136 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY V_)F [Jan., 



Pardosa minima Keyserling. 



One male from Lake Worth. Febr., agrees with northern examples. 



Pardosa floridana n. sp. 



Cephalothorax ^'•ellowish, head black, a broad brown stripe from 

 each posterior eye to the hind margin, and the lateral margins nar- 

 rowly brown. The pale median area is l^roadest in front, and there 

 indents the black head with a narrow projection each side. Abdo- 

 men black, with numerous small white dots; a basal spear-mark, and 

 four pairs of geminate patches follow the spear-mark, each is separated 

 by a narrow transverse line; venter yellow, with a few black spots in 

 three lines; sternum yellow, with a median black stripe forked on 

 anterior half, and three black dots each side; coxib yellow, with black 

 marks above; clypeus yellow, with two black spots; mandibles yel- 

 lowish, with a black line in front. Legs yellow, more reddish toward 

 tip, faintly marked with black on femora and base, middle and tip of 

 tibia and metatarsus. 



Length 6 mm. 



One female from Enterprise, April 22. A paler specimen, with legs 

 scarcely marked, but with a dark sternum, comes from Punta Gorda, 

 Febr. 



PISAURID^ 

 Bolomedes sexpunctatus Hentz. 



One specimen from Lake Worth. 

 Dolomedes albineus Hentz. 



One female from Altoona, July. It is easily recognized l)y the 

 j^ellow ventral stripe. The head is much elevated in this species. 

 I have a spider from Punta Gorda which agrees with Micromata pini- 

 cola Hentz; it is immature, and, I think, the young of D. albineus. 

 Pisaurina undata Hentz. 



Several sjjecimens from Punta Gorda. April. 

 Maypacius floridanus Simon. 



Described from the State; I have not seen it. 



Thanatidius dubius Hentz. 



A young specimen from Punta Gorda, April; it is adult in late 

 summer. 



CTENID^. 



Cupiennius Sallei Keyserling. 



One specimen from Lake Worth. This is the first time this Mexican 

 spider has- been recorded from the United States. 



