210 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [May, 



squarish in the cephalic part and as broad as the area of eyes, on the 

 pars thoraica narrow; the eye area nearly black; at the margins 

 broad white bands; the margin black. Chelicerce clothed with long 

 bristly hairs. Endites and labium light yeUow brown. Sternum light 

 brown with long light hairs. Legs pale brown with dark rings. Abdo- 

 men brown, clothed with black and white short hairs without distinct 

 markings; the venter light grayish. 



Cephcdothorax a little shorter than the length of tibia + patella of 

 fourth legs and the breadth shorter than the length of tibia of the 

 fourth pair of legs. Front row of eyes distinctly procurved, the 

 central eyes largest and the interspace between the central eyes about 

 equal to their diameter and longer than the space between the lateral 

 eyes. The distance from the lateral eyes to the margin of the clypeus 

 and to the eyes in the middle row about thrice their diameter. The 

 eyes of the middle row very large and the interspace between them 

 longer than their diameter. The interspace between the middle and 

 the posterior eyes broader than the diameter of the middle eyes. 

 Chelicerce a little longer than the face, very tapering at the apex and 

 clothed with long bristly hairs, a little narrower than the femur of first 

 pair. Tibia of first pair of legs below with 2, 2, 2 spines; these and 

 other spines very long. 



Total length, 4.2 mm. Length of cephalothorax, 2.5 mm.; width, 

 1.8 mm. 



Ijcngth of leg I, 7.3 mm. 



Length of leg IV, 10 mm. 



(Description rearranged from the original.) 



Locality. — Florida. One single adult female from Lake Leonore in 

 Orange County. 



This tiny Pardosa is not known to me at first hand. It is certainly 

 a very unusual form, if it be true that the "distance from the lateral 

 eyes to the margin of the clypeus and to the eyes in the middle row is 

 about thrice their diameter," a statement much to be questioned. 



Genus SCHIZOCOSA Chamberlin, 1904. 

 (Canadian Entomologist, ^^ol. XXXVI, p. 177.) 



Entire body densely clothed with pubescence; the cephalothorax 

 with a light median band as wide anteriorly as the eye area and either 

 with or without submarginal pale bands. Spines of anterior tibiae 

 in number and arrangement like those of Pardosa and Lycosa, in length 

 varying between those of these two genera. Anterior row of eyes 

 considerably shorter than the second, clearly procurved, more strongly 



