Neiv Spiders from Nciu England. 401 



palpi are long and the tibia as long as the tarsus. The abdomen 

 is gray with a white middle stripe more than half its length, con- 

 tinuing to the end in a row of spots. At the sides are similar 

 spots in irregular rows. PI. V. figs. 1, la. 



Male in sphagnum bog, Bangor, Me., June 29, 1910. Female from 

 Laggan in the Rocky Mountains in Canada. See Trans. Conn. Acad., 

 Vol. IX. 



Lycosa beanii, Em. Canadian Spiders, Trans. Conn. Acad., Vol. IX, 

 1894. 



This species has the general appearance oi frondicola. The middle 

 stripe of the cephalothorax is straight at the sides and narrowed 

 from the eyes backward. The femora are marked with indistinct 

 rings and there are traces of rings on the other joints. The under 

 side is somewhat lighter than the back and has no black spots or 

 stripes. The epigynum is well shown in the figure in the paper on 

 Canadian spiders. 



Seal Harbor, Mt. Desert, Me., July 1, 1909. 



Pardosa muscicola, new. 



The male of this species has been confounded with uncata and 

 the female with g/acialis. The markings are much like glacialis, 

 with the middle stripe of the cephalothorax more distinctly divided 

 into three at the anterior end. The lance-shaped spot at the front 

 end of the abdomen is equally distinct in both. The femora of 

 muscicola, however, are marked with four distinct but somewhat 

 broken rings resembling the femora of tachypoda and uncala rather 

 than glacialis. PL V, fig. 2. The epigynum is wide as in glacialis 

 iDut the anterior pit is single and the middle lobe straight with 

 parallel sides in the posterior half. Fig. 2c. The male is rather 

 lighter colored than that of glacialis and the tarsus and tibia of the 

 male palpus are not black as in that species but colored as in uncata. 

 The basal process of the palpal organ is shaped as in uncata but 

 the long branch is longer and extends entirely across the tarsus, 

 ending in a slightly curved blunt point. Fig. 2a, 2 b. 



This species lives with glacialis, uncata and tachypoda on the moss 

 ot the upper part of the Green Mountains and White Mountains and 

 in Labrador and Newfoundland. 



Pirata montanus, Emerton. Trans. Conn. Acad., Vol. VI, 1885. 



The female only is described in N. E. Lycosidae, Trans. Conn'' 

 Acad., 1885. The male resembles the female in size and markings 



