124 Kansas Academy of Science. 



Colors. —Female pale yellow beneath, without markings. Very much 

 the same above, except for a dark area occupying the ocellar quad- 

 rangle and two narrow, dark colored streaks, one on either side of 

 the median line of the abdomen. The latter are not at all distinct 

 on the anterior third of the abdomen. Two or more pairs of white 

 spots dot these dark streaks. The ground color of the male is 

 somewhat darker, shading into orange brown on the cephalothorax 

 and legs. Like the female, the male is unmarked beneath and has, 

 above, the two dark streaks on the abdomen and the dark area on 

 the ocellar quadrangle. The femora and, to a certain extent, the 

 other joints of all the legs are more or less streaked or almost 

 banded with very dark brown. The tips of the tarsi in both sexes 

 are dark. Palpal organs of the male dark except at the tip. Other 

 joints of the palps pale and unmarked. The body and legs of both 

 sexes are sparsely covered with long, silky hairs, with here and 

 there a spine. 

 Phidippus texanus Banks. 



Phidippus texanus Banks. Proc, Ent. Soc. Wash., 1905. 



Not uncommon in the late summer and the autumn months. Speci- 

 mens taken at Englewood and Medora in July, and at Manhattan 

 in October. 

 Phidippus multiformis Emerton. 



Phidippus multiformis Emerton. Trans. Conn. Acad., VIII, 1891, p. 6. 



Two females and one male from Manhattan, July 27. 

 Phidippus montivagus Peckham. 



Phidippus montivagus Peckham. Trans. Wis. Acad., XIII, p. 293. 



A single specimen, female, from Manhattan, July 14. 

 Dendryphantes glacialis, sp. nov. (figs. 3, 4, 8). 



An average-sized species, conspicuously striped on the abdomen. Two 

 females were taken at Manhattan May 26, and' a pair in the glacial 

 region near St. George June 6. 



Measurements. — Female, 5.5 mm., male, 5 mm. in length. Cephalo- 

 thorax, 2.5 mm. long, 2 mm. wide. 



Colors. — The cephalothorax of this species is reddish brown, with 

 scattering white hairs thick enough at the sides and on the posterior 

 slope to almost give the appearance of a band or stripe. About 

 the eyes the red-brown is several shades darker. The ground color 

 of the abdomen is dirty white tinged with yellow. Down the median 

 line is a brown stripe, a little the wider in the male. On either 

 side of this stripe is another of the same color and approximate 

 width, curving a little to conform to the lateral border of the ab- 

 domen. Still another and wider stripe, not visible from a dorsal 

 view, runs along each side of the abdomen. In the female this 

 stripe is broken into spots or streaks. On the ventral surface 

 there is a narrow median stripe from the genital opening to the 

 spinnerets, and a wider stripe each side of this. The legs and palps 

 are dull yellow tinged with brown, unmarked in the female, but 

 much darker with some appearance of banding in the male. The 

 front row of eyes is curved, with the middle eyes fully twice as 

 large as the lateral, and almost as widely separated as the former 

 and latter. 



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