Spiders of Victoria. 



Ill 



The Legs are faii^ly stout, with scopulae on all tarsi, and 

 metatarsi, thin only on the latter, in the two rear pairs. 



In Report of the Horn Expedition^ I described a Liocranum, 

 L. Koch, under the name of L. albopunctatum. M. E. Simon 

 has a genus Medmassa (Hist. Nat. des Ar., Vol. IL, p. 198) 

 which takes in a portion of Liocranum, and will, I think, well 

 include L. albopunctatum. The only point in the specihcation 

 which would incline me to make a new genus for these, is that he 

 makes his side eyes narrowly separated, while here they are rather 

 widely separated (by at least two diameters of the rear eyes). 

 With this exception it may justly be put into Medmassa with 

 three other species, one probably L. Koch's L. pallipes, described 

 by him from an undeveloped specimen and the others I describe 

 below. 



In his sub-family of Corinninae (fam. Clubionidae, ioc. cit. p. 23), 

 M. Simon distinguishes them as having " sternum distinctissime 

 marginatum." 



The group Corinneae, in which the genus Medmassa occurs 

 {Ioc. cit. p. 128), has " chelarum margo inferior dentibus 3-4 

 armatus." 



J Report on the Work of the Horn Scientific Expedition to Central Australia, pt. ii., 

 Zoology, p. 328. 



