1901.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 587 



Troohosa parva Banks. 



Trochosa parvn Banks, Jour. N. Y. Ent. Soc., 1894, p. 52. 



Several examples from Albuquerque (Soltau), Beulah 

 (Cockerell), aud Eagle creek camp, White Mountains, third week 

 in August. 

 Trochosa cmerea (Fabricius). 



Araneus cinereus Fabricius, Entom. Syst. II, p. 42:5 (1793). 



A female from Las Cruces, September 2; at light. 

 Trochosa sp. 



One female of a pale species from Albuquerque. It is appar- 

 ently new, but does not show any marked characters in this sex. 



Pardosa glacialis (TlioroU). 



Lycom glacialis Thorell, Ofv. K. Vetensk.-Akad. Forli., 1872, p. 159. 

 Lycosa concinna Thorell, Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., Ill, No. 2, 

 p» 506 (1877). 



One male and several young from Albuquerque, aud adults 



from summit of range between the Pecos and Sapello rivers, 



August, July. 



Pardosa sternalis (Thorell). 



Lycosa sternalis Thorell, Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., Ill, No. 2, p. 



504 (1877). 

 Pardosa luteola Emerton, Traus. Conn. Acad., IX, p. 427, 1894. 



One male from the White Mountains. 



OXYOPID^J. 

 Oxyopes pictipes n. sp. 



Cephalothorax uniform gray-brown on sides and in front, eye- 

 region black, above a broad pale area, broader in front than 

 behind, with a narrow median extension forward to the eyes, and 

 each side at base of pars cephalica is a short extension, in front 

 on the clypeus is a small median pale spot; mandibles dark brown ; 

 palpi pale, banded with black; legs pale, a longitudinal black 

 line beneath on the femora of anterior pairs, apical halves of all 

 femora mostly black, patellae mostly black, bands on middle aud 

 apex of tibiae, and on base, middle and apex of metatarsi, black. 

 Sternum pifle ; coxae dark ; venter mostly black ; dorsum of abdo- 

 men pale, nearly interrupted beyond middle by an extension 

 upward of the black sides. Head of the cephalothorax rather 

 high, sloping off gradually behind. Posterior eye- row procurved; 

 P. M.E. about twice their diameter apart and fully as far from 



