Pedipalpi, Ricinulei, and Opiliones. 15, 



from the end conspicuously concave; the end is angular. Seen 

 from the side (fig. 3 i) the lower margin of the whole flagellum 

 is shaped as a line somewhat curved or convex at the middle, 

 while the upper margin is incurved considerably before the end. 

 The flagellum has several pairs of long or very long spiniform 

 setae distributed on the sides, at the end and on the lower sur- 

 face, while the upper side has only two erect shorter setse far 

 from one another in the median line. 



The walking legs, the upper surface of abdomen, and the 

 posterior part of the dorsal side of cephalothorax are more or 

 less olive-green with a reddish or light reddish tint ; front part 

 of the head, antennae and palps reddish; the lower surface of 

 the body lighter. 



Body without flagellum 2.64 mm., palp 1.75 mm., first leg; 

 4.1 mm., fourth leg 2.9 mm. 



Female. 



It agrees with the male in many particulars, but differs in 

 several features. 



Palps (fig. 3 c) a little more robust and proportionately shorter 

 than in the male, being only about half as long as the body. 

 Trochanter has not the lower distal part produced, and the cor- 

 ner is a rather obtuse angle measuring about 110°. Femur con- 

 siderably deeper than in the male, scarcely twice as long as 

 deep, and the lower margin is angularly bent a little from the 

 base: the tip of this angle is a Uttle nearer to the proximal 

 than to the distal end of the upper margin of the joint. Patella 

 and tibia shghtly thicker than in the male, while the tarsus is 

 conspicuously shorter than in that sex, and the claw is some- 

 what more than one-third as long as the upper margin of the 

 tarsus. 



First pair of legs slender, slightly longer than the body. 

 Coxae terminate a little before the outer angle of the mandibles.. 



