74 Records of the Indian Museum. EVOL, 26h, 
been T. schnehageni, Kraepelin. Altogether it seems most un- 
likely that T. sepiaris really occurs in Burma at all. 
Butler does not say whether his figure of T. sepiaris (1873, 
pl. v. fig. 6) was taken from one of his Burmese or Ceylonese speci- 
mens. It differs from specimens of T sepiaris from India and 
Ceylon in having the tibia of the arm slightly broader instead of 
narrower than it is long. I have no knowledge of the shape of 
the tibia of the arm of T. schnehagent. 
Thelyphonus sepiaris is a much more variable species than 
Uroproctus assamensis. ‘The range of variation in the teeth of the 
trochanters of the arms is indicated in text-fig. 3. One male of T. 
sepiaris in the Indian Museum collection has the hand relatively 
narrow as in the female. The shape of the fingers is somewhat 
variable in both sexes. 


JUV. Juv. 
FiG. 3.—Abnormalities in the trochanter of the arm of Thelyphonus sepiarts, X 4. 
Specimens answering to Pocock’s descriptions of the subspecies 
indicus and muricola, and to that of the form which he regarded 
as a distinct species cristatus, occur with various intermediate 
forms in various places, and I am unable to regard any of them as 
in any way distinct. 
Thelyphonus schnehageni, Kraepelin. 
Burma: Rangoon. 
Only the female is known. 
Thelyphonus manilanus, Koch. 
Philippine Islands: Manila: 
Moluccas: Halmaheira (subsp. halmahetrae, Kraepelin). 
New Guinea (introduced). 
