1916.) F.H. Gravety: Indo-Australian Thelyphonidae. 75 
Thelyphonus wayi, Pocock. 
Siam: Bathambang. 
Described from a single female in 1g00(a). 
In this species and the next the tarsal joints of the antenni- 
form legs, though long as in Uvoproctus assamensis and the pre- 
ceding species of Thelyphonus, are modified in mature females as 
in the remaining species of Thelyphonus. 
Thelyphonus anthracinus (Pocock). 
Borneo: Batu Song in Eastern Sarawak. 
The antenniform legs of the female are of the same transi- 
tional type as in the preceding species. The male has probably 
been described by Thorell (see below, p. 76). 
Thelyphonus caudatus (Linnaeus). 
(Pisa fies. 28°29 pl.iv, figs. 37, 38:) 
Java; Batavia; *Buitenzorg; *West Java. 
Pocock (18)4, p. 122) gives Hong Kong as well as Java. As, 
however, there are no records from intervening countries the occur- 
rence of the species in the former locality needs confirmation be- 
fore it can be accepted. 
Thelyphonus linganus, Koch. 
(PE, figs, 30, 31 “ple iv, igs: 39, 40;) 
Malay Peninsula: Penang. 
Perak—Ulu Selama; *Grik; *Lenggong 
Cave; ? Larut Hills, 3400 ft. 
Kelantan—Kuala Aring. 
*Johore—Johore Bahru; up to about 500 
ft. on Gunong Pulai. 
*Singapore. 
Sumatran Islands: Sumatra; Linga; *Sinkep. 
The specimens from Perak differ from those from further south 
in that the tarsi of the antenniform legs are less distinctly modi- 
fied, being of more uniform thickness and lacking the grooves on 
the sixth and seventh segments and the hook on the seventh. In 
a series of specimens from Johore and Sinkep Island the grooves 
are, however, usually absent from the sixth segment and often 
from the seventh, while the tooth is not always well developed. 
Probably, therefore, the differences are not specific. 
Tarnani (1895) records this species from Batavia; but his 
description is inadequate, and his figure of the tarsus of the anten- 
niform leg indicates a mistaken identification, the eighth joint 
being, for instance, shorter instead of longer than the seventh, and 
the third longer instead of shorter than broad. 
G 
