420 Pomona College Journal oe Entomology 



spots ; all metatarsi pale : tarsi ringed with browii at the false articulations : 

 I)alpi pale, spotted with brown, black at tip. Los Ani^elcs, Calif. 



Globipes 



But one species is known. 



Globipes spinulatus Bks. 

 Reddish brown, dorsum sumewhat mottled with brown, base of legs yellow- 

 ish, rest reddish ; cephalothorax and abdomen smooth ; eye-tul)ercle low and 

 with few .spinules above; femur II longer than the body, and more than twice 

 as long as femur T. From Southern California. 



Leuronychus 



Two species are known. 



I. A brown dorsal stripe f^acificKs. 



No dorsal stripe paniihis. 



Leuronychus pacificus Bks. 

 Whitish to grayish, with a broad median brown stripe ; the patellae of legs 

 brown, lineate with white ; trochanters brown ; spinules on venter and coxae. 

 From Olympic, Wash., and Mt. Shasta, Calif. 



Leuronychus parvulus Bks. 

 No stripe on dorsum, but a spot on abdomen in form of a Greek cross ; 

 patellffi not lineate with white; trochanters pale; only stiff black hairs on venter 

 and coxae. From Olympia, Wash., probably occurs in northern California. 



Leptobunus 



But one species known from California. 



Leptobunus californicus Bks. 

 Whitish above, mottled with brown and black, the vase mark indefinite; 

 femur I shorter than the body, tips of coxae pale, tibia I with two dark bands ; 

 apical brown rings on other joints, palpi not lineate with brow'n. Southern 

 California., Los Angeles. Another species, L. borealis, is known from ,\laska ; 

 it has the tips of coxae dark, one band on tibia L and the palpi lineate with 

 brown. 



Nitopus 

 One species is recorded from California. 



Nitopus californicus Bks. 

 Grayish above, indistinctly mottled with white and brown ; femora and tibis 

 with brown ])an(ls near base and tip; tibia II is much longer than metatarsus 



II, one false articulation in metatarsus I. From Los Angeles. 



Another species A', dorsalis, with a white median stripe, is known from 

 Alaska; the tibia II is not longer than metatarsus II, and there is no false 

 articulation in metatarsus I. 



