Supplement to the New England Spiders. 207 
ata. The sternum has a light middle line for half its length, which 
shows indistinctly in the darker specimens. 
Lycosa bilineata. 
Pardosa bilineata, Em. N. E. Lycoside. 
Lycosa ocreata, pulchra, Montgomery. Proc. Phil. Acad. Nat. Sci., 
1902. (Plate VI, figures 4, 4a, 4b.) 
The female of this species was described in N. E. Lycoside, from 
New Haven, Conn., without the male being known. This was later 
found at Cold Spring Harbor on Long Island. The female resembles 
in color and markings Pardosa pallida more than it does its nearest 
relative, Lycosa ocreata. It is 6 mm. long, with the cephalothorax 
3.5 mm. The colors are light yellow and brown, with gray hairs 
on the legs and abdomen. The cephalothorax has three pale stripes, 
the middle one as wide as second row of eyes, the lateral half as 
wide and a little above the edge. The legs are pale yellow without 
any markings except faint traces of rings on the femora. The 
markings on the abdomen are like those of ocreata: a dark pointed 
stripe in the middle bordered by light stripes, outside of which are 
rows of dark spots. The colors of the male are the same except the 
tibia and end of the metatarsus of the first leg, which are deep black 
and surrounded by stiff black hairs, Fig. 4a. The epigynum is 
much like that of re/ucens, T-shaped, and as wide as long. The 
male palpi have the tibia slightly enlarged, but not as much as 
in relucens or ocreata. ‘The palpal organ is like that of re/ucens, 
with the appendage supporting the end of the tube longer, so 
that it projects out over the edge of the tarsus, and the large thick 
terminal appendage is wanting. 
Pardosa littoralis, Banks. (Plate VI, figures 5, da, 5b.) 
This species described by Banks from Long Island, N. Y., where 
it is common, has now been found at Ipswich and Plum Island, 
Mass. The females are 7 mm. long, with the cephalothorax 3 mm. 
It is not as slender as pallida and nigropalpis, but has the proportions 
of glacials, the young of which it much resembles, Fig. 5. 
The color is pale yellow with gray markings. The legs are yellow 
without markings. The cephalothorax has a narrow black line each 
side and two wide dark stripes leaving a light stripe on each side 
and a less defined one in the middle. The abdomen has a middle 
light stripe with indented edges, and the sides are marked with 
light mixed with gray. In the male all the dark markings are 
darker than in the female. 
