+ 
Supplement to the New England Spiders. 221 
fon) 
half as large as the lateral. The upper row is more curved; the 
eyes all about equal in size, and the same distances apart. The 
lateral eyes of the two rows are near each other, but do not touch. 
The legs are long, with long spines, the fourth pair longest. The 
tibiz of the first and second legs are thickened and have on the 
under side two pairs of long spines under the metatarsi. The 
sternum is almost circular with a slight point behind between the 
fourth coxee. 
The colors are translucent white and dark gray, like Phrurolithus 
alarius, but usually darker. The cephalothorax is light in the middle, 
with black edges and radiating dark lines. The abdomen is dark, 
with a series of pairs of light spots down the back. On the under 
side the sternum and coxe are light and the abdomen spotted ir- 
regularly with dark gray. The male palpi in an individual that 
has been dried have the tibia and patella of about the same length. 
The tibia has a stout process on the outer side that turns inward 
against the base of the tarsus. The tarsus is oval, and the palpal 
organ long and thick. The tube seems to start near the outer end 
and curve around toward the inner side. 
Adults were found at New Haven, Conn., May 1, and young 
males at Cold Spring Harbor, April 10. 
Coelotes calcaratus, Keys. Zool. bot. Ges. Wien, 1887. 
Celotes longitarsus, Em. Trans. Conn. Acad., 1890. 
On Plate VII, Vol. VIU, fig. 2a is not the epigynum of this species 
but that of Czcurina arcuata. A correct figure of the epigynum 
of C. calcaratus is given in Common Spiders of the U. S. by J. H. 
Emerton 1902, page 104, fig. 242. 
Cicurina arcuata, pallida and brevis. (Plate VIII, figures 6 and 7e.) 
The three species of Cicurina live under dead leaves on the 
ground at all seasons, all three being sometimes found in the same 
locality. C. arcuata Keys. = complicata Em. is the largest and most 
deeply colored, with the abdomen covered with gray oblique marks. 
C. pallida is of the same shape and a little smaller, without mark- 
ings. It is less common than the other two. C. brevis = Tegenaria 
brevis Em. = C. creber Banks, is smaller than the others and pale, 
with two rows of gray spots on the abdomen. The cephalothorax 
of the male is rounder and the head narrower than in the female, 
and more so than in the males of other species. All the species 
have very complicated palpal organs and a large appendage of the 
tibia of the palpus which lies against the tarsus and is not easily 
