24 A. TULLGREN, SPIDERS COLLECTED IN FLORIDA. 



Fam. Oxyopidae. 



Peiicetia Thorell 1870. 



47. P. viridans (Hentz) Maux 1880. 



Several specimens from Orlando aud Clarcona in Orange co_ 



Oxyopes Latr. 18(I4. 



48. O. salticus Hkntz 1845. 



Syn. O. gracilis Keyserling 1876. 



Several adult females and one adult male from Orange co- 



49. O. laminatus n. sp. 



(Fig. 14). 

 Female. — Ceplialothorax light yellow-brown, densely 

 clotlied with white scales, the hind-part with a black irregular 

 spöt on each side; the middle-furrow very long and fine. It 

 is very liigli, highest in front. Pars cephalica indistinctly 

 separated from pars thoracica. — Eyes in foiir rows, situated 

 on black spöts. The two of the second row connted from 

 clypeus a little larger, the two of the first row about as 

 much separated from the margin of clypens as from the eye& 

 in the fourth row. The interspace between the eyes in the 

 third and the fourth row a little larger than that between 

 the eyes of the second and the third row. Cheliceres conical,. 

 light yellow-brown with a blackish spöt at the base, about 

 as long as the face and much longer than the patella of the^ 

 iirst leg. — Stcrnuin cordated, about as long as broad, clothed 

 with white scales and long black bristly upturned hairs^ 

 yellow in the middle part and black at the margins. — 

 Maxillce about twice as long as the sqarish labium a little- 

 convergent at the apex and a little broader in the anterior 

 part, clothed with short adpressed blackish hairs and some 

 few upturned curved bristly hairs. — Lerjs yellow-brown 

 with dark rings; the larg claws with 15 teeths more or less;, 

 the joints of the first pair of legs have: on the femur above 

 1. 1. 1 spines, in front 2 and behind 1 spine, below two rows- 

 fine bristly hairs; on the patella 1. 1 above and 1 spine 



