74 TULLGREN, SPIDERS COLLECTED IN SOUTH-CHILE BY P. DUSEN, 



sides, the pars thoracica a little broader. The central-furrow 

 is very miniite, situated a little beliind the posterior eyes. 

 It is yellow-brown, dark brown in front and at the sides of 

 the pars cephalica. The clypeus is very narrow. The cepha- 

 lothorax is clothed with scattered brig-ht whitish hairs above, 

 €ispecially in the middle part, around the eyes and on the 

 clypeus and has on the pars cephalica especially in the re- 

 gion of the eyes very long and fine upturned scattered hairs, 



Eyes. — The front-ro w is nearly straight; the middle- 

 eyes much larger than the lateral ones; all eyes nearly con- 

 tiguous. The eyes in the second row very small and situa- 

 ted in the middle of the interval between the front-row and 

 the third row. The eyes in the third row a little smaller 

 than the anterior lateral eyes. The quadrangle of eyes 1,.'5 

 mm, broad and 0,8 mm. long, 



Clieliceres testaceous, the inner margin of the claw-furrow 

 only with one small tooth. 



Maxillce and lahium testaceous of ordinary shape. 



Sternum påle yellow, very convex, broad oval; the anterior 

 €0X86 broadly separated, thinly clothed with long white hairs. 



Legs 4, 1, 2, 3, påle testaceous with long white hairs 

 by some specimens there are black spöts on the back of femur 

 IV, The tibia I beneath with 1. 2. 2 or 2. 2. 2. spines, The 

 metatarsus I beneath with 2. 2 spines. The tibia II with 1, 1. 2. 

 spines beneath and the metatarsus II with 2. 2, spines beneath. 

 No lateral spines on the two first pair of legs. Patellee without 

 spines; femora with three in a longitudinal row on the back 

 arranged long sjDines. The two posterior pairs of legs with 

 numerous spines, even lateral ones. The metatarsi I and II 

 a little shorter than the tarsi and tibise. 



Abdomen elongate-oval. It varies highly in colour. By 

 some species the back is blackish with small rounded testa- 

 ceous döts and in the middle-line with a broad longitudinal 

 more or less black-spoted band, that in its posterior half 

 sends to the sides about four short oblique branches of the 

 same colour. By other specimens the blackish colour is nearly 

 perfectly efFaced. The venter has more or less distinct blackish 

 longitudinal middle-band and on each side of that some very 

 small blackish döts. By some young specimens is the venter 

 nearly one-coloured grayish.^ Abdomen is densely clothed 

 with long whitish and brownish hairs. 



Vulva conf. Pl. VII, fig. O, 



