BARBADOS-ANTIGUA REPORTS 15 
light band narrowing between the posterior row of eyes, dilate in the 
cephalic area and narrowing in the thoracic part and having a pair of 
narrow longitudinal dark lines in the dilated portion. Abdomen with a 
central dark area anteriorly, followed by the usual herring bone mark- 
ings; ventral area light. Legs with very faint traces of brown. Vulva 
small. 
Barbados. One female. 
Lycosa sancti-vincenti Simon 
1897. Lycosa sancti vincenti Simon, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, p. 888. 
Antigua. One female. Found only on St. Vincent. 
Family Oxyopide 
Oxyopes salticus Hentz 
1845. Oxyopes salttcus Hentz, Jour. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., Vol. 5, p. 
196, pl. 16, fig. 10; reprint 1875, p. 47, pl. 6, fig. 10. 
1876. Oxyopes gracilis Keyserling, Verh. Zool. Bot. Ges. Wien, Vol. 27, 
p. 698, pl. 2, figs. 63-64. 
Antigua; Barbados. A common spider south and west of 
New York, in the West Indies and Central America. 
Oxyopeidon maculipes sp. nov. 
Plate I, fig 6 
@ total length 4% mm. 
Cephalothorax yellowish-brown, darkened on the sides and reddish be- 
tween the eyes. Clypeus and sides with many lanceolate white scales. 
The eyes are about equal distances apart; the anterior medium very 
much smaller than the laterals, which are placed a little below them. 
The eyes of the posterior row, subequal and much smaller than the anter- 
ior laterals; the posterior medium eyes are hardly twice as far apart as 
from the laterals; the posterior laterals are at an equal distance from 
the anterior laterals and posterior medium. The abdomen is grayish with 
light areas on each side and faint light markings behind. The legs are 
yellowish, the anterior pair are missing; the others are marked with dark 
as follows; a spot under the middle of femora II, at basal end of tibia 
II and tip of tibia III, at tip of femora IV and at base of tibia IV. 
The vulva is very similar to Oxyopeidon letum Cambridge. 
Antigua. One female. 
Family Salticide 
Wala vernalis (Peckham) 
1893. Anoka vernalis Peckham, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, p. 701, pl. 62, 
fig. 9. 
Antigua; Barbados. A common spider in the West Indies. 
