a 
Heteropoda nigriventer sp. n. 
Pl. XXVI, fig. 20 
In size, appearance, length of leg, etc. much like H. venatoria. 
Carapace castaneous, covered with yellowish pubescence, with a posterior yellow 
stripe; ocular region infuscate, clypeus mesially pale; legs also covered with yellow pubes- 
cence, finely mottled with spots, not banded, white at the base of the spines; abdomen co- 
vered with yellow pubescence above, ornamented below with a broad fuscous band, extending 
from the epigastrie fold to the spinners. 
Carapace as long as the 34 tibia, shorter than the 4 tibia. 
Less with spine-armature as in H. venatoria,; there is a spine on the anterior sur- 
face of the patella as well as on the posterior. 
Vulva with its lateral sclerites widely separated by the median process which passes 
between them nearly to their posterior border. 
Measurements in millimetres. Total length 26, length of carapace 10.5, width 
9.5, length of 1% leg 47, of 224 50, of 3:4 38, of 4% 43. 
Loc. Donggala in Celebes; a single female example. 
At once recognisable from venatoria by the presence of the fuscous ventral band of 
the abdomen — a feature in which it approaches cervina L. Koch. Easily distinguishable 
from the latter by its longer legs, larger size, etc. 
Oliophthalmus gen. n0v. 
Pl. XXVI, fig. 22, a, b. 
Carapace about as wide as long, about as high as in Heteropoda, but flatter above, 
head not elevated; posterior line of eyes as wide as the head, distinetly recurved, convexity 
forward, the lateral much larger than the median and prominent, separated by a space that 
is less than its diameter from the subjacent edge of the carapace ; eyes of anterior line pro- 
curved, the medians much smaller than the laterals, their upper edges almost or quite at 
the same level as those of the laterals; the laterals separated from the edge of the elypeus 
by a space that nearly equals half their diameter, the medians separated from the edge by 
a space excelling their diameter, the quadrangle of the median eyes longer than broad, 
the anterior medians larger than the posterior medians. 
Legs moderately long and robust, 2, 1, 3, 4 or 2, 1 and 3, 4, the Sezundaiegpeme 
nearly or quite equal; protarsi and tarsi scopulate, though weakly on the 4. 
Abhandl. d. Senckenb. naturf. Ges. Bd. XXIII. 78 
