Pseudoscorpions in the British Museum. 453 



distinclly granulate. The specimen from Aburi lias the 

 fiiij^ers proi)ortionally shorter and the hand nearly smooth, 

 uhile tiie specimen from Cross River has tlio fingers propor- 

 tionally somewhat longer and the hand distinctly granulate. 



Chelifer intennediuSy Balzan. 

 Guatemala : Vera Paz. 1 ? . 



Chelifer macrochelatus, Tomosv^ry. 



West Indies, Trinidad: St. Annes. 4 (^^ , 5 ?, taken 

 from under the wings of a beetle [Macropus longimanus) , 

 28. viii. 1908, by P. Carmody. 



Chelifer nodulimanus^ Tomosvary. 

 Guatemala : Vera Paz. 1 S • 



Chelifer nodosuSy Schrajik. 



Europe, England, Isle of Sheppey: Minster. 2 ?. The 

 specimens were found attached to the legs of a fly, 23. ix. 1912, 

 collected by J. W. Dunn. 



West Africa, Gold Coast : Aburi. 5 ? , found clinging to 

 the legs of a rauscid, taken in office, 22. i v. 1911, by Mr. Arm- 

 strong. Certainly imported (see the introduction). 



Chelifer scorpioides, Hermann. 



England, London : South Kensington. 3 cJ, 19 ? , 3 jun. 

 The specimens were found in the sand-pit at the back o£ 

 the Natural History Museum, under the skull of a whale, 

 22. vii. 1912. 



Note. — Tliere were several, in all eleven, larval masses, 

 some fixed at the underside of the abdorai.'n, some loose ; the 

 greatest number of larvae (or eggs) in one larval mass was 

 about twenty. 



Chelifer hayoyii, Ellingsen. 



Africa, Uganda: Ciiagwe, Seziwa Swamps. 1 cJ, on 

 Anas undulata, 27. viii. 1911, collected by S. A. Neave 

 (Imperial Bureau of Entomology). 



Nyasaland : Blantyre. 1 cJ , 1 ?, from vegetation, Nov. 

 191U, collected by Dr. J. E. S. Old (Imperial Bureau of 

 Entomology). — Chiromo. 1 ?, May 1911, collected by 

 Dr. J. E. «. Old. 



