lately discovered in England. 435 



Family Linyphiid^. Genus Linyphia. 

 Linyphia albula. 

 Genei-al colour pale and plain ; cephalothorax with some obscure 

 converging lines ; abdomen with a pale yellowish-brown longi- 

 tudinal band down the centre of the upper side, slightly ramose, 

 and tapering to the spinners, a little above which are a few 

 pairs of small spots of a brown colour. 



Adult female. — Length ^ of an inch ; length of cephalo- 

 thorax -Yj^, breadth ^t > breadth of abdomen Jq ; length of a 

 leg of the first pair -^^ ; length of one of the third pair ^; rela- 

 tive length of legs 1, 2, 4, 3. 



Cephalothorax oval, compressed on the sides tovvards the 

 front. Colour palish yellow, slightly suffused with drab ; several 

 obscure brownish lines commence near the eyes, and, running 

 back, meet at a small indentation in the medial line, where they 

 are met by some obscure converging rays which come from the 

 lateral margins. 



Eyes eight in number, small, and seated on black spots on 

 the front part of the cephalothorax; the four centre eyes (of 

 which the two front ones are the smallest of the eight) form a 

 trapezoid with its shortest side forwards. The eyes of each 

 lateral pair are seated obliquely on a small tubercle, and are 

 contiguous. 



Legs long, slender, furnished with hairs and a few fine spines. 

 Colour like that of the cephalothorax, only rather paler, with 

 the tarsal and metatarsal joints darkest. Each tarsus ends with 

 three claws. 



Palpi furnished with hairs and spines; same colour as the 

 legs, though rather darker at the extremity. 



Fakes powerful, conical, a few teeth on the inner surface, 

 and rather inclined towards the sternum, 



Maxillce strong, straight, the outer angle at the end curvi- 

 linear. 



Labium semicircular, and prominent at the top. 



Sternum heart-shaped and convex. All these parts are darker 

 and more suffused with brown than the cephalothorax. 



Abdomen slender, oviform, thinly clothed with hairs ; project- 

 ing moderately over the base of the cephalothorax; of a yellowish- 

 white or pale cream-colour, the under side rather the darkest : 

 a light yellowish-brown band (with several small short branches 

 issuing obliquely from it across to the sides) runs from end to 

 end of the abdomen ; this band is broadest at the end near the 

 cephalothorax, and fines-down to a dark line before it reaches 

 the spinners, just above which are six or eight small brown spots 

 in pairs; the first two pairs arc nearer together than the second 



