THE AGALENID^ 



105 



and narrow, and the palpal organ large and complicated, with 

 a long fine tube that extends from the base along the outer 

 side and back to the hard appendages in the middle. The 

 epigynum (fig. 247) has a small, transverse, oval opening at 

 the hinder end, in front of which the coils of long tubes can be 

 seen through the skin. 



In New England Agalenidre PI. VII, fig. 2 is the epigynum 

 of this species and not of Ccslotcs longitarsiis. 



Hahnia bimaculata. — The Hahnias resemble Tegenaria, but are 

 much smaller and have the spinnerets extended in a line across 



men (fig. 251). HaJinia bima- 



an inch long, with the abdo- 



widest behind, as it is in 



fa 



the under side of the abdo- 

 ciilata is about one-eighth of 

 men large and oval, 

 Caelotes (fig. 250). The 

 cephalothorax is bright 

 orange brown, and the 

 legs and abdomen pale yellow- 

 ish with gray markings. The 

 legs are ringed with gray, the 

 longer joints having two 

 rings, and the abdo- 

 men has a pattern of 

 light yellow and gray 

 spots. The spinnerets 

 are all long and in a 

 nearly straight line, half as 

 long as the width of the 

 abdomen. The outer or 

 upper pair are half as long 



as the abdomen, and the two joints are nearly of equal length. 

 The tracheal opening is in the middle of the abdomen, nearer 

 the epigynum than the spinnerets. The sternum is as wide as 

 long, widest opposite the second legs. The maxillae are straight 



Figs. 250, 251. Hahnia bimaculata. — 



250, female enlarged twelve times. 



251, under side showing the peculiar 

 arrangement of the spinnerets. 



