176 SUBANTARCTIC ISLANDS OF NEW ZEALAND. [Spiders and Opilwnes. 



The eyes in both of these species from the Snares Islands seem more closely to 

 resemble those of M. Simon's M. caffer than do those of M. hamiltoni, while the latter, 

 in their greater procurvature, are more like those of M. kergudenensis, Cambr. 

 The male palp, pattern of abdomen, and other points are like M. kergudenensis. 



One male and one female, from the Snares Islands. 



Genus Pacificana, H. R. Hogg. 

 Pacificana, H. R. Hogg, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 7, vol. xiii, p. 65, 1904. 



Pacificana cockayni, H. R. Hogg. 



Pacificana cockayni, H. R. Hogg, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 7, vol. xiii, 

 p. 66, text-figure 1, 1904. 



One male and four females, collected on Bounty Islands by Dr. Cockayne in 

 1903, and forwarded to me by Professor Charles Chilton, of Canterbury College. 



The genus Pacificana is known only from the Bounty Islands ; it is allied to 

 Emmenomma, Simon, founded for a species found on the islands Hoste and Hermite, 

 adjacent to Cape Horn, and to Ommatauxesis, Simon, from Tasmania. 



Fam. SALTICIDAE. 



Group MAEPISSEAE. 



Genus Clynotis, E, Simon. 



Clynotis, E. Simon, Hist. Nat. des Ar., vol. ii, p. 611, 1901. Icius, L. Koch, 

 At. Austr., 1879, p. 1127. 



Clynotis barresis, nov. sp. (Plate VIII, figs. Qa^^.) 



M. Simon states {loc. cit., p. 600) that the species described by L. Koch as of 

 the genus Icius do not belong to his genus, widely spread as it is over Europe, Asia, 

 and Africa. He therefore formed for them the new genus Clynotis. 



The specimens here described (one male and two females, from Campbell Island, 

 collected by Messrs. Des Barres and Chambers) appear to belong to the genus in 

 question. The front row of eyes are not quite so much recurved as described in 

 some of the species. They are rather close to C. semiater, L. Koch, but, except in 

 the legs, differ in their brighter colouring, and the 3rd pair of legs shorter than the 

 2nd, instead of being equal to them. 



Male. — The cephalothorax is dark orange, with large black blotches between the 

 small eyes, round the rear eyes, and over the rear slope, black all round the sides, 

 with pale-yellow hair. At the sides of the eye-space the hairs are bright yellow, 

 inclining to red. The eyes are all yellow, the rear pair on black rims. The clypeus 

 overhangs the point of insertion of the mandibles, and in the space between are 

 long stout bristly hairs. The mandibles are dark yellow-brown ; fangs yellow- 

 brown. The lip and maxillae are dark yellow-brown. The front pair of legs have the 

 femur, patella, tibia, and metatarsus dark (but not black) brown, with dark-brown 

 upstanding and pale-yellow downlying hair. The tarsal joint is paler yellow-brown, 

 with pale bristles at the anterior end. The spines are black. The other legs are 



