Arachnida, etc. 15') 



Family SCYTODID^. 

 6. Scytodes (Dictis) venusta, Thor. 



Dietis ventisfa, Thorell : Aun. Mus. Geneva (2), 1889-90, viii, p. 301. 



Several specimens apparently identical witli B. venusta, Thorell, 

 •whicli has hitherto been recorded only from Sumatra. 



Family PHOLCID^. 

 7. Smeringopus elongatus (Vinson). 



Fholcus clongatm, Vinson : Aran, des iles . . . Reunion, Maurice, et 



" Madagascar, 1863, p. 135, jil. iii, fig-. 5. 

 Pholcus distmctus, 0. V. Canibr. : Jouru. Linn. Soc, 1869, x, p. 380, pi. xi, 

 figs. 28-30. 



" Flying Fish Cove. In houses." 



Widely distributed in the tropics of both hemispheres. 



Family AEGIOPID^. 

 8. Argiope reinwardti (Dol.). (PL XVI, Fig. 2.) 



Epeira trifasciata, Doleschall : Nat. Tijdschrift Xederland. Indie. 1857, xiii 

 (ser. Ill, vol. iii), p. 416. Verli. Nat. Vereen. Nederland. Indie, 

 1858-9, V, pi. i, fig. 3 {noiiK preocc). 



Epeira reinwardti, id.: loc. cit., p. 31, pi. xv, fig. o. 



Argiope doleschallii, Thorell : Remarks on Syn., 1873, p. 520 ; Ann. Mus. 

 Geneva, 1878, xiii, p. 38. 



" Common eveiywhero ; geometrical vreb in forest. "Web 

 furnished with narrow vertical white band of thick silk, crossing 

 centre. Spider rests in form of an X-" 



Ranges from Java to Amboina. 



In the typical Javan form of this species, as figured by 

 Doleschall, the two anterior abdominal stripes are separated by 

 a wider dark space than is observable in any of the Christmas Island 

 specimens. Unfortunately we have scarcely any material from Java 

 wherewith to test the constancy of this character in the typical 

 form. I3ut since in the Christmas Island form the two yellow stripes 

 are sometimes in contact in the middle line, sometimes separated 

 by a naiTow space, it is justifiable to assume that Javan specimens 

 will be found to vary in a similar way. 



A figure of the species is published on PI. XVI, as being 

 the most beautiful and one of the most plentiful spiders on the 

 island. 



