524 REV. O. P. CAMBRIDGE ON NEW AND RARE BRITISH SPIDERS. 
(Linn. Trans. loc. sup. cit. under the name of De Greyii is that of Clerck's species. 
L. piscatoria, Blackw., is a totally different spider (vide next infra). 
LycosA HYGROPHILA. 
Lycosa uliginosa, Westr. Ar. Suec. p. 533, ad partem. 
Pirata hygrophilus, Thor. Syn. Europ. Spid. p. 343 et seq. 
Lycosa piscatoria, Blackw. Spid. Gr. Brit. p. 34, pl. ii. fig. 16. 
The certainty of the above synonyms has been established by careful comparison of 
English and Swedish types; the specific name piscatoria, thus belonging to the foregoing 
spider, gives place to that by which the present species has been renamed by Dr. Thorell 
(loc. sup. cit.). 
LYCOSA CUNEATA. 
Araneus cuneatus, Clerck, Sv. Spindl. p. 99, pl. 4. tab. 11. 
Lycosa ` — Cambr. Linn. Trans. xxvii. p. 398 (exclude synonymic reference to L. barbipes, 
Sundevall, which is a different species). 
—— cuneata, Sund. Sv. Spindl. Beskr. Vet.-Akad. Handl. 1832, p. 187; Thorell, Syn. Eur. Spid. 
p. 330. 
The spider described as L. barbipes by Sundevall (loc. sup. cit.) is said by Thorell to be 
the northern form of L. andrenivora, Walck. [and Blackw. |= L. inquilina (Koch), differ- 
ing from it by the tibiæ of the first pair of legs being tumid (or incrassated), but cy¿in- 
drical, and not oval, nor with an oblique transverse impression on the sides, as in 
L. cuneata (Clerck). But this difference between L. barbipes, Sund., and L. andrenivora, 
Bl. & Walck., would seem sufficient to distinguish them specifically from each other. 
Dr. Thorell, however, thinks otherwise (Syn. Eur. Spid. p. 319). 
Lycosa cuneata seems to be rare and local in England ; in addition to the locality men- 
tioned (Linn. Trans. xxvii. p. 398), it was met with by myself on the Brighton racecourse 
in June 1871. | 
LYCOSA LEOPARDUS. 
Pirata leopardus, Sund. Sv. Spindl. Beskr, Vet.-Akad. Handl. f. 1832, p. 189. 
Lycosa cambrica, Blackw. Spid. Gr. Brit. p. 32, pl. ii. fig. 14. 
leopardus, 'Thor. Syn. Europ. Spid. p. 331. 
From examples sent him by myself, Dr. Thorell has decided Mr. Blackwall's Lycosa 
cambrica to be identical with P. leopardus (Sund.); the latter name, therefore, having 
been conferred some years previously to the former, has precedence. 
Lycosa TRAILLH, sp.n. (Pl. XLVI. fig. 1.) 
Male adult, length 3 lines; female adult, nearly 4 lines. 
In general form this spider most resembles Lycosa saccata (Bl). The colour of the 
cephalothorax is deep reddish-brown, the caput black, and the thoracie portion marked 
with rather indistinct converging blackish stripes. This portion is slightly pubescent ; and 
the caput has numerous long, strong, black, bristly hairs upon it. The two eyes of the 
