Arachnlda. 7947 



Family Dbassid.e. 



Clubiona assimilata, Cai/ib. New to Science. Among specimens 

 of C. amarantha captured at Bloxworth and Southport I found an 

 adult male of this species (taken, I believe, at Southport), and received 

 another from the Rev. T. W. Huthwaite, taken at Coven, StaflFordshire. 

 Smee preparing a description of it I have found adidt males of this 

 same species, included under the name "amarantha," in the collection 

 of Mr. Meade, of Bradford, Yorkshire. 



C. neglecta, Caiub. New to Science. This species was also mis- 

 taken for C. amarantha, to which, like the last, it bears a strong gene- 

 ral resemblance; it (an adult male) was captured at Bloxworth. 



C. deinognatha, Cai7ib. New to Science. An adult male of this 

 very distinct Clubiona was captured at Bloxworth several years ago, 

 but was overlooked among a large number of specimens of C. ama- 

 rantha, from which the large size of the falces at once distinguishes it. 



C. diversa, Camb. New to Science. An adult male of this minute 

 Clubiona was received from Mr. C. H. Brown, who captured it at 

 Southport, Lancashire, in June. 



C. trivialis, Koch. Adult males and females of this species (now 

 first recorded as British) have been captured by myself at Southport, 

 Lancashire ; Hursley and Lyndhurst, Hampshire ; and at Bloxworth, 

 on furze-bushes and among heath. Mr. Blackwall tells me he finds' 

 females of this species in his collection, that he met with in similar 

 situations, some years ago, in North Wales. I also captured it on the 

 Pentland Hills, Scotland, in July last. 



Family Ciniflonid^. 

 Ergatis arborea, Ca7?ib. New to Science. Adults of both sexes of this 

 spider were captured by myself in May, 1860, at Hursley and Lynd- 

 hurst, and subsequently at Bloxworth. It is closely allied to E. be- 

 nigna, but is smaller, different in the structure of the palpi, and in its 

 habitat. 



Family Agelenid^. 



*Agelena subfusca, Camb. I have found, occasionally, adult males of 

 this species on walls and posts at Bloxworth, apparently intercepted 

 while on an aerial excursion. The female has hitherto escaped notice. 



Tegenaria silvicola, JValck. I found an adult female, and many 

 immature specimens of both sexes, under moss and loose stones on 

 walls, at the foot of the Pentland Hills, in June. 



