504 DRASSID ZL. 
THE family of the Drassidée is spread over the greater part of the world. They all have a 
rather remarkable habit of concealing themselves, not in holes or crevices, but in silken cells, 
spun by themselves among leaves, under stones, in chinks of walls, and, in fine, wherever their 
instinct leads them. They are active creatures, and catch their prey by fair chase, in one 
instance even pursuing the victim beneath the surface of the water. 
The species shown at Fig. B never attains to any great size, two-fifths of an inch seeming 
to be the ordinary length of a female, the male, of course, measuring rather less. It generally 
resides under stones, and but for that habit would be seen oftener than is now the case. The 
cocoon of the female is pure white, and contains rather more than one hundred eggs of a very 
pale yellow color. The cocoon is then placed in a larger sac, also made of white silk, and 
placed in a hole in the ground. The mother spider generally includes herself in this second 
sac. The color is alike in both sexes, being of a pale reddish-brown. 
At Fig. F. is shown another species of the same genus, and at Fig. E is drawn a portion 
of a twig, showing the manner in which the female deposits her eggs. The reader will 
probably have seen these curious little egg pyramids on the branches of various trees. This 
species is very small, the male measuring barely the eighth of an inch in length. It is rather 
prettily colored. The limbs are buff, with a large patch of chocolate-brown on the first two 

A. Clubiéna holosericea. (Male.) D. Clubiéna holosericea, (Female.) 
B. Drassus ctipreus. E. Drassus micans. (Eggs.) 
C. Drassus cipreus. (Nest in dried leaf.) F, Drassus micans 
G. Clotho durandii. 
pairs. The cephalo-thorax is ruddy leaf-brown, with six white streaks, their points converging 
to a spot in the central line. The abdomen is deep black in the shade, but when the light 
shines upon it, various iridescent hues of purple, green, and copper are given out, rendering 
the creature a really beautiful species. The name of ‘‘ micans,”’ or glittering, is applied to the 
creature on-account of its changing colors. 
At Figs. A and D are shown the two sexes of a curious and prettily marked spider of 
moderate dimensions, the female measuring nearly half an inch in length. 
This species is mostly found in well-wooded districts, living-in a pretty white silken 
house, which it spins under the shelter of rough bark or shady leaves. The cocoon containing 
the eggs is placed in this cell, and affectionately tended by the parent. The cocoon is also 
made of white silk, and generally contains rather more than one hundred spherical eges. 
These are very pale yellow in color, and laid loosely in the cocoon. The cephalo-thorax of this 
species is pale dull green, and the abdomen is soft silken gray, with a peculiar velvety lustre, 
produced by the dense clothing of hair with which it is covered. The specific name “ holo- 
, signifies silken, and is therefore very appropriately given to the species. 
Another species of this genus is termed O7ubiona nutriz. Tt is rather larger than the 
generality of the Clubionas, being nearly three-quarters of an inch in length. The reader must 
understand that the leneth is exclusive of the limbs, and is measured from the front of the 
cephalo-thorax to the end of the abdomen. This is a very rare creature. 
sericea 
