177 

 THE SPIDERS OF YORKSHIRE. 



WM. FALCONER F.E.S. 



Slaithwaite, Huddersfield. 



{Contintied from page 86). 



Xysticus kochii Thor. 



Rarer than the last and of much more restricted range ; 

 commoner in the south than in the north of England ; absent 

 from Irish list, but recorded for St. Kilda and widely distributed 

 on the Continent. Season as in the last. First occurrence — 

 R. Butterfield, Wilsden, May, 1907. 



V.C. 61. — Wildcat Lane, near Hull, several examples, T.S. [Trans. 

 Hull Nat. Fd. Club, 1908). 



V.C. 63. — Wilsden, i o ; Grassington, i ^, R.B. 

 X. pini Hahn. 



Common in the south of England, but rare in the north and with 

 a wide Continental range ; in Ireland, has occurred in Munster ; 

 on furze, etc. Season as in the last. 



V.C. 62. — Langdale End, i adult $, R.A.T., June, 1914. 

 X. sabulosus Hahn. 



Widely distributed in Gt. Britain as far north as the Grampians, 

 but much commoner in the south than in the north ; found in 

 three localities in Connaught and abroad in Sweden, Belgium, 

 France, Germany, Hungary, Spain and Greece. Season as in 

 the last. 



V.C. 62.— Eston Moor, i 9, April, 1911, J.W.H. 

 X, erraticus Bl. 



Not common, but widely distributed in Ireland and Wales, and 

 a few widely separated localities in England and Scotland, 

 as far north as Aberdeen. Abroad — Scandinavia, Belgium, 

 north-east France and Central Europe. Adult from spring to 

 autumn. First occurrence — T. Stainforth, Spurn, May, 1908. 



V.C. 61. — Spurn, 2 $s, and cliffs north of Bridlington, i $ ; Snake 

 Hall Moor, ^, T.S. 



V.C. 62. — Eston, not imcommonly amongst rubbish under whin 

 bushes, J.W.H. 

 X. ulnii Hahn* 



In England of more southern range being reported from Dorset, 

 Sussex, Glamorgan, Oxford, Wicken Fen, Lines., Staffs., and 

 Northumberland ; not yet known from Scotland, but recorded 

 from five localities in Leinster. Abroad, extending from Nor- 

 way (64° N.) through Sweden, Belgium and north-east France, 

 Germany, Austria, Hungary and Croatia to south Riissia. 

 In similar situations to the rest of the genus and usually plentiful 

 where found . 



V.C. 63. — Martin Beck Wood, 2 adult $s, and immature examples, 

 July, 1917, C. 



Gen. Oxyptila Sim., 4-9. 

 O. atomaria Panz. 



Widely distributed in Ireland and reported from various 

 localities in Great Britain as far north as the Grampians ; 

 continental range also extensive. Much less abundant than 

 its near ally, O. triix Bl. Adult summer and autumn. First 

 record — T. Stainforth, Spurn, June, 1908. 



* X. ulmi Hahn. sub Thomisus Westimoodii Camb., Trans. Linn. Soc., 

 Vol. XXVII, p. 405, recorded as from Yorkshire, should have been 

 ■described as from Oxfordshire. 



1921 May 1 



