.3i^> Falconer : The Spiders of Yorkshire. 



mass of decaying vegetable matter, green mould and soil at the 

 roots of ling and bilberry ; near Pole Moor ; Scout Wood 

 (Merridale) ; Honley Old Wood ; Storthes Hall Wood ; Marsden 

 Clough and Morton Wood (Holmfirth) ; Upper Stones Wood 

 (Stocksmoor) ; Hcbden Bridge. 



V.C. 64.— Malham, T.St.; Ilkley, R.B. ; Ingleborough, Keighley 

 Burley-in-Wharfedale, Saltaire, W. P. W. ; Knaresborough 

 district, Y.N.U. ; Sawley district, S.M., W.F. ; Ingleton ; 

 Grassington ; Airton ; Stainforth Force ; Hare wood Park. 



V.C. 65. — Upper Teesdale, Y.N.U. ; Semmerdale ; Whitfield Force. 



Fam. Hahniid.^, 5-6. 



Gen. Antistea Sim., i-i. 

 A. elegaus C. L. Koch. 



A hygrophilous species haunting sphagnum bogs and other damp 

 places ; widely distributed in the British Isles as far north as 

 Moray Firth and on the Continent in the N., W., and Central 

 countries. Adult May to September. First occurrence — the 

 author, Standedge, July, 1899. 



V.C. 61. — Weedley Springs (S. Cave), 2 ^s, Allerthorpe Common, ^, 

 and Brantingham, T.S. ; Skipwith Common, many both sexes. 



V.C. 62. — Normanby Intake Plantation, J.W.H.; Eston Moor, $; 

 Ringing keld Bog, Cloughton ; Scalby Mill. 



V.C. 63. — Hurst Wood (Shipley), W.P.W. ; common in most of the 

 sphagnum bogs amongst the hills in the Huddersfield district, 

 Standedge, Pule, Clowes Moor and Wessenden Valley (Marsden), 

 Chew Valley (Greenfield), Booth Banks (Slaithwaite), Meltham ; 

 Broad Oak (Linthwaite), both sexes in a dry barn (carted in 

 with hay). 



V.C. 64.— Brim Bray and High Moor, Sawley, S.M., W.F. ; Adel 

 Bog ; Ilkley. 



Gen. Hahnia C. L. Koch, 4-5. 

 H . helveola Sim. 



A rare British spider which has occurred in X. and S. Wales, 

 Dorset, Staffs., Cheshire, Lake District, Northumberland ; 

 Lanarkshire and Rannoch (Scotland) ; absent from Ireland and 

 known elsewhere in three European countries, France, Germany, 

 Switzerland. Adult April to October. First occurrence — the 

 author, Butternab Wood, September, 1900. 



V.C. 61. — Brantingham Dale, i $, T.S. 



V.C. 63.— Calverley, i $, S.M. ; Deffer Wood (Cawthorn) i $; 

 Butternab Wood (Huddersfield), a few $s ; Bott( ms Wood 

 fSIaithwaite) , one $; Drop Clough (iMarsden), end of April and 

 beginning of May, 1907, adult and imm. ^s abundant in cavities 

 of the ground under stones, and in October adults of both sexes 

 near the old quarry, less plentifully on other dates. 



V.C. 64. — Giggleswick Scar, i 9- 



H. nava Bl. 



Rare in Ireland but widely distributed and sometimes abundant 

 in England and Scotland ; abroad, France, Corsica, Austria, 

 Hungary, Germany, Sweden ; at the roots of herbage, under 

 stones and on railings and walls. Adult ]\Iay to August. h'irst 

 occurrence — T. Stainforth, Bielsbeck, August, 190S. 

 V.C. 61.— Bielsbeck, i 9, T.S. 



V.C. 62. — Basedale, Easby Moor and Gt. Ayton, i 9 ^t each place, 

 J.W.H. ; Langdale End, near Scarborough, i ^, R..\.T. 



(To be continued ). 



Naturalist 



