588 MR. H. R. HOGG ON [ Dec. 12 
Two females brought by the Horn Expedition from the 
MacDonnell Ranges. 
This species rather closely resembles L. Koch’s Z. crispipes from 
Rockhampton, though larger. It is more faintly marked on the 
cephalothorax, and is without the pattern on the back of the 
abdomem. The lower edge of the front row of eyes is straight 
instead of procurved, and the epigyne is broader at the base, 
which curls round instead of ending at the base of the horseshoe 
parts. 
In this species the cephalothorax is as long as patella cwm 
tibia iv. L. Koch says that in Z. erispipes it is longer than 
tibia iv. 
DOLOMEDES HABILIS, sp. nov. (Text-fig. 89.) 
Cephalothorax chocolate-brown, with a narrow pale yellow- 
brown stripe reaching from the second row of eyes to the rear 
slope, and a similar stripe on each side of the cephalothorax at 
about one-third of the distance from the margin to the middle 
line. 
Text-fig. 89. 
Dolomedes habilis. 
a, eyes from front; 6b, epigyne. 
The mandibles are black-brown, thickly covered with long 
yellow-brown hair. The lip and maxille yellow-brown ; sternum 
rather more yellow. Legs and palpi yellow-brown all over, 
brighter underneath. The : abdomen is yellow-brown, of the same 
shade as the upper side of the legs. The sides paler yellow- brown 
in the front half, merging into the same colour as that of the back 
towards the rear, the paler part being divided from the hack by a 
