300 MR. H. R. HOGG ON SOME 



Group Abgyhonete^^:. 

 Genus Oambridgea. 

 Cambridgba antipodiana White- 

 One female from Mt. Peel, Mr. R. N. Hftvvke.s. 



Family PISAURID^E. 



Group DOLOMEDEM, 



Genus DoLOMBDES Latr, 



DoLDMEDEg TRIDENT ATUS, Sp. n, 



One female from Dunedin, Mr, G. M. Thomson. 



Family LYCOSID^, 



Group Pardose^. 



Genus Pardosa C, Koch, 



(Probably) P, cajjescens Goyen, 



Lycosa canescens Goyen, Trans. JST.Z, Inst, vol, xix. p. 203. 



The specimens, one male and one female, agree closely with 

 Mr, Goyen's description of his species, which he states he always 

 found on river banks. Prof, Chilton collected this from a mud- 

 bank in Picton Harbour, and I have little doubt as to its being 

 the same. Its short broad lip, square front, two large equal 

 teeth and one smaller on the inner margin of the falx-sheath, and 

 procurved front row of eyes, show clearly that it belongs to 

 0. Koch's genus Pardosa, and this would follow from Mr. Goyen's 

 description of the lip alone, 



Tetragnatha PER0J5: L, Koch, var, crosSjE, nov, (Text-fig. 92.) 



Female, Cephalothorax, mandibles, maxillae, coxfe, and legs 

 orange-yellow. The lip, except on the front edge, is yellow-brown 

 and the stejrnum somewhat darker. The scanty hairing is rather 

 pale brown, and the spines on the legs dark brown. The cephalic 

 part of the cephalothorax is bordered with a somewhat browner 

 line, but with white hairs thereon, and there are two jDairs of 

 rather darker spots on the front of the rear slope. The abdomen 

 above is yellow-grey, bordered with a dark grey wavy line on each 

 side, the whole distance from front to rear. There are short white 

 hairs rather thicker on the side slopes than on the back. Under- 

 neath it is a dingy yellow-grey with short brown hairs; there is a 

 rather darker area running from the spinnerets to the breathing- 

 apertures and epigyne. 



The cephalothorax is a long oval, not quite twice as long as 

 bi"oad, rounded at the sides, the cephalic part distinctly raised above 

 the thoracic. Between the end of the former apd the rear slope 



