70 MR. C. J. WITH ON SOME NEW SPECIES OF 



Leg IV.: femur 0'372 (()-140), trochantin 0*122 ; tibia 0-304 (0-091); 

 tarsus I. 0-160 (0-057) ; tarsus ii. 0-122 (0-050) mm. 



Material. — 0£ this species I have examined a single female, collected in the 

 month of August in thickets near stream, in brush, near Balthazar (windwai'd) , 

 Island o£ Grenada. 



Remarks. — The described form differs from G. cwjahanus, Balz. (5. p. 441, 

 and 6. p. 549) by the very differently-shaped galea, by the absence of a 

 transverse suture on the cephalothorax, by the femur of the palps, which is 

 3-2 instead of 3-5 as long as wide, and by the shorter hand, which is not so 

 long as the finger, and last, but not least, by the less slender legs, which in 

 the fourth pair have the jfirst tarsal joint much longer than the second (cf. 5. 

 fig. 22). All these differences taken in consideration, and remembering that 

 other members of the Ch. irrugatus group (c/. 18. p. 101), to which this species 

 belongs, have the galea alike in both sexes, I feel obliged to establish a new 

 species. The examined specimen was covered with a number of " spores 

 of fungi" (c/:i8. p. 152). 



3. Gaeypus floridensis, Banks. (Plate 9. figs. 26-28 ; cf. With, 18. fig. 9, 

 p. 41, tab. 2. figs. 4 a-d.) 



1895. Banks, (9) p. 9. 



?. 



Cephalothorax (PI. 9. fig. 26). — Anterior pair of ei/es slightly removed 

 from lateral margin, but from the front margin a distance equal to three times 

 their diameter. The cephalothorax, which is much longer than wide behind, 

 is gradually attenuated towards the second pair of eyes, but in front distinctly 

 narrows, forming a fairly long cucullus with a deep notch in the middle 

 of the front margin. Two almost straight transverse grooves, of which the 

 posterior is the deepest, are found, the anterior being placed much nearer to 

 the hindmost than to the front margin. The skin is granular, with short 

 obtuse hairs. 



Abdomen. — The fairly long and slender abdomen has all the tergites but the 

 first, partly second, and eleventh divided longitudinally by a broad band. 

 The sclerites appear somewhat granular, and along the hindmost row of the 

 tergites 12-14 short somewhat obtuse hairs are placed, in addition to two 

 lateral in front of row on each side. 



Antennce. — The galea, which extends distinctly beyond the terminal hair, 

 has about six terminal and ventral branches (cf. 18. tab. ii. fig. 4 c). The 

 serrula exterior has median teeth, the shortest increasing in length towards 

 the basal and terminal ones, of which the former is the longer (cf. 18. fig. 4 c). 

 The flag ellum consists of three short somewhat dentated hairs (cf. 18. fig. 4&), 

 and the lamina interior consists behind the terminal spine of a number of 

 fairly well-marked squarely truncate " teeth." 



