SPIDERS FROM SOUTH ANNAM. 



301 



Family Agalenid.e. 

 Genus Agalena Walck. 



AgALENA DORIS, sp. n. 



The cephalothorax dark brown at sides, with paler brown 

 median stripe reaching from the rear row of eyes to the rear 

 slope. The hairy covering is plumose, smooth brown at the sides 

 and white on the median area. The mandibles, lip, and maxillte 

 are pale yellow-brown, with similar white hair to that on the 

 cephalothorax, the sternum darker, the hair longer and pointing 

 forwards, the coxae pale, with short plumose hair and longer 

 iipstanding bristles. The legs and palpi pale brown, banded 

 with white hairs, but darker on the under side of the femur. The 

 abdomen is yellowish grey all over, with scattered plumose white 

 hair. The eyes are topaz-yellow. 



Text-fio-iire 8. 



1. Affalena dorls, SY>- i^'^-> ^ ■ «> eyes. 



2. Agalena tenuis, sp. n., S • 



h, spinnerets of botli species; c, lips and maxilla; of both species; 

 d, male palp of A. tenuis; e, eyes of A. tenuis. 



The cephalic part of the cephalothorax is straight and narrow, 

 truncate in front, the thoracic part sloping rather steeply there- 

 from to the side-margins. The rear row of eyes are equal and 

 equidistant their diameter apart, and so far procurved that a 

 line across the upper points of the laterals is wholly below the 

 lower edge of the median. The front row is shorter and like- 

 wise procurved, the eyes about the same size as the rear row, 

 beino- about two-thirds of their diameter apart, and only so much 

 procurved that the upper points of the laterals reach as far back 

 as the centres of the median. 



Proc. Zool. Soc— 1922, No. XXI. 2i 



