42 Deutsch. Ent. Zeitschr. 1910. 



Dorsal side (Fig. 4). Shields. Anterior dorsal sliield 

 not occupying the space between the edges of the body , sur- 

 rounded by a narrow band or margin of weak skin , widened 

 before the prosomatic hairs, constricted between these hairs, and 

 linally again widened behind the hairs , being here as wide as 

 the body. — Posterior dorsal shield divided in a large middle 

 shield and a small posterior one. The middle shield is separated 

 from the anterior one by a wide band of weak skin ; from the 

 edges of the body it is also separated by a margin of weak skin ; 

 this margin is narrower anteriorly ; posteriorly the shield touches 

 the edges by two rounded outgrows ; posterior edge of the shield 

 excavate or concave and separated from the posterior shield by 

 a narrow streak of weak skin. The shape of the shield is more 

 or less trapezoidal , much longer than wide ; widest anteriorly. 

 Posterior shield nearly semicircular , covering the top of the 

 abdomen, and provided in its centre with a small oval weak spot. 

 Hairs. Vertical hairs widely separate from each other , short, 

 bristly. Long prosomatic hairs nearly as long as the width of 

 the body. Inwardly of these hairs stand the minute small pro- 

 somatic hairs. On the anterior margin of the middle dorsal shield 

 a pair of minute hairs, separate from each other more than the 

 long prosomatic hairs. On the lateral margins of the middle 

 shield , on a level with the distal ends of femura III a pair of 

 minute hairs. On the posterior lateral rounded outgrows of the 

 middle shield a pair of minute hairs. On the edge of the Shoulders 

 a short hair. On the anterior margin of the posterior shield 

 near the lateral edge a pair of minute hairs. On the lateral 

 margins a pair of short hairs. On the posterior margin of it 

 two pairs of trailing hairs about as long as the width of the 

 body (the inner pair longer than the outer one) and a pair of 

 inmost small hairs. 



Ventral side (Fig. 5). E p i m e r a I free ; epimera II 

 slightly shorter, parallel to epimera I ; epimera III still shorter, 

 straight , parallel to each other , distally provided with short 

 external epimerite , standing perpendicularly to the epimera. 

 Epimera IV like epimera III, but a little convergent forwardly. — 

 Shields. In the angles formed by the epimera III and IV with 

 their epimerites there are almost Square extracoxal plates. — 

 Hairs. Inwardly of the proximal ends of epimera II a pair of 

 short hairs. Inwardly of the ends of the epigynium a pair of 

 ditto. Behind this pair another pair of ditto. Between the ends 

 of the epigynium and the epimera III a pair of ditto. Between 

 the epimera IV a pair of ditto. Aside of the anterior end of 

 the anal split a pair of ditto. On the extracoxal plates III the 



