NOKTHTJMBERT.AND AND DURHAM. 67 



Glubiona reclusa, Cb. 



Clubionarechisa, Cambridge. Trans. Linn. Soc, vol. XXYIII., 



tab. 33, fig. 3. 



I^. Wooler, adults, male and female, D. Durham. I have 

 taken the male only in the Durham woods. The female may 

 readily be distinguished from its known congeners by some fine 

 marbling on the cephalothorax. Habits similar to those of the 

 foregoing. In the Midlands I have taken the female with her 

 .cocoon beween two leaves (Laurel, Meadow-sweet, Ash) spun 

 together. 



Glubiona lutescens, Wcstr. 



Cluhiona assimilata, Cambridge. Zoologist (1862), p. 7953. 

 ,, lutescens, Koch. Die Arachn.-fam. d. Drassiden, 

 p. 36, Taf. XIII., figs. 217-219. 



D. Durham. Pretty plentiful in the woods at Durham. I 

 have not noticed it elsewhere in our two counties, but found it 

 tolerably abundant in Leicestershire. Adult males may be found 

 roaming about in April ; females are more frequent later. The 

 latter very much resemble the females of the three preceding 

 species. I have taken male and female in copula in May. 



Glubiona pallidula, (Clk.). 



Araiiea pallidula, Clk. Sv. Spindl., p. 81, pi. II., tab. 7. 

 Cluhiona epimelas, Blackwall. Op. cit., p. 124, pl.YII., fig. 77. 



N. Wooler, an adult male. D. Durham, a few females, with 

 cocoons, in July. 



Glubiona compta, C. L. K. 



Cluhiona comta, Blackwall. Op. cit., p. 128, pi, VII., fig. 81. 



N. Wooler, Morpeth, Bardon Mill. D. Durham, Teesdale, 

 Wolsingham. One of the commonest of the genus, and the 

 prettiest. Blackwall' s figure may be somewhat misleading to a 

 beginner. All the adults I have seen present red-brown bars on 

 a yellowish ground j not vice versa. Habits and time of maturity 



