rask Rs Gøs rr sagn c 
417 
is about twice as broad as long and adorned with four thick bran- 
ches; the outer branches are a little shorter than the plate, sub- 
conical and terminating in a short, setiform process which seems to 
be marked off by a suture; the inner branches consist of two parts, 
the basal one is considerably longer than the plate, thick and cy- 
lindrical, at its end are inserted two very short, robust hairs, and 
the distal part, which is considerably thicker than the basal one, 
is quite membranous (fig. 4 k) and shaped as an oblong oblique 
sac covered with exceedingly short and delicate pubescence. — The 
animåls- have been captured at Genova (Italy) by Dr. F. Sil- 
vestri, who presented them to our Museum, having determined them 
as Eur. Latzelii Cook. 
List of the Species of Eurypauropodidæ. 
The papers in which the forms have been described are men- 
tioned in my ,,Historical Notes" (p. 324—26). 
Euryp. spinosus Ryder; Massachusetts, New York and Indiana. 
—  ornatus Latzel; Austria (in Lower-Austria). 
—  cycliger Latzel (according to Daday —= Trachypauropus 
glomeroides Tåmåsvary); Austria — Hungary. 
—  Latzelii Cook (= E. spinosus Latzel, not Ryder); Austria 
(Carinthia) and Italy (Genova). 
—  hastatus v. Attems; Austria (Steiermark). 
—  poecillifer Silvestri; Italy (Bevagna). 
Trachypauropus margaritaceus Tådmåsvary; Hungary. 
Vidensk. Medd. fra den naturh. Foren. 1901. 27 
