406 J. H. Emerton — Canadian Spiders. 



They are 12™™ long, cephalothorax, 4™™, larger than the common 

 White Mountain specimens. The color is the usual black and gray 

 with bright white markings on the abdomen, and the femora of the 

 hind legs are slightly reddish. The epigynum is shown in PI. i, fig. 

 46, for comparison with that of JEJ. aculeata. 



Zilla montana C. Koch ; Z. montana Em. 



Ship Harbor, Nova Scotia. Also found on Mt. Washington, New 

 Hampshire. 



Singa variabilis Em., New Eng. Epeiridae, 1884. 



Female from Ellis Bay, Anticosti I. Also from Peak's I., Port- 

 land, Me.; Eastern Massachusetts; New Haven, Connecticut. 



Argiope transversa Em.; Epeira fasciata Hentz. 



Ottawa, J. B. Tyrrell, common all over the United States, but 

 probably lives no farther north than the southern parts of Maine 

 and Canada. 



Tetragnatha extensa Linn. ; Tlior. ; T. extensa Em. 



Anticosti I. and Entry L, Gulf of St. Lawrence. Saskatchewan 

 River, S. H. Scudder. Adirondacks. White Mountains. Massa- 

 chusetts. Connecticut. Also a common European species. 



Pachygnatha brevis Eeyserling, Zool. Bot. G-. Wien, 1883. 

 P. tristriata Keys., Zool. Bot. Gess., 1882. 

 P. brevis Em , New Eng. Epeiridse. 



Montreal. New England. 



Theridium sexpunctatum Emerton, New Eng. Therididae, 1882. 



English Head, Anticosti. Mt. Washington, New Hampshire. 



Steatoda guttata (Reuss) Thor. ; ^S*. guttata Emerton. 



Bryon I,, Gulf of St. Lawrence. Niapisca L, near coast of Lab- 

 rador. Common in New England. 



Steatoda borealis Em., New Eng. Therididae. 



Theridion horeale Hentz. 



Montreal. White Mts. Eastport, Maine. Common about houses 

 all over New England. Theridium quadripunctatum Blackwall in 



