6500 Arachnida. 



L. terricola. Blox worth. 



L. anthracina. Bloxworth. 



L. pulla. Bloxworth. 



L. alacris. Bloxworth. 



L. ericaea. On the sand-hills, Southport, October, 1858. 



L. insignis. Bloxworth and Lyndhurst. 



Neriene bicolor. Bloxworth, Bradford, and Southport. 



N. livida. Bradford. 



N. flavipes. Bloxworth. 



N. cornuta. Bloxworth. 



N. rubens. Bloxworth. 



N. longipalpis. In University College Quadrangle, Durham, 

 November, 1857. 



N. trilineata. Common everywhere. 



N. rubella. Bloxworth. 



N. variegata. Lyndhurst and Southport. 



N. affinis. Lyndhurst, August, 1858 ; Mr. Blackwall had never 

 before seen the adult female, but had little doubt of its specific 

 identity. 



Walckenaera cuspidata. Beneath a stone, Portland, September, 

 1858. 



Pachygnatha Listeri. Bloxworth ; rare. 



P. Degeerii. Bloxworth, but not common. 



Family Epeirid^e. 



Epeira quadrata. Females very common at Bloxworth and Lynd- 

 hurst, though I never obtained but one male. 



E. apoclisa. Common everywhere. 



E. scalaris. Bloxworth and Lyndhurst, but not common. 



E. umbratica. Not uncommon at Bloxworth, Ringwood, and in 

 the New Forest. 



E. Agalena. Bloxworth. 



E. solers. One of the commonest spiders on the Heath, both at 

 Lyndhurst and Bloxworth. 



E. similis. Bloxworth, and in verandahs at Weymouth. 



E. calophylla. Very common among furze bushes on Bloxworth 

 Heath. 



E. acalypha. This species was discovered by myself on Bloxworth 

 Heath in June, 1853, but was not recorded as a native of Britain until 

 after its capture by Mr. Meade in 1856 ; it is very abundant on the heath 

 at Bloxworth and Lyndhurst in September and October, and a dozen 

 or more may be seen on one heath plant, as close together as they can 



