154 AMERICAN SPIDERS AND THEIR SPINNINGWORK. 
eyes not greatly differing in size; MF removed about 1.3 diameter; MR about one diameter; 
side eyes upon tubercles; SF removed from MF by a space not greater than, and scarcely 
as great as that which separates MF, thus differing entirely from the eyes of the genus Epeira ; 
the space between SR and MR is at least twice the interval between MR, and about equals 
the distance between MF; all the eyes are upon black bases, giving them a blackish appear- 
ance; the clypeus is about the height of one diameter of MF; the front row is slightly 
recuryed, the rear row procurved. : 
Leas: 1, 2, 4, 3; stout, yellow, with brown annuli at the tips; the spines compara- 
tively few and very long; the palps are colored and armored as the legs; mandibles long, 
conical, somewhat widened at the tips; yellowish brown in color. 
AppomEN: Ovate, decidedly narrower in front than behind, differing therein from 
typical Epeira, and widest about two-thirds the distance from the front; the central pat- 
tern is a bottle shaped figure, with undulating edges, being blackish brown, the centre a 
lighter brown or yellowish hue; on either side are irregular borders of white, then follows 
a light band of yellowish brown, then another white, and so to the sides, which are dark 
brown; the whole surface is beautifully reticulated; the dorsum is highly arched, almost a 
semicircle ; the spinnerets are distal; the venter a brown patch, flanked on either side by a 
white or yellowish white space, the spinnerets being black, with dark brown bases, and a 
white patch on either side; the epigynum (Fig. 4a) has a light colored scapus, somewhat 
convoluted, with a wide, rounded, spoon shaped tip; the portule on either side are strong, 
brown, bowl shaped objects.? 
Mate: Fig. 5. Little more than 2 mm. long, colored and marked much like the female, 
One specimen in hand has the angular point of the dorsal folium much darker in color, giving 
the appearance of rows of black spots, symmetrically arranged on either side. The same 
markings may be seen in a number of females. The legs are a uniform yellow; tibia-II 
without any special clasping spines upon the legs, with a few very long ones, all of dark 
yellow color. ; 
Distrisution: I have specimens from New England, New Jersey, North Carolina, 
Georgia, and from as far north as Wisconsin. It has been located in Florida, and probably 
inhabits the Western and Northern United States as far west as Mississippi, and may be 
found beyond, 
No. 18. Epeira foliata Henrz. Plate IV., Figs. 7, 8, 8a. 
1847. peira foliata, Hentz. ..... J. B.S., v., 475; Sp. U.S., xiii., 14; pl. xviii., 50. 
1884. Epeira foliata, EMertron ....N. E. Ep., p. 318, xxxvii., 6-10. 
1889. Epeira folifera, Marx ..... Catalogue, p. 545. 
Femae: Total length, 6 mm.; abdomen, 4 mm. long, 2.75 mm. wide; cephalothorax, 
nearly 2.5 mm. long, 1.75 mm. wide. The general colors (in alcohol) are brownish yellow 
or pale brown for the fore part of the body. Mr. Emerton describes this part as grayish or 
greenish yellow, darker toward the end of the joints, the first and second legs being darker 
and with dark rings in the middle of the tibia and tarsus. The abdomen is grayish or 
olive yellow, relieved by brown or red longitudinal stripes. Dr. Marx, in his catalogue, 
names this species E. folifera, on the grounds (Note 17) that Hentz’s name of “ foliata” had 
been previously appropriated by Walckenaer for E. cornuta; but as Walckenaer’s name is 
a synonym, and is not retained by araneologists for the species to which it is affixed, 
Hentz’s name must be regarded as the true one for this species. The species differs from 
the typical Epeira in haying both eye rows procurved, and further in the subconical shape of 
the cephalothorax. 
CrerHaLorHorax: Cordate, peaked and high in the middle, sloping sharply back to the 
indented base: the fosse a deep longitudinal indentation; cephalic suture distinct; caput 
depressed, somewhat arched at the base; color yellow, covered with pubescence, sloping to 
1 The base of the scapus in the figure is drawn too broad. 
