196 AMERICAN SPIDERS AND THEIR SPINNINGWORK. 
5 3 ei AL 
No. 538. Marxia mcesta (Kryseruina). Plate XII, Figs. 11, la-e. 
1889. Epeira maesta, Marx in litt. . . . Catalogue, p. 546. 
1892. Epeira mésta, Knyseruina . . . . Spinn. Amerk., Epeir., p. 108, Fig. 80. 
Frematr: Total length, 11 mm.; cephalothorax, 5 mm. long, 3.5 mm. wide, 2.6 mm, at 
the face; abdomen, 9 mm. long, 8 mm. wide across the base, narrowing to 1.5 mm. at 
the face. 
CrPHALorHorAx: Oval, well rounded at the sides, truncate behind, where it is over- 
hung by the abdomen; corselet grooves sufliciently distinct; cephalic suture well marked, 
as is the median fosse. Color dark brown, with lighter band of yellow along the corselet 
margin; head colored as corselet, and rises from the fosse at a slight inclination; is arched 
on the posterior and narrower half, and about midway has two knobs, such as appear in 
other species of the genus; thence the fore part of the caput is depressed to the central 
eye space, which turns up into a strong prominence, giving from the side view a snouted 
appearance to the face. In front the face is wide, but the eye space is distinctly separated 
from the knobby summit of the caput by the depression aboye alluded to. Sternum shield 
shape, well rounded at the sides, subtriangular at the apex, glossy, dark brown, or blackish, 
elevated in the centre and flattened, with sternal cones, sparsely covered with grayish 
white hairs, which are thickest on the anterior part; skin hard and glossy. Labium widest 
at the base, where the color is dark brown, the tip obtusely triangular ; maxillee colored 
like the lip, rounded, at least as wide as long. 
Eyrs: Ocular quad on a high prominence, most elevated behind; the rear slightly 
narrower than the front, which about equals the sides; MF separated by nearly two 
diameters, about equal to MR, which are separated by a little greater space. Side eyes on 
tubercles much less prominent relatively than the median one; separated by a diameter of 
SR, which is smaller than SF. The space between SF and MF equals about twice the area 
of MF, or 2.3 times the distance between MF. Height of clypeus equals alignment of MI’. 
Both rows viewed from the front are procurved, the hind row more so, and is much longer 
on account of SR being placed so far to the side; the margin of the clypeus has yellowish 
gray bristles. 
Lees: 1, 2, 4, 3; stout; in color dark brown, provided with grayish yellow bristles and 
spines. The palps are colored and armed as the legs. 
Axspomen; Subtriangular in form, widest at the base, where it is rounded to the front, 
and far overhangs the cephalothorax. The dorsum is somewhat flattened, and the abdomen 
is almost as thick at the apex as in front. Two shoulder tubercles mark the base well back 
of the anterior middle point, leaving thus the fore part of the abdomen as a wide sub- 
triangular space sloping toward the front, while the remainder of the dorsum slopes some- 
what, though but little, toward the rear. The apex is marked by a prominent rounded 
tubercle, resembling those upon the shoulders, but smaller; on either side of this is a 
similar smaller tubercle, and beneath it on the apical wall of the abdomen are two others 
in a row, of similar character, but somewhat flattened. The color is yellow, much broken 
by irregular and lateral black lines upon the sides. Between the shoulder tubercles and 
the apical ones extends a folium of dark or darkish brown, mottled with yellow reticula- 
tions, dentated upon the edges and narrowing toward the apex; an interrupted yellowish 
band marks the middle of the dorsal field. The basal front has the same black and yellow 
reticulations that mark the sides. The venter has a broad black band, with lateral mark- 
ings of yellow at the front; the spinnerets are black, with yellowish spots at the base; the 
epigynum (Figs. 11b, lle) has a well arched atriolum, and a scapus whose base is wide and 
spooned, giving the edges a horseshoe shape; from its central point issues a long lanceo- 
lated tip. « 
Disrrisution: Pike’s Peak, Colorado; New Mexico. (Marx Collection.) Only the 
female of this species is known. The localities in which it has been found would indicate 
a geographical distribution throughout the Southwestern States and Territories, and prob- 
ably the Pacifie Coast. 
