159 



adduces Fuesslin's species of the same name, and has copied his 

 citations, has given a figure of this spider, which appears to me 

 undoubtedly to represent T. civilis or Derhamii. C. Kooa however ') 

 takes up Fuesslin's and Sulzee's Ar. longipes among the names of 

 an entirely different spider, T. longipes C. Koch (T. cubicularis id., 

 in Herr.-Sch.eff. , Deutschl. Ins., 125, 12, = T. mnrina Walck. 

 1802?), which is said to be from southern Switzerland and northern 

 Italy, and which, judging from Kocu's figure, is much less like J?-. 

 longipalpis Sulz., than is T. Derhamii. 



Ar. longipes Vill. 2 ) is a spider unknown to me. — Air- longi- 

 pes Fabr. 3 ) from "Australasia" is a Nephila. 



According to Blackwall T. Derhamii is met with also in 

 N. America (Canada). 



(Pag. 308.) AGELENA [ = Agatena Walck. 1805]. 

 Vid. Thor., On Eur. Spid., p. 132 



(Pag. 309.) 1. A. labyrinthica [= Agaleim labyrinthica (Clerck) 



1757]. 



Syn.: 1757. Araneus labyrinthicus Clerck, Sv. Spindl., p. 79, PI. 2, tab. 8. 

 1758. Aranea labyrinthica Linn., Syst. Nat., Ed. 10, I, p. 620. 

 1758. „ riparia id., ibid. 

 1763. ,, Eieselii Scop., Ent. Cam., p. 395. 

 ?1790. ,, LiLnGERA Rossi, Fauna Etrusca, II, p. 130. 

 ?1805. AGELENA labyrinthica Walck., Tabl. d. Aran., p. 51 (ad part ). 

 1832. „ „ Sund., Sv. Spindl. Beskr., in Vet.-Akad. 



Handl. f. 1831, p. 129. 

 1834. „ „ Hahn, Die Arachn., II, p. 61, Taf. LXV, 



figg. 150, 151. 



1861. „ „ Blackw., Spid. of Gr. Brit., I, p. 152, PI. 



X, fig. 97. 



Ar. riparia Linn, is the young of Ar. labyrinthica: vid. Thor., 

 Rec. crit. Aran., p. 84. — The nearly allied Agalena similis Keyser- 



1) Die Arachn., VIII, p. 36, Taf. CCLXHI, fig. 617. 



2) Thorax pallide fulvus, lateribus obscurioribus. Abdomen ovatum, lu- 

 teum, basi punctis nigris, apice fasciis transversis. Pedes longi, tenues, spi- 

 nosi; 5, 6 breviores. Habitat in Europae arboribus r . De Villers, Car. Linneei 

 Entom., IV, p. 127. 



3) Spec. Ins., I, p. 545. 



4) Not. of Spid. captured by Potter in Canada, in Ann. of Nat. Hist., 

 XVII, p. 76. 



