350 



1805. Dolomedes mirabilis Walck., Tabl. d. Aran., p. 16. 



1833. Ocyale „ Sdnd., Sv. Spindl. Beskr., in Vet.-Akad. Hancll. 



f. 1832, p. 198. 



1834. Dolomedes „ Hahn. Die Arachn., II, p. 35, Tab. LI, fig. 120. 

 ?1837. Ocyale murina C. Koch, Uebers. d. Arachn. -Syst., 1, p. 23. 



1848. „ mirabilis id., Die Arachn., XIV, p. 107, Tab. CCCCLXXXII, 



fig. 1346. 



1848. „ hufo-fasciata id., ibid., p. 110, Tab. CCCCLXXXII, fig. 



1347. 



91848. „ murina id., ibid., p. Ill, Tab. CCCCLXXXII, fig. 1348. 



1849. Dolomedes Scheuchzeri Menz., Kurz. Abr. einer Naturgesch. d. 



Spinn., p. 12, fig. 17. 

 1861. „ mirabilis Blackw., Spid. of Gr. Brit., % p. 37, PL 



II , fig. 18. 



Ar. mirabilis Clerck and Ar. Tufo-fasciata De Geer are varie- 

 ties only of one and the same species. I suppose that even O. mu- 

 rina C Koch is nothing more than a variety of O. mirabilis: I have 

 at least female specimens both from northern and southern Europe, 

 which in colour perfectly agree with C. Koch's description of 0. mu- 

 rina, but in which I cannot discover any differences of structure, not 

 even in that of the vulva. — Menzel (loc. cit.) calls this spider Do- 

 lom. Scheuchzeri Bremi; I do not know in what work Bremi has em- 

 ployed that name. 



(Pag. 538.) IV. SPHASUS 1= Oxyopes (Latr.) 1804]. 

 Vid. Thor., On Europ. Spid., p. 197. 



(Tag. 539.) 1. S. lineatus [= Oxyopes ramosus (Panz.) 1804]. 



Syn.: 1804. Aranea ramosa Panz., Syst. Noraencl., p. 165. (Sch.eff., Ic. Ins. 



Katisb., n, Tab. CLXXXIX, fig. vi). 

 91804. „ heterophthalma Latr., H. N. d. Crust, et d. Ins., VLT, 



p. 280. 



91806. Oxyopes vartegatus id., Gen. Crust, et Ins., I, pag. 316. 



91807. Sphasus heterophthalmus Walck., H. N. d. Araignees, 3, 8. 

 1834. Oxyopes variegatus Hahn, Die Arachn., LT, p. 36, Tab. LLT, fig. 121. 

 1839. Sphasus „ C. Koch, ibid., V, p. 95, Tab. CLXX, fig. 403. 

 1856. „ lineatus Thor., Eec. crit. Aran., p. 112. 



1867. „ variegatus Ohl., Aran. d. Prov. Preuss., p. 123. 



Westring has been kind enough to send me the typical spe- 

 cimen of his Sph. lineatus, a young, very bare-rubbed female, which 



