82 ME. A. MTJEEAY ON THE GEOGEAPIIICAL EELATIONS OF 



are found in the Old World ; two or three species occur in the 

 south of Europe. 



Note 5. — Spartocerus. If this genus is confined to Spartoceras 

 proper, it seems to be exclusively American. 



Note 6. — Hypselonotus. The same remark as on Spartocerus. 



Note 7. — Heterog 'aster. This probably includes Nysius and 

 Cymus. 



8. Homoptera. 



Genera. 



o <J 



rth 

 rica. 



ralia. 





03 



tss 



ilian 

 on. 





%* 



w § 



o * 



Aust 



IS 



o 



?3 

 a 

 i— i 



< 



Braz 

 regi 





it 





*# 







*S.Afr. 







* 









* 



«• 



* 





* 











n 



* 





* 



* 



* 





•Sf* 









* 



* 





* 



* 



* 







* 



* 





m 



* 



Madg. 



* 





•* 









* 



S. Air. 







# 



* 







* 









* 











S. Afr. 







* 



* 















* 

















* 



* 













9. Araclmoidea. 



Genera. 



Europe 

 and Asia. 



North 

 America. 



Australia. 



Chili. 



India. 



Africa. 



Brazilian 

 region. 



Limnochares (wofe 1) ... 



















* 































Note 1. — Information defective. 



Note 2. — There is an East-Indian genus named Gea, but if 

 the remarks by Dr. Thorell of Upsala (an able araneologist) are 

 to be relied on (see ' On European Spiders,' by T. Thorell, 

 Upsala, 1870, p. 225), the fossil spider Gea is a different species 

 and genus from the existing East-Indian species Gea spinipes ; and 

 if so, Gea has no existing representative genus, though the family 

 (Epe'irides) is most numerous and diffused over the whole known 

 globe.— 0. P. Cambeidgke. 



To the foregoing we may add the following, to complete the 

 notice of Heer and Krantz's lists, which go no further, viz. : — 



