PECKHAM— PELLENES AND SOME OTHER GENERA. 
219 
from them by the median 'longitudinal white band running 
throughout the length of the abdomen. 
We have one female from Texas, sent to us by Mr. Townsend. 
Pcllenes caroliiioisis, n. 
PL I, figs. 10-lOb. 
A distinctly marked, black and salmon-colored species. 
9. Length, 5.5-7 mm. Legs, 34:12, first and second a little 
stouter than the others. 
The quadrangle of the eyes is equally wide in front and behind, 
and is one-third wider than long. The front row is straight, 
with the middle eyes subtouching, and twice as large as the 
lateral, which are separated from them. The maxillae are 
rounded, and are more than twice as long as the labium. The 
clypeu's is two-thirds as wide as the middle eyes. 
The hairs on the cephalic part are bright yellowish -red over 
the first row of eyes, and silvery further back. There is a 
scalloped, salmon-colored band behind the dorsal eyes. The 
lower margin has a black line between two white lines. In our 
specimens the other parts of the cephalothorax are rubbed bare, 
excepting the clypeus, which is white in a band along the margin, 
in a large spot under each lateral eye, and in a narrow band 
which begins just between the midclle eyes, and widens as it 
passes downward to the margin, and which has an oblique chest- 
nut-colored band running outward from below each of the mid- 
dle eyes. The abdomen is velvety black, with markings of a 
bright pinkish and salmon-color, there being a wide transverse 
band near the front end, an oblique band on each side, further back, 
two oblique marks in the middle and two irregular, sometimes con- 
tinuous spots on the posterior part of the dorsum, and two dots 
near the spinnerets. The pattern is complicated by a sprinkling 
of salmon-colored hairs, which surround the posterior part of 
the dorsum. The legs are yellowish, and are covered with white 
and salmon-colored scales. 
Carolinensis bears. a general resemblance to viridipes but is 
distinguished by the chestnut-colored hairs on the clypeus. 
We have several females from Charleston, S. C. 
Pellenes sabulosus, n. 
PI. I, figs. 5, 11-lla. 
A very dark species, with indistinct markings. 
9. Length, 6-8 mm. Legs, 3-1:12. 
The quadrangle of the eyes is equally wide in front and behind, 
and is one-fourth wider than long. The front row of eyes is 
slightly curved, the middle eyes being slightly separated and not 
