A Survey of the Scorpion Fauna of South Africa. 
175 
Addenda. 
Since this paper was submitted for publication a large quantity of 
additional material has been received, including a number of hitherto 
undescribed varieties. It has, therefore, seemed desirable to include the 
descriptions of the latter with this paper, and I have also taken the oppor- 
tunity of citing the additional records for many other species. 
Many of the records are based on the scorpion collection of the 
McG-regor Museum, Kimberley, kindly lent to me by Miss M. Wilman, 
the Curator of that institution ; I have thus been able to examine much 
interestino: material from South -West Africa and Bechuanaland. 
Text-fig. 6. — Parahuthus (jranulatus strenuus var. nov., showing granulation of 
first two caudal segments superiorly. 
BuTHus TRiLiNEATus, Peters. 
N'jelele Eiver and Lilliput Station, in the Zoutpansberg District 
(Transvaal Museum). 
The specimens are both immature. The pectinal teeth number 24, 
26, and 23, 24. All the sternites, except the last, are quite smooth 
.and devoid of granules at least mesially. On the last sternite the outer 
row of granules is abbreviated, arising anteriorly at a point in a line 
with the commencement of the inner pair, but extending backwards not 
half so far as the inner rows, which indeed reach the hind edge of the 
sternite. Thirteen well-developed granular rows on the movable digit, and, 
in addition, a very short apical row. 
