1985] 
Wise & Reillo — Enoplognatha 
139 
Fig. 2. Morph frequencies in the four different regions that were sampled. Indi- 
viduals from the local populations (i.e. aggregations ^ 20) and also spiders found in 
aggregations with fewer than 20 individuals have been pooled to calculate the pro- 
portion of each morph. Thus, with the exception of SUNY Syracuse, the sample used 
to derive proportions for each region is larger than the sum total of local populations 
that appear in Fig. 3. 
of both the striped and the solid-red morphs. The number of popu- 
lations from October Mt. State Forest in Massachusetts and from 
the Huyck Preserve in New York is too small to make any generali- 
zations about local differences in morph frequencies. Additional 
sampling might indicate that some local populations in western 
