134 
Psyche 
[December 
epigynum showing two pairs of dark tubes beneath the skin, 
the median pair much the larger, decreasing in size, and 
slightly diverging, the lateral pair much smaller and curved. 
Holotype $ New Hampshire; Mt. Washington, 5,000 feet, 
1 July 1926, (Banks). 
Paratype 2 New Hampshire ; Mt. Washington, 5,000 feet, 
1 July 1926, (Banks). 
This species lacks the abdominal pattern found on Hahnia 
cinerea, the anterior row of eyes is almost straight, the eyes 
are closely grouped and the epigynum is very unlike that 
species. 
Family Pisaurid^e 
Genus Dapanus Hentz 1867 
Recently Mr. Banks has called to my attention a name 
proposed by Hentz that has been overlooked by recent stu- 
dents. In 1867, “A Supplement to the Descriptions and 
Figures of the Araneides of the United States”, was post- 
humously published in the Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist.* 
vol. 11 : 103-1 11, with two plates, from notes and figures by 
Hentz. In the volume of the Occ. Papers Boston Soc. Nat. 
Hist., vol. 2, 1875, which contains the collected writings of 
Hentz and is commonly used, these notes are distributed, 
always in brackets, to the original descriptions, and in the 
introduction a brief note states the origin. On page 44 of 
the Occ. Papers under Micrommata marmorata, appears the 
following: “Prof. Hentz had formerly considered this to be 
the type of a new subgenus, for which he gave the name 
Dapanus, distinguished by having its second pair of legs 
longest, the eyes subequal, the hinder row curved posteriorly. 
Supplement .” 
Micrommata marmorata is based on an adult female with 
a cocoon and is usually recognized as a synonym of Microm- 
mata undata described on the preceding page. Mr. Emerton 
unfortunately placed the species in the genus Ocyale 
Audouin, (Lycosidae) and in 1898, Simon erected the genus 
Pisaurina for Dolomedes mirus Walck., (Ins. Apt., 1837, 
1 : 357, for Abbot’s drawing pi. 65, fig. 321) . This is usually 
recognized as the same as undata Hentz ; so the species for- 
merly known as Pisaurina mira (Walck.) with its many 
synonyms becomes Dapanus mirus (Walck.) 
