1962] 
Levi — Steatoda and Enoplognatha 
17 
metatarsus, 2.0 mm; tarsus, 1.1 mm. Second patella and tibia, 3.0 mm; 
third, 2.3 mm; fourth, 3.2 mm. 
The male illustrated (Fig. 6) may belong to this species; this is 
uncertain, as is the locality where it has been found. 
Records. Peru. “Pampa Machei, 4400 m,” Feb. 1947, cf (Brecht, 
AMNH). Cuzco: Cuzco, 3500 m, July 1947, 9 (W. Weyrauch, 
AMNH). 
Enoplognatha puno new species 
Figures 9, 10 
Type. Female from 32 km north of Desaguadero, Puno, Peru, 
27 Feb. 1951 (E. I. Schlinger, E. S. Rcss), in the California Acad- 
emy of Sciences. The specific name is a noun in apposition, after 
the type locality. 
Description. Carapace, sternum, legs dark brown. Abdomen 
brownish black with an indistinct dorsal pattern as in E. peruviana. 
Venter with some white pigment on each side. Anterior median eyes 
much smaller (two-thirds their diameter) than oval posterior eyes. 
Anterior median eyes two-thirds diameter apart, more than their 
diameter from laterals. Posterior median eyes less than their shorter 
diameter apart, two and one-half times their shorter diameter from 
laterals. Chelicerae with three large anterior teeth and a minute 
denticle on posterior margin. Total length 6.1 mm. Carapace 2.6 
mm long, 2.0 mm wide. First femur 2.3 mm; patella and tibia 2.9 
mm; metatarsus 1.7 mm; tarsus 1.0 mm. Second patella and tibia 2.5 
mm; third 2.1 mm; fourth 3.0 mm. 
Diagnosis. Only the epigynum (Fig. 10) and ducts of the internal 
genitalia (Fig. 9) separate this species from E. peruviana ; the pattern 
and the structure are very similar. It is possible that this species 
belongs to a geographical race of E. peruviana. 
Enoplognatha juninensis (Keyserling) 
Figures 11-13 
Lithyphantes juninensis Keyserling, 1884, Die Spinnen Amerikas, Theridiidae 
2(1): 143, pi. 6, fig. 90, 9. Female lectotype here designated from 
Maraynioc, Junin, Peru in the Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, 
examined. 
Enoplognatha juninensis, Simon, 1894, Histoire Naturelle des Araignees, 1: 
578. 
The specimen examined from Pasco, Peru has the abdomen dark 
gray with a light area on each side on dorsum ; the venter is also dark 
