I 12 
Psyche 
[March-June 
stood. The palpal tarsus differs from that of O . reticulatus Pet. 
but the other palpal segments are very similar and the color pattern 
of the abdomen is somewhat similar also. 
Records . No male paratypes have yet appeared in my collections 
and the female is unknown. 
Oonops reticulatus Petrunkevitch 
Oonops reticulatus Petrunkevitch, 1925: 98; Roewer, 1942: 278; Bonnet, 
1958: 3192; Cickering, 1951: 228; 1971: 489, figs. 1-2. 
Oonopoides bryantae, -Chickering , 1951: 224, figs. 12-13. 
One female, which may be somewhat immature, from Puerto Rico, 
W. I., 5 km. from Mayaguez on Route 106, January 30, 1964 is, 
with some uncertainty, referred to this species. A male and several 
females taken on the University campus in St. Augustine, Trinidad, 
W. L, April, 1964 are, with reasonable certainty, referred to this 
species. These specimens should have been reported in Part 1 of 
this series on the genus Oonops but they were misplaced and over- 
looked at that time. 
Oonops figuratus Simon 
Oonops figuratus Simon, 1891: 564, fig. 9. The female holotype from St. 
Vincent, B. W. I. is in the British Museum (Natural History), ex- 
amined. Simon, 1893, 444-445; 1893: 292, 294; Petrunkevitch, 1911: 
127; Roewer, 1942: 278; Bonnet, 1958: 3190. 
I failed to collect members of this species during my visit to St. 
Vincent, B. W. I. in 1966 and, apparently, the species has not been 
reported since the original description was published. 
Oonops glohimanus Simon 
Figures 18-21 
Oonops glohimanus Simon, 1891: 563, fig. 7. Male and female types from 
the Island of St. Vincent, B. W. I. are in the British Museum (Natural 
History), examined. Petrunkevitch, 1911, 128; Simon, 1893: 445; 1893: 
294; Roewer, 1942: 278; Bonnet, 1958: 3190. 
The male on loan from the British Museum (Natural History) 
has almost no pigment in the ocular area and the boundaries of the 
eyes are very difficult to discern (Fig. 18). All legs appear to bear 
spines, especially the third and fourth. The palpal tarsus of the 
male appears quite different from Simon’s Figure 7. This organ 
appears to be obscurely distinctive (Figs. 19-20). The epigynal area 
is also obscurely distinctive (Fig. 21). One male from St. Vincent, 
B. W. I., October, 1966 is tentatively referred to this species. 
Oonops pallid, ulus (Chickering) 
Oonopinus pallidulus Chickering, 1951: 222, figs. 10-11. The female holotype 
from Barro Colorado Island, Panama Canal Zone is in the Museum 
of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University. 
Oonops pallidulus. — Chickering, 1971: 496, figs. 12-13. 
