80 
Psyche 
[Vol. 91 
Pardosa sagei Gertsch and Wallace 
Figures 8, 11, 50, 51; Map 2 
Pardosa sagei Gertsch and Wallace, 1937:1, Figs. 1,2. Holotype male and allotype 
female from El Volcan, Chiriqui, Panama, 26 February 1936 (W. J. Gertsch), 
deposited in AMNH, examined. Three paratype males and four paratype 
females from the type locality, with same data as holotype, deposited in MCZ, 
examined. Roewer 1954:188. Bonnet 1958:3420. 
Male. Total length 5.00 ±0.35 mm; carapace 2.69 ±0.12 mm long 
and 2.40 ±0.10 mm wide (20 specimens). Carapace yellow orange 
mesally and submarginally, with pair of dark longitudinal bands 
flanking mesal area; margins dark. Sternum orange yellow, 
sometimes with few black spots. Chelicerae yellow orange; retro- 
margin with 3 teeth. Legs yellow orange; tibia and basitarsus I with 
fringe of long, erect, lateral setae. Abdomen yellow brown mesally, 
darker laterally; venter pale yellow, sometimes with few small black 
spots. Terminal apophysis small, pointed (ventral view); median 
apophysis with distal process elongate and straight, with basal 
process small, located about midlength on apophysis (Fig. 8); 
conductor thin, fluted at tip, lacking knoblike process (Fig. 11). 
Female. Total length 5.38 ±0.57 mm; carapace 2.63 ±0.18 mm 
long and 2.04 ±0.18 mm wide (20 specimens). General color and 
structure as in male but leg I lacking fringe of setae. Median septum 
with posterior part approximately rectangular (Fig. 50). Copulatory 
tubes rather thick, curved near middle (Fig. 51). 
Diagnosis. Specimens of P. sagei most resemble those of P. 
fastosa, P. desolatula, and P. mayana. Males of sagei are diagnosed 
by the straight distal process of the median apophysis. Diagnostic 
characters are not available for female sagei; the known females 
were collected together with males. 
Range. Panama. 
Natural History. Males and females have been collected in 
February, March, July, and August. Egg sacs were found in July 
and August. 
Pardosa fastosa (Keyserling) 
Figures 9, 12, 52, 53; Map 2 
Lycosa fastosa Keyserling, 1877:618, Figs. 5, 6 (pi. 1). Six syntype males and four 
syntype females from “Umgebung von St. Fe de Bogota”, Bogota, Colombia 
