1984] 
Dondale & Redner — Genus Pardos a 
91 
recorded habitats are roadside grass and a mowed field, a sugar cane 
field, and on the ground in goldenrod and pine flat-woods. 
Chamberlin and Ivie (1944) found parvula (reported as P. saxatilis) 
“in company with” atlantica near Sylvania, Georgia. 
Pardosa littoralis Banks 
Figures 22, 25, 60, 61; Map 1 
Pardosa littoralis Banks, 1896:192. Five syntype males, 2 syntype females, and 1 
syntype juvenile from Mill Neck, Long Island, New York, June, deposited in 
MCZ, examined. Emerton 1909:207, Figs. 5, 5a, 5b (pi. 6); 1930:169. 
Pardosa longispinata Tullgren, 1901:23, Fig. 13 (pi. 1). Holotype female from Lake 
Leonore, Orange County, Florida (E. Lonnberg), deposited in Zoological 
Institute, Uppsala University, not examined. Banks 1904a:121; 1910:59. 
Chamberlin 1908:209. Petrunkevitch 1911:572. Wallace 1950:77, Figs. 3, 4 (pi. 
1). Roewer 1954:189. Bonnet 1958:3381. Muma 1973:180; 1975:86. 
Pardosa floridana Banks, 1904a: 136, Fig. 1 (pi. 7), Fig. 15 (pi. 8). Holotype female 
from Enterprise, Florida, deposited in MCZ, examined. Banks 1910:59. Gertsch 
1934:21. Gertsch and Wallace 1935:5, Figs. 12, 16; 1937:3. Muma 1945:21. 
Kaston 1948:336, Fig. 1126 (pi. 58), Figs. 1140, 1141 (pi. 59). Bonnet 1958:3369. 
Pardosa banksi Chamberlin, 1904:175. New name for Pardosa littoralis Banks, 
mistakenly believed to be preoccupied. Chamberlin 1908:182, Fig. 7 (pi. 13). 
Banks 1910:58. Petrunkevitch 1911:569. 
Pardosa ocala Bryant, 1935:81, Fig. 12 (pi. 5). Holotype female from Hale’s Siding, 
Alachua County, Florida, 14 October 1933 (Wallace), deposited in MCZ, 
examined. Paratype female from Lake County, 9 October 1933 (H. K. Wallace), 
not found. 
Male. Total length 5.07 ±0.42 mm; carapace 2.66 ±0.19 mm long 
and 2.03 ±0.16 mm wide (20 specimens). Carapace with orange or 
yellow orange mesal and submarginal areas, and with paired dark, 
longitudinal bands flanking mesal area; lateral margins usually 
dark. Sternum orange with marginal black spots and dark mesal 
band or V-shaped mark, rarely entirely black. Chelicerae orange; 
retromargin with 3 teeth. Legs orange or yellow orange; femur I 
sometimes dark basally, usually more so in northern specimens. 
Abdomen black, sometimes with pale heart mark and series of pale 
spots at midline, or mottled with yellow brown; heart mark with 
narrow band of white setae; venter dull yellow, sometimes with 
small dark spots. Terminal apophysis long, stout, tapered, ex- 
tending to or beyond tip of embolus; median apophysis broad at 
base, slender and curved at tip (Fig. 22); conductor with single curve 
on basal margin, directed retrolaterobasad, with dark, shiny knob 
near tip (Fig. 25). 
