LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 
199 
(true Spiders) are placed above the Tedipalpi ; the Tardigrada are included 
under Acarina ; and Thelyphonus is made a genus of the family PhrynidcB. 
[Cy. Zool. Rec. V. p. 190, where parts 1 & 2 of this work are noticed.] 
Taczanowski, Ladislas. Les Araneides de la Guyane franyaise. 
Hor. Ent. Ros. viii. pp. 32-132, Taf. iii. & iv. 
A first instalment of a work on the Spiders of French Guiana, from a col- 
lection made by M. Constantin Jelski, and now in the Warsaw Museum. 
The present paper treats of the family AttideSj of which 64 species are re- 
corded j of these, 61 are described as new. 
Thorell, Tamerlan. Om Arachnider fran Spetsbergen och 
Beeren-Eiland. CEfv. Vet. Ak. xxviii. pp. 683-702. 
Records 6 species of Araneidea and 8 of Acaridea. Of the former 5, and 
of the latter all, are described as new. 
. Om nagra Arachnider fran Grdnland. L, c. xxix. pp. 147- 
166. 
Records 14 species of Araneidea and 6 of Acaridea. Of the former 7, and 
of the latter 3, are described as new. 
. Remarks on Synonyms of European Spiders. No. 3. 
Upsala : 1872, pp. 229-374. 
The present number of this valuable work comes down to the genus Attus^ 
and fully bears out the justice of Mie remarks made upon it by the Recorder 
(Zool. Rec. vii. p. 211). 
Zimmermann, Hermann. Die Spinnen der Umgegend von 
Niesky. Verzeichniss I. Ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss der 
Arachnidenfauna der Oberlausitz. Abb. Ges. Gbrl. xiv. 
pp. 69-136. 
Records 161 known species of Araneidea^ distributed among 8 families : — 
Epeiridce 26, Theridiidoi 46, Agelenidts 6, Drassidce 16, Dysderidce 2, Ly~ 
coddce 19, Thomisidee 21, and Attidce 16. Although not pretending to add 
to the scientific knowledge of the Araneidea^ this paper shows that the author 
is a painstaking and accurate observer. 
In Scot. Nat. i. p. 191, is a list of some rare and local spp. of Scotch Spiders 
observed by the Recorder in a collection made by Mr. James Hardy. 
Kneelani), in an article on Sexes of Spiders,” in the ^Annual of Scien- 
tific Discovery ; or year-book of facts in Science and Art,’ 1869, p. 234 mis- 
quotes from a paper by the Recorder (Zool. s. s. iii. pp. 1240-1242), whom he - 
makes to state, contrary to fact, that no example of the c? of the Epeiridoi was 
known to him or to be found in the great museums of Europe. He also er- 
roneously converts a conjecture of the Recorder’s, as to the probable appear- 
ance of S Gasteracantha, into a statement of fact. 
A useful abstract of Bertkau’s paper on the structure and use of the falces 
(Arch. f. Nat. 1870; cf. Zool. Rec. vii. p. 207) is contained in Z. ges. Naturw. 
1870, pp. 200-202. 
