146 
MU MO I£S OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
Echinosoma yorkense Dohrn. 
Mt. Lamington, Northern Div., Papua, V and VII, 1927, (C. T. 
McNamara), 2<J, 1 £. Kuranda, Queensland, I, 3 and 9, 1925, (F. P. Dodd) 
1 <?, 1 $. 
There is also a similar male from Waigana, Milne Bay, New Guinea, 
taken September 9 to 14, 1912 bv Carson in the author’s collection, received 
in exchange from the Burr Collection. 
We find that sumatranum and yorkense are variable in coloration and the 
characters which have been used to separate them can not always be trusted. 
A minute pale tegminal spot is present in all but the Mt. Lamington female, 
though very faint in the Kuranda female. Such a spot, believed to be present 
in yorkense but absent in sumatranum, is even more distinctly present in a 
male of sumatranum from the Tengger Mountains, Java. Males are, however, 
easily separated by the abdominal tergites, the fifth to eighth inclusive being 
laterally heavily keeled and acutely produced in yorkense, these roundly produced 
laterad with only the fifth and sixth weakly keeled in sumatranum. 
LABIDURI1LE. 
Titanolabis eolossea (Dohrn). 
Barrington Tops, New South Wales, Australia, I, 13 and 19, 1927, (T. G. 
Campbell), 5 £ (three with total length about 31. two about 39 mm.), [Austral. 
Mus.] Cutlers Pass, W illiams River, N.S.W .. X, 28, 1922, (Musgrave and 
Campbell), 2 small juv., [Austral. Mus.] Hazelbrook, Blue Mountains, N.S.W., 
IX, 1922, (L. Abrahan), 1 $ (total length 34-5 mm.). Blue Mountains, N.S.W., 
II, 20, 1910, 1 <j>. Booloombayt, Nyall Lakes, N.S.W., IX, 2, 1922, (A. Mus- 
grave), 1 small juv. 
A male labelled " N.S.W.'' is in the author’s collection the total length 
of which measures 534! mm. 
Gonolabis pacifica (Erichson). 
Bairndale, Victoria, (Spry), 1 $ (stenolabic), determined by Burr. 
Barrington Tops, New South Wales, I, 19, 1927, (T. G. Campbell), 1 $ 
(moderately platylabic), [Austral. Mus.) Cutlers Pass, Williams River, N.S.W., 
X, 28, 1926, (Musgrave and Campbell), 2 [Austral. Mus.]. 
We do not consider the characters given for Mongolabis Zacher sufficient 
to warrant recognition of that genus. 
Bormans described brunneri but stated that it was possibly the same as 
jjacifca. Burr in 1908 gave briefly the features which distinguish these species. 
Gonolabis tasmanica (Bormans). 
Mt. Wellington, Tasmania, 4,000 feet, 1 1 <j>, determined by Burr. 
Interlaken, Tasmania, I, 24, 1928, (A. Musgrave), 1 <$, [Austral. Mus.]. 
