110 Psyche [June-September 
that species would indicate a much larger spider, possibly 
an Aysha. 
The two following species are separated in the males by 
the modified posterior coxae. 
Anyphaena pectorosa L. Koch 
Fig. 5 
Die Arach. fam. Drassiden, 1866, p. 198, pi. 8, f. 131, 
“1 $ Baltimore." 
Anyphaena calcarata Emerton, Trans. Conn. Acad. Sci.; 
1890, 8, p. 189, p. 6, f. 3, “ $ $ Conn.; West Haven, July 
. . . . N. Pike's Long Island Collection." 
The IV coxae in the males have a small, pointed process 
directed outward; the III coxae have two processes, the 
posterior one is pointed inward and distinctly bifid, the an- 
terior process is a blunt tooth. The principal process in 
the palpus is broad and flattened. On the upper side of the 
tibia is a small spine. 
This species is found from Massachusetts south to North 
Carolina and Tennessee and west to Missouri. 
Anyphaena fraterna (Banks) 
Figs. 6, 23 
Gayenna fraterna Banks, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc. ; 1896, 
23, p. 63. “ $ near Sea Cliff, N. Y. June." 
Anyphaena conspersa Keyserling, Verh. Zool. bot. Ges. 
Wien 1887, 37, p. 453, pi. 6, f. 23 “ 5 Ky. ; Bee Spring," 
preoccupied by Simon, 1878. 
This species is distinctly spotted. In the male the pos- 
terior process on the III coxae is slender and simple, not 
bifid as in A. pectorosa. In the palpus the largest process 
is slender and curved only at the tip. The tibia has a small 
cone-shaped process on the inner basal side as well as a 
short spine on the upper. The epigynum is long and 
narrow instead of broad as in pectorosa. 
Type. 2 $ N. Y. ; Sea Cliff, N. Banks Coll. Found from 
Massachusetts to Tennessee and Kentucky. 
