Peckham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 467 
The lower sides are black, and three wide dark bars, on each 
side, at the posterior end, connect this region with the brown 
bands higher np. The first legs are lighter than in the male. 
We described the male of this species in 1888, from a speci¬ 
men which had the hairs entirely rubbed away, leaving it black. 
Later we received perfect specimens of both sexes. Mr. Banks, 
in the meantime, had described it under the name “guttatus”. 
It is found in Victoria, B. C., and in various parts of Califor¬ 
nia, San Mateo, San Diego, and Santa Bosa Island. 
DENDRYPHANTES CANADENSIS B. 1897. 
Plate XXXVI, figs. 2—2d. 
1897. Icius canadensis Banks $ % Canadian Entomologist, p. 196. 
Length, $ $ 5 mm. Legs, $ $ 4132, first pair much thick¬ 
ened in both sexes. Spines, $ $, tib. I 3-3, tib. II 1-1, 
and sometimes 1 farther back, below; met. I and II 2-2. 
Falces vertical. 
The coloring is alike in the two sexes. The cephalothorax 
is dark brown, blackish on the eye-region, with a thin covering 
of light hairs. The abdomen has a dark background of deep gold- 
colored hairs. Down the middle is a blackish region upon 
which there is a series of yellow spots and chevrons, as shown in 
the figure. Behind the middle, on the sides of the chevrons, is 
a pair of round, pure white spots, and farther back is a second 
pair, smaller. There is a white basal band, and a pair of less 
distinct whitish bands on the sides. The venter is white with 
two jet black stripes nearly meeting behind and a short dark 
streak in the middle. The first legs are brown, clouded with a 
darker shade, the others light brown, not annulated. 
We have canadensis from Pineola and Roan Mt., FT. C., and 
Mr. Banks has it from Ottawa, Canada. * 
32—S. & A. 
