564 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences , Arts and Letters. 
Viridipes, another species with four white bands on the eye- 
region, has a very different abdomen. 
PELLENES NEMORALIS P. 1901. 
Plate XLVIII, fig. 9. 
1901. P. nemoralis P., Bull. Wis. Nat. Hist. Soc., N. S., I, 4, p. 221. 
$ . Length, 5.3 mm. Legs, 3412, first pair plainly stoutest. 
The general color is brown. This specimen has the eye re¬ 
gion covered with white and copper-colored hairs, and has 
patches of the same on the abdomen, where, however, they are 
nearly all rubbed off, leaving pale chevrons and mottlings 
visible. Clypeus covered with thick white hairs. Falces 
brown, with some white hairs. Legs, light brown, with some 
light-colored and white hairs. 
S'ee remarks under dolosus. 
We have one female from Arizona. 
PELLENES OREGONENSE P. 1888. 
Plate XLV, figs. 6—6b. 
1888. Habrocestum oregonense P., Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Let¬ 
ters, VII, N. A. Att., p. 66. 
1901. Pellenes oregonensis P., Bull. Wis. Nat. Hist. Soc., N. S., I, 4* 
p. 203. 
Length, $ 5.8 mm., 9 8 mm. Legs, $ 9 3412, first ’pair 
fringed and enlarged in $ . In the male the cephalothorax is 
dark colored, and is covered with iridescent red hairs with white 
over the first row of eyes. Abdomen, venter, clypeus, falces r 
palpus and legs also covered with iridescent red hairs. The first 
leg has the tibia as wide as long, and rounded out in all direc¬ 
tions, with fringes of stout dark hairs on the femur patella and 
tibia. The inner face of both the patella and tibia is a glisten¬ 
ing black; metatarsus and tarsus white. 
We have a number of males from Sisson, California, that are 
fawn-colored instead of red, and have more white on the ceph¬ 
alic plate, otherwise they agree with the other form. 
