616 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences , Arts , and Letters. 
the ganglion; it encloses the eye-spot and is crowded with bac- 
teroids, especially at its anterior end, so that it is nearly opaque 
by transmitted light. 
Total length 250/*; toes 15/x; trophi 32/* long, 32/x wide. 
Lindia Candida is known only from shallow, weedy areas of 
Lac Yieux Desert, Yilas County, Wisconsin, and from a swampy 
brook at Oceanville, near Atlantic City, New Jersey. 
This species is distinguished from other members of the genus 
by its general outline, hyaline body, and the unusual form of 
the toes. 
Lindia Producta Harring and Myers, new species 
Plate LIII, figures 9-14 
The body of this species is elongate, spindle-shaped, and 
slender, its greatest width being only one fifth of the total 
length. The integument is moderately flexible and the outline 
quite constant. It is fairly transparent. 
The head and neck segments are of nearly equal length and 
width, about three fifths of the greatest width of the body. The 
anterior transverse folds are not strongly marked. The anterior 
portion of the abdomen is nearly cylindrical; posteriorly it tapers 
very gradually to the tail, which is three-lobed, with a small, 
rounded median lobe and two minute lateral lobes. The foot 
has two joints of very unequal size, the proximal being but little 
smaller than the posterior end of the abdomen, while the last 
joint is very small and tapers toward the toes. On the posterior 
dorsal edge of the first foot joint there is a minute tuft of sen¬ 
sory setae. The toes are minute, nearly cylindrical, and end in 
blunt points; their length is about one thirtieth of the total 
length. 
The dorsal and lateral antennae are small setigerous papillae 
in the normal positions. 
The corona extends down the ventral side about one fourth 
the length of the body; the post-oral portion forms a slight chin. 
The auricles are of the normal Notommata-type, with long, close- 
set cilia, continuous with the corona. 
The mastax is a somewhat simplified form of the specialized 
virgate type of this genus. The rami are of the usual lyrate 
