Peckham—Spiders of the Family Attidae. S 185 
in patches on the mottled brown and yellow legs, and on the 
lower sides of the abdomen. There is a thick bunch of these 
hairs at the front end of the abdomen, and the bare integument 
shows two golden-brown bands, beginning at this point and di¬ 
verging a little as they pass backward to beyond the middle of 
the dorsum. Further back, just in front of the spinnerets^ is 
a central patch of the same color. The rest of the abdomen is 
dark brown. 
We have one male of this species from Gape Colony. We 
have named it for Mr. E. M. Lightfoot of Cape Town. 
Cyrba, dotata\ spi nov. 
Plate XIX, fig. 6. 
$. Length 6.7 mm. Legs 4132, first pair stoutest, second 
next. 
The front eyes form a straight row, the lateral being plainly 
further back than the middle, and more than half as large. The 
second row is a little nearer the third than the first. The 
third is nearly as wide as the cephalothorax at that place. 
The tibia of the first leg has three pairs' of spines, and that of 
the second three posterior and two anterior spines. The meta¬ 
tarsi of the first and second have two pairs of very long spines. 
Our specimen seems to have been covered with short yellow 
and long white hairs, but as these are nearly all rubbed away 
we describe it as it appears under alcohol. The cephalothorax 
is black, with a central longitudinal brown band on the tho¬ 
racic part. The legs are brown excepting some blackish patches 
on the undersides of the first and second. The abdomen has 
the sides brown, streaked and mottled with black. The front 
central part is white. A black herring-bone stripe begins just 
in front of the middle and runs to the end, the spaces on the 
sides being occupied by five pairs of white spots. The clypeus 
has a thin fringe of whitish-brown hairs. The f alces are brown, 
stout, and vertical. The palpi are thickly covered with brown 
and white hairs. 
We have one female from Xewlands, Cape Peninsula, col¬ 
lected by Mr. Purcell. 
