232 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
The first, leg has, besides lateral spines, three pairs under the 
tibia, and two under the metatarsus, this latter joint having 
no lateral spines. The tibia of the second has two pairs below, 
besides a single spine near the proximal end, and lateral spines. 
The metatarsus has two pairs and lateral spines. 
We have several males from Durban. 
Viciria morigera sp. nov. 
Plate XXYI, figs. 6-6b. 
$. Length 9 mm. Legs 3421, first and second pairs stoutest. 
This is a light colored species, ornamented with red and 
white bands. 
The cephalothorax is light yellowish-brown. The hairs on 
the eye-region form a, white ground with a bright red V in the 
middle, the apex being between the large eyes of the first row, 
and a red band on each side. The hairs around the eyes of 
the first row are bright red. The middle of the clypeus is 
white, hut from under the lateral eyes three bands, a red be¬ 
tween two white ones, pass backward below' the side eyes and 
curve upward over the thoracic part. The white bands meet, 
but the red ones end in two large dark spots within and be¬ 
hind the dorsal eyes. On the lower sides are some scanty black 
and white hairs. The striking and handsome appearance pro¬ 
duced by the bands is so unlike anything found in other South 
African species of Viciria as to easily distinguish morigera. 
The abdomen, in our specimens, is rubbed, hut the marking 
seems to have been two transverse curved bands and a median 
longitudinal band, all red, on a ground of white hairs. The 
falces are light brown. The legs are yellow, with black hairs 
and long spines. The tibiae of the first and second have, bed¬ 
sides lateral spines, four pairs below, and of these, the two 
spines nearest the proximal end are double, two coming out 
from the same point of insertion. The inner spine next in 
order is also double, although its mate on the other side is 
single. This peculiarity marks off morigera from V. alba, 
V. flavipes, V. parm.ata and V. niveimana, all of which have 
three pairs of ordinary spines under the tibia of the first. The 
