DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XII. 
PIG. 
107. Tegenaria civilis. a, $ ; b, $ ; c, eyes and falces; d, maxillae, labium, and sternum; 
e, ceplialo-thorax and abdomen, in profile ; f, palpus of $; g, claws. 
108. „ silvicola, $ . 
109. Ccelotes saxatilis. a, ? ; h, $ ; c, eyes and falces ; d, parts of the mouth; e, palpus of d ; 
f, lateral view of spinners ; y, claws ; h, cocoons, of the natural size, with particles 
of earth deposited by the spider on the upper surface. 
110. Textrix lycosina. a, ? ; b,$\ c, eyes and falces ; d, parts of the mouth ; e, ceplialo-thorax 
with falx, profile view ; /, palpus of 3 ; y, palpal organs in profile. 
6. Lycosa herbigrada. a, <5; b, palpal organs of ditto. 
85. Salticus tardigradus. b, ? . 
58. PInlodromus cespiticolis. h, cocoon in situ on calluna, slightly enlarged. 
102. Angeleno, brunnea. d, cocoon, attached to moss, in its unfinished state, pieviousto its being 
plastered with mud, as shown in Fig. e, slightly enlarged. 
AA. Hemeleies fasciatus, wingless ? ; a figure of the male will be given in a subsequent Plate. 
HU j; formosus. l)esv. These two ichneumons are parasites of Agelena brunnea. They 
are described by Mr. F. Smith, in the ‘Transactions of the Entomological Society/ 
for the year 1860. 
CC. Pompilus sepicola. F. Smith. ( P.fuscm. Eabr., not of Linn.) A large ichneumon, which, 
after paralysing spiders by piercing them with its ovipositor, conveys them to its 
nidus as food for its young. 
