. The common spiders of the United States. Spiders -- United States. THE LYCOSID^ 8 3. behind. In the males (fig. 199) the colors are darker and the dark markings larger. The ends of the palpi are large and covered with black hairs. In one freshly molted young male there was hardly any trace of the spots on the sternum. The male palpi were dark gray with black hairs, except the tarsus, which was light colored, with a dark spot in the middle and a black hairs. The markings of the abdomen were very in tinct, and the light color brownish, while the tho- rax and legs are slightly green. The first


. The common spiders of the United States. Spiders -- United States. THE LYCOSID^ 8 3. behind. In the males (fig. 199) the colors are darker and the dark markings larger. The ends of the palpi are large and covered with black hairs. In one freshly molted young male there was hardly any trace of the spots on the sternum. The male palpi were dark gray with black hairs, except the tarsus, which was light colored, with a dark spot in the middle and a black hairs. The markings of the abdomen were very in tinct, and the light color brownish, while the tho- rax and legs are slightly green. The first femora were black toward the end. ~. â Figs. 205,206, 207 C**~*« , §~( # dosa albopatella. â 205, Pardosa nigropalpis. -£-- # female> 2o6?male. Bot5h About quarter Of an inch / enlarged four times. 207, ff end of palpus of male. long. Black and gray. / The male with head and palpi black (fig. 203). In female the cephalothorax has a large light middle stripe, widest between the eyes and the dorsal groove, and a narrow light stripe on each side (fig. 202). The abdomen is light in the middle for its whole length in an irregular stripe partly divided by faint cross lines of gray. The sides are darker and spotted with black. The legs are faintly marked with darker rings. In the male the contrast between the light and dark markings is greater, the markings of the cephalothorax are smaller and brighter, and the head and palpi are black and covered with black hairs. Pardosa albopatella. â Smaller than P. nigropalpis, but resem- bling it in shape and color (figs. 205, 206). The middle stripe. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Emerton, J. H. (James Henry), 1847-1930. Boston, London, Ginn & Company


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectspiders, bookyear1902