. Breviora. 1968 MIAGRAMMOPES IN PANAMA AND THE WEST INDIES 7 what he assumed to be the same species from Puerto Rico. Among these were three females regarded as mature and several immature specimens of both sexes. I think it unlikely that the Puerto Rican specimens belong to M. ciliatus Petrunkevitch but I cannot be posi- tive at this time. In my collection from Puerto Rico, made in January and February, 1964, I have a single mature male and sev- eral immature specimens but not a single mature female. The mature male is being described as a new species elsewhere in this Figures 6-10.
. Breviora. 1968 MIAGRAMMOPES IN PANAMA AND THE WEST INDIES 7 what he assumed to be the same species from Puerto Rico. Among these were three females regarded as mature and several immature specimens of both sexes. I think it unlikely that the Puerto Rican specimens belong to M. ciliatus Petrunkevitch but I cannot be posi- tive at this time. In my collection from Puerto Rico, made in January and February, 1964, I have a single mature male and sev- eral immature specimens but not a single mature female. The mature male is being described as a new species elsewhere in this Figures 6-10. Miagrammopes aspinatus sp. nov. Fig. 6. Carapace; from above. Fig. 7. Right first tibia; dorso-retrolateral view. Fig. 8. Right fourth tibia; prolateral view. Figs. 9-10. Male palp; prolateral and retrolateral views, 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 Harvard University. Museum of Comparative Zoology. Cambridge, Mass. , Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University
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