[252]. Bernard, loc. cit. p. 366.

[253]. J. Linn. Soc. xxv., 1894, p. 29.

[254]. See Pocock, Ann. Nat. Hist. (6), xiv., 1894, p. 120.

[255]. Kraepelin, Das Tierreich, Berlin, 8. Lief., 1899, p. 234.

[256]. The term mostly in use is Araneida, which should mean Araneus-like animals. This is clearly not allowable, unless there is a genus Araneus or Aranea. For many years there has been no such genus recognised, but Simon now attempts to re-establish it, inadmissibly, as it appears to us. (See note, p. 408).

[257]. Mém. Mus. d’Hist. Nat. xviii., 1829, p. 377.

[258]. Pickard-Cambridge (Spiders of Dorset, 1879–1881) omits the coxal joint, which, with its lobe, he calls the maxilla, and therefore gives only five joints, which he names axillary, humeral, cubital, radial, and digital.

[259]. Pickard-Cambridge, in his Spiders of Dorset, names them exinguinal, coxal, femoral, genual, tibial, metatarsal, and tarsal.

[260]. Nat. Hist. Tidsskr. iv., 1843, p. 349.

[261]. J. Linn. Soc. xv., 1881, p. 155.