Page:Supplement to harvesting ants and trap-door spiders (IA supplementtoharv00mogg).pdf/121

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VI. Nemesia cæmentaria, Latr.—Nest of cork type. Only known with certainty to inhabit the neighbourhood of Montpellier.

VII. N. Moggridgii, Camb. (formerly described under the name of N. cæmentaria, Latr.[1])—Nest of cork type; is found at San Remo, Mentone, Cannes, Hyères, and Marseilles. Its range probably extends some distance to the eastwards, but I doubt whether it does so towards the west, for there I think it likely that it will be found to be replaced by the typical cæmentaria.

VIII. N. Simoni, Camb.—Nest of the single-door unbranched wafer type, discovered at Bordeaux in May, 1874.

IX. N. suffusa, Camb.—Nest of single-door branched wafer type, discovered at Montpellier in May, 1873.

X. N. Eleanora, Camb.—Nest of double-door unbranched wafer type; is found at San Remo, Mentone, Cannes, Vaucluse near Avignon. M. Simon says[2] he has also found it at Digne, in the Basses Alpes.

XI. N. congener, Camb.—Nest of double-door branched wafer type; discovered at Hyères in May, 1873.

XII. N. Manderstjernæ, Koch, in Ausserer (formerly described under the name of N. meridionalis, Costa).[3]—Nest of double-door, branched, cavity wafer type; is found at San Remo, Bordighera, Mentone, Nice, Cannes, and Hyères (apparently very rare at the last-named place).

  1. Ants and Spiders, p. 92.
  2. E. Simon, Aranèides nouveaux du Midi de l'Europe, in "Mém. Soc. Roy. Sc. de Liège," 2^{me}. ser. tom. v. p. 30.
  3. Ants and Spiders, p. 101.