138 MACROCERAMUS, CUBA. 



rounded. Aperture brownish and banded inside, lip pale, 

 very slightly expanded, thin ; columellar margin dilated above. 



Length 13.5, diarn. 4.8 mm., whorls 11 (entire). 



Length 14.5, diam. 5 mm., whorls 9i/ 2 (truncate). 



Length 12.3, diam. 5 mm., whorls 8i/ 2 (truncate). 



Eastern Cuba: Yateras, on trees and cliffs (Gundlach) ; 

 Jibara (Arango) ; Farallones (Wright). 



M. pictus Gundl. in PFR., Malak. Bl., vi, 1859, p. 93, no. 60 ; 

 Monogr., vi, p. 348. ARANGO, Fauna, p. 82. 



Has some resemblance to the Haitian M. lineatus, but is 

 most closely related to M. pazi, from which it differs in the 

 less expanded peristome, more elaborate color-pattern and 

 more striate surface. Figured specimens are from Faral- 

 lones. 



20. M. PABALLELUS ' Arango ' Pf r. PL 21, figs. 15, 16 ; pL 

 20, fig. 9. 



Shell very shortly rimate, ovate-turrite, cream-white, with 

 a dark brown band beloiv the periphery, its lower edge den- 

 ticulate, and a small dark umbilical patch; above the periph- 

 ery there is a single spiral row of small brown dots, each con- 

 nected with a narrow oblique streak toward the suture above. 

 Early whorls usually truncate, the next two or three dark- 

 flamed. Surface striate above, the last whorl smoother, some- 

 times weakly malleate. Spire straightly high-conic, the 

 suture finely crenulate, at least above. Whorls 7-8 in trun- 

 cate, 9-10 in entire shells, but slightly convex, the last rounded 

 at the periphery and below. Aperture slightly oblique ; peris- 

 tome very slightly expanded, the columellar margin widely 

 dilated and reflexed, its face a little excavated. 



Length 11.5-13, diam. 5.5 mm. 



Length 14, diam. 6 mm. (type). 



Eastern Cuba: Cape Maisi, on spiny plants (Arango). 



M. parallelus Arango mss., PFR., Malak. Bl., xiii, 1866, p. 

 59; Novit. Conch., p. 402, pi. 93, f. 9, 10; Monogr., vi, p. 347. 

 ARANGO, Fauna, p. 81. 



Closely related to M. pazi and pictus, but distinguished by 

 the rather faint, golf-stick-shaped markings of the upper 



