HAWAIIAN NESOPUPAE. 



Section Nesodagys new section. 



Surface like Limbatipu-pa, but there is a long, lamella-like 

 angular lamella reaching the lip. 



The two species included in this section are more or less 

 intermediate between Limbatipupa and Nesop it-pa. 



a\ Shell oblong to ovate, embryonic whorls granulose. 



P. wesleyana and sub-species, no. 13. 



a-. Shell short, almost globose, embryonic whorls minutely 

 spirally striate. P. thacnixmi, no. 14. 



13. NESOPUPA WESLEYANA Ancey. PL 29, figs. 1, 2. 



"Shell oblong, thin, perforate, scarcely shining, under a 

 strong lens granulate, brown-corneous, ornamented with 

 oblique and distant, more or less deciduous, membranous cos- 

 tulse, slightly wavy on the last whorl. Spire oblong, slightly 

 obtuse. Whorls 5, separated by an impressed suture, the last 

 oblong, ascending slightly towards its end, tapering gradually 

 towards the base, slightly dilated near the aperture. Aper- 

 ture vertical, truncate-ovate, very slightly receding at the base, 

 nearly equal to i/>, of the length, brownish within, 5-plicate ; 

 peristome not continuous, expanded and reflexed throughout, 

 slightly thickened, sublabiate, with a unicolorous brownish 

 lip. Angular lamella arcuate, elongate, slightly bent; parietal 

 a little more deeply seated, nearly median in position ; colu- 

 mellar lamella acute, deeply seated; two elongate, parallel 

 palatal, the lower more deeply seated. Length 2, diam. 1, 

 aperture about 0.75 mm." (Ancey). 



Hawaii: Hilo, 4 miles Olaa road, type locality (Tliaanum, 

 Cooke) ; Glen wood (Pilsbry) ; Waipio Pali (Henshaw, Thaa- 

 num) ; Rainbow Falls (Cooke) ; Puna (Thurston) ; fossil at 

 Puuwaawaa (Thurston), Huehue (Gouveia) Palihoukapapa 

 (Thaanum, Henshaw). Kahoolawe ; fossil at Kanapou 

 (Forbes & Stokes). E. Maui : Kaupakalua (Baldwin), fossil 

 at Kanaio and Auwahi (Fleming). W. Maui: Waiakapu and 

 Waihee (Forbes), Hahakea and lao (Cooke). Oahu: Ahui- 

 manu (Cooke), Kamanaiki (Gouveia) fossil at Kailua 

 (Pilsbry). No typical specimens of this species have been 



