Notes on South African Non-marine MoHusca. 185 



Watsou considers that specimens collected at Caledon and East 

 London by Mrs. Longstaff in 1914, and at Albert Falls, Natal, by 

 Akermaii in ]910, will probably prove to belong to this species. 

 Lightfoot has also taken it in gardens at Stellenbosch, Ceres and East 

 London. 



AGRIOLIMAX L^VIS (Miiller). 



Recorded by Sturauy from " Cape " (in Vienna Museum) in 1898,. 

 by Collinge from Cape Town (finder not mentioned) in 1901, and by 

 Taylor from Queenstown, Cape Province (Dower) in 1904. 



It is probable that examples from Thornville Junction, Natal 

 (Burnup, 1907), will eventually prove to belong to this species. 



ARION FUSCUS (Miiller). 



Lightfoot found this species to be fairly common on the slopes of 

 Table Mountain at Plaat Klip, and on Signal Hill, in 1898. It was 

 chronicled by Colliuge from Pietermaritzburg in 1910. 



ARION INTERMEDIUS Normand. 



Stated by Simroth to have been collected on the Cape Flats by 

 Schultze in 1904. 



In addition to the chances of possible importation by the earlier 

 Dutch and Huguenot settlers, there has more recently been established 

 a considerable German agricultural colony in this neighbourhood, so 

 that the presence there of any of the commoner Eui'opeau Molluscs is 

 easily explainable. 



EULOTA SIMILARIS (Ft'russac). 



A widespread circum-tropical species whose presence at Durban is 

 doubtless accountable to introduction in plants from Mauritius or 

 Ceylon. It is making little headway in South Africa, for although 

 collected in Durban by Plant about 1860 and in a garden on the Berea, 

 near the Botanical Gardens, by Quekett about 1900, Mr. Burnup 

 informs me that the only fresh locality known to him is in the Stella 

 Bush, near Durban, where specimens have been taken within the last 

 four years. As houses have recently been built abutting on the Bush, 

 E. similar is may well have been carried there in plants from the 

 Berea, but it certainly appears probable that the species is now 

 breeding in Natal. 



