514 Mr. Jeffreys's Supplement to the "Synopsis of 



C. ventricosa, p. 354. 



Animal nigrescens, pede dilutiore. Ten^acw^abreviuscula. 



Not uncommon at the roots of willows, and among the rejec- 

 tamenta at Battersea Fields. Eton ; rejectamenta at Weymouth, 

 and parts of South Devon ; Rev. Dr. Goodall. 



C. derugata, p. 354. 



Var. a. alba, hyalina. 



Neighbourhood of Bath, rare. Darnwood : Kent ; Mr. J. F. 

 Stephens. 



Dr. Turton favoured me with the C. papillaris of Draparnaud 

 as British. It is rather narrower in girth, with the peristome 

 not so thick and reflected as in South-European specimens ; but 

 as the Doctor could not give me the exact locality of his shells, 

 and Baron Ferussac has pronounced this, with (deservedly) the 

 Helix ociona and Bulla rivalis of British authors, as exotic to this 

 country, I cannot for the present give it a place in my catalogue. 



Pupa. 

 P. Secale, p. 355. 



Jaminia Secale. Risso, Prod, de TEiir. MSr. iv. 88. 



Devizes, Dr. Turton : and my friend Doctor Gibbon of 

 Swansea showed me some specimens which he had received 

 from the neighbourhood of Brecon, South Wales. 



Mr. J. E. Gray tells me that he once found a specimen of 

 the Pupa cinerea (Draparnaud) among the rejectamenta of the 

 Thames at Battersea ; and I have since myself detected an im- 

 perfect specimen at the same place. 



P. ringens, p. 356. 



"Animal dark lead colour above and white below." Mr. Alder, 

 Catal. 



P. bidentata. Pfeifer, i. 59. Taf. Hi. fig. 21, 22. 



P. Muscorum c. Id. iii. 6l. ? 



P. um- 



