PUPA. 245 



the outer lip of adult specimens and is repeated at short 

 intervals ; these transverse plates or septa are distinctly visible 

 outside the base of young shells : outer lijp dJidi pillar lip light 

 reddish-brown, much thickened and slightly reflected: um- 

 bilicus small, narrow and oblique, but distinct. L. 0-133. 

 B. 0-65. 



Var. pallida. Shell of a lighter colour, sometimes whitish. 



Habitat : Among dead leaves and moss, and at the 

 roots of grass, in moist places throughout the northern 

 counties of England, the West of Scotland, and all 

 Ireland, as well as in Guernsey. It occurs in a sub- 

 fossil state at Copford. Its foreign range appears to 

 be limited, so far as is at present known, — it having 

 only been fomid once in the rejectamenta of a river near 

 Toulouse (Moquin-Tandon), Cintra and the neighbour- 

 hood of Oporto (Morelet and Pring), and Algeria (More- 

 let and Dupuy). This southern distribution would seem 

 to bear out the conjecture made by the authors of the 

 ' British MoUusca ' that the present species '' is probably 

 a member of our Atlantic fauna and of Southern or 

 South-western origin ; '^ but at the same time its occur- 

 rence as an upper tertiary fossil, with Helix lamdlata 

 and many other decidedly Northern forms, is a fact that 

 must not be overlooked in considering the geographical 

 distribution of the MoUusca. 



This is a shy little creature, although tolerably active 

 when inclined to make its appearance. It has a singular 

 habit of withdrawing slowly one of its eyes, which rolls 

 backwards Kke a little ball until it reaches the neck, 

 while the tentacle which supports it remains extended 

 to its full length. This I have observed being done 

 when there was no obstacle in the way. It also retracts 

 occasionally, and apparently without any reason^ one of 

 its horns and not the other. It does not appear to be 

 ovoviviparous, lilve the next species (P. umbilicata) : at 



