2 MOLLUSCA OF SOMERSET. 
original locality, and has likewise been introduced with plants 
into many other gardens in the West of England.” Its dis- 
covery in Messrs. Miller and Sweet’s nursery at Clifton (now 
Garraway’s) by Mr. T.. Drummond was the first British record. 
Mr. J. De C. Sowerby thought it might have been imported 
along with plants from Teneriffe or elsewhere, but it is now 
held that the three species of Yestacella which occur in these 
Islands are indigenous. 
It has been lately recorded by Santer Kennard from a 
Holocene rain-wash at Porlock Weir. 
North. 
Long Ashton Vicarage. Plentiful; Mrs. Falloon. There 
are specimens from this locality in the Bristol Museum. 
Brislington ; A. M. Norman. 
Bath; Jenyns Museum coll. 
Clevedon; A. M. Norman. 
Garden near Axbridge; Miss H. J. Taylor. 
Axbridge; Miss Ffoulkes Taylor. 
Castle Cary ; W. Maemillan. 
Greinton. Abundant; W. S. Clark. 
Street; W. S. Clark. 
Weston-super-Mare; W. Robinsen. 
South. 
Taunton; A. M. Norman. 
Garden at Taunton; W. Gyngell. 
Bridgwater. Abundant; /7. Corder. 
TESTACELLA HALIOTIDEA, Draparnaud. 
Much rarer than the preceding species. Norman apparently 
doubted its occurrence in the county, “In all instances in 
which we have had the opportunity of examining the speci- 
mens, the species has proved to be 7. mauqe?. 
North. 
Weston-super-Mare ; W. Robinson. 
Beckington; H. Franklin Parsons. Recorded by W. 
Mark Webb in “Journ. Malacology,” 1897, p. 49. 
South. 
Bridgwater; B. B. Woodward. 
Gardens, Taunton; Tate. 
TESTACELLA SCUTULUM, Sowerby. 
The only record that I can find of this species is that given 
in Leipner’s Bristol List, 1875, viz., Leigh Woods, rare, 
