LIMACID®. 5 
Var. tristts, Moquin- Tandon. 
Bratton St. Maur! In meadows, under sticks that had 
lain for a long time on the ground. 
A. LEVIS, Miller. 
Probably not so uncommon as the lack of records would 
indicate. 
North. 
Among heaps of stones by the side of the lane which 
runs parallel with the cliff from Walton to Portishead, 
and among decaying vegetation by the side of a rhine 
in Portishead Moor ; Norman. 
Coombe Down, Bath; Mrs. Oldroyd. 
Under logs and bark in damp situations, Bratton St. 
Maur ! 
South. 
Not uncommon by a ditch, Hatch Beauchamp; E. Wake- 
Bowell, 
Luccombe ! 
MILAX SOWERBYI, Férussac (=Amalia sowerbyi, Férussac, 
and Amalia marginata, Muller). 
Easily known by the prominent pale keel, it usually occurs 
in gardens, and the paucity of records probably arises from its 
subterranean habit ; it usually hides by day in worm burrows. 
North. 
Bath; Mrs. Oldroyd. 
Clevedon, in gardens, and in the copse between the upper 
Clevedon and the beach; Norman. 
Weston district ; Ff. A. Knight. 
Abundant in gardens in Hill Road, Weston-super-Mare ! 
South. 
Somewhat sparingly at Hatch Beauchamp, more common 
at Beer Crowcombe; EF. Wake-Bowell. 
Dulverton ; H. Watson. 
Var. nigrescens, Roebuck. 
Bridgwater ; W. Vinson. 
M. GAGATES, Draparnaud., 
Also chiefly subterranean, coming forth to feed at night. 
North. 
Specimens in the British Museum are labelled “ Bath, 
J. E. Daniel.” 
