
INVOLUTE. | 
This species is subject to the following very distinct varieties : 
1. With four plaits, the middle ones less than the others. 
2. With five plaits, the three middle ones less than the 
others. 
3. With five plaits, the three lower ones less than the 
others. 
Found first in Britain by Mr. Rolph, in Charlton Wood, 
Kent; and Mr. Gray has met with it at Hastings, Sussex. Its 
habitat is in damp woody situations, among moss, and on the 
trunks of trees. 
5. Cuxausiiia pusia, pl. XVIII, f. 32. 
Clausilia dubia, Drapernaud, Hist. des Moll., p. 142, pl. 4, f. 
10; Alder, Mag. Zool. and Bot., II, p. 111; Clausilia rugosa, 
var., Alder, 1. c., p. 32; Clausilia similis, Gilbertson, MSS. 
Shell dark umber-brown, ventricose; body long; spire small, 
consisting of from nine to eleven rather inflated yolutions ; 
covered with pretty strong, elevated, somewhat granular strie, 
iu consequence of a few spiral ridges on the lower volutions ; 
aperture oblong-ovate, contracted above, and a little rounded 
below; lips white, rather narrow; columella with two plaits, the 
superior one placed near the upper portion of the aperture and 
pointing downwards, the lower one near the under side, inter- 
nally bifurcate, and pointing upwards. Size, about five-eighths 
of an inch long, and one-eighth in diameter. 
Tt is known from Clausilia rugosa by being longer, and 
more ventricose. 
Found in the North of England, under moss in rocky situa- 
tions. 
Genus 50.—Pupa—Lamarck. 
Shell oblong, cylindrical, thick; spire with numerous volu- 
tions, terminating in an obtuse apex; aperture elliptical for the 
most part, sometimes a little square at the upper extremity, 
and rounded anteriorly; peretreme and inner lip continuous, 
slightly thickened, and reflected; upper part of the aperture 
frequently provided with a single tooth within: many of the 
species furnished with longitudinal ribs. 
The young shells of the genus Pupa are trochiform, with a 
simple cayity at the base. Mr. Alder first pointed out a 
remarkable structure in the interior of Pupa wmbilicata and 
P. Anglica. This consists of a raised thread-like laminar 
process winding spirally round the columella, and a similar 
lamina running spirally on the upper side of the volutions, with 
a series of small, flat, nearly transverse, testaceous plaits, situate 
at intervals, in the interior of the volutions. These are some- 
what analagous to the septa in the genus Segmentina. These 
plaits are not, however, continued through the lower volutions. 
Their use has not yet been ascertained. 
1. Pura muscorvm, pl. XIV, f. 7. 
Pupa muscorum, Drapernaud, Hist. des Moll., p.59, var. a; 
Pfeiffer, I, p. 57, pl. 3, f. 17, 18; Pupa delucida, Rossmassler, 
VI, p. 15, pl. 23, f. 326; Bulimus muscorum, Bruguiére, Ency. 
Meth., p. 334, No. 63; Helix muscorum, Miiller, Verm. Hist., 
II, p. 105, No. 304; Turbo muscorum, Linnus, Syst. Nat., p. 
1240, No. 651; Chemnitz, Conch., IX, pl. 3, f. 3; Maton and 
Racket, Linn. Tr., VIII, p. 182; Turton, Brit. Fau., p. 184; 
Donoyan, Brit. Sh., III, pl. 80. 
MOLLUSCA. 39 
Shell subcylindrical, smooth, glossy ; body somewhat shorter 
than the spire, which consists of four rather broad yolutions, 
gradually tapering to a somewhat obtuse apex; aperture sub- 
ovate, destitute of teeth; outer lip white, rather narrow above, 
but widening a little below; pillar lip narrow; whole surface of 
a fulyous brown-colour. 
Found at the Rabbit Burrow, Portmarnock, Ireland; near 
Weymouth, Dorsetshire; at Corstorphin Hill, near Edinburgh, 
and in the park of the Earl of Rothes, near Leslie, Fifeshire, 
on the bark of trees and among moss. 
This seems the true P. muscorum of Linneus; and I cannot 
agree with Rossmassler and other modern authors, in consider- 
ing the P. unidentata and bidentata as varieties of this species. 
2. Pupa unipenrata, pl. XIV, f. 4.—First Ed. pl. 41, 
f. 4. 
Pupa unidentata, Pfeiffer, Land un Was. Sn., I, p. 58, pl. 3, 
f.19, 20; Pupa muscorum, Girt, Conchyl. der Wetterau, S. 
20; Rossmassler, I, p. 83, pl. 2, f. 373 Turbo muscorum, V. 
Alten, Erd-und Flussconchyl., un Augsb., S. 23. 
Shell smooth, brownish horn-coloured, subcylindrical; con- 
sisting of seven narrow, slightly inflated yolutions, terminating 
in an obtuse apex; aperture suborbicular, sublunate above, with 
a single sharp, prominent tooth placed on the base of the body, 
margins white and smooth. Length a little more than an eighth 
of an inch; diameter a third of its length. 
Distinguished from P. marginata by the single tooth being 
more acute, and placed farther forward. 
Found with other species of Pupa at Portmarnock Rabbit 
Burrow, Ireland. 
3. Pupa BIDENTATA, pl. XIV, f. 6.—First Ed,, pl. 41, f. 6. 
Pupa bidentata, Pfeiffer, I, p. 59, pl. 3, f. 21, 22. 
Shell ovate, ventricose; body and spire of nearly equal 
length; the latter consisting of four considerably inflated volu- 
tions, the three superior ones rapidly diminishing, and termi- 
nating in a rather sharp apex; aperture subovate; outer lip 
slightly reflected, and white ; pillar lip narrowly reflected on 
the columella, with a narrow subumbilicus behind it ; whole 
surface covered with a chestnut-brown epidermis. Length not 
two lines; diameter equal to two-thirds its length. 
Found at Portmarnock, Ireland. 
This species is much shorter, in proportion to its breadth, 
than the P. marginata, and is always destitute of the rib be- 
hind its outer lip. 
Notwithstanding the opinion of Rossmassler and other 
authors, I always have considered that the P. muscorum, 
unidentata, and bidentata are distinct-species; for besides the 
dentition, the following distinctions will be found in the three 
nearly allied species of this genus. In P. muscorum the shell 
is subcylindrical, the whole volutions a little more oblique than 
in the other species, and gradually decreasing, with the apicial 
one rather obtuse; and the body and first volution longer. Ee 
unidentata is nearly cylindrical, the volutions are more trans- 
yerse, the three apicial ones diminishing more abruptly, with 
the superior one more pointed. P. bidentata is altogether a 
shorter shell in proportion to its breadth. 
4. Pupa marcinata, pl. XVIII, f. 33, 34. 
Pupa marginata, Drapernaud, Hist. des Moll., p. 61, pl. 3, 
f. 36, 37, 38; Pfeiffer, Land un Was. Sn., I, p. 59, pl. 3, f. 23, 
24; Brard, p. 93, pl. 3, f. 15, 16; Turton, Man., p. 98, f. 795 
