AXA.J)E\US. 



479 



Mr. G. Nevill, in the Molluscau portion of the * Scientific Eesults 

 of the Second Yarkand Mission,' under Anad. altivagus, I well 

 remember his showing me in Calcutta. They are certainly very 

 distinct from the Simla specimens I liave seen, and much nearer 

 A. jerdoni in outward appearance. Heynemann's name would 

 have well suited these gigantic Nepalese slugs ; but his description 

 certainly applies to a much smoother animal, so well shown in his 

 fiaure of a portion of the foot viewed from above (plate 1, tig. 17t), 

 and which I reproduce on plate vii, fig. 4. The i^epalese species 

 I propose to distinguish by the name insiffuis." {Godwin- Austen.) 

 It is rather unfortunate that Lieut.-Colonel Godwin-Austen, 

 when naming this species, did not give a full description. 



Fig. 152. — Anadenus jerdoni. 

 (Copied from Land and Freshw. Moll. India.) 



469. Anadenus blanfordi, Godwin- Austen. 



Anadenus blanfordi, Godwiu-Austeii, Moll. India, i, 1882, p. 5.3 ; 

 Coolcerell, The Conchologist, ii, 1893, p. 192. 



Original description : — " From the single spirit-specimen it 

 woukl appear to have been of a dark ochraceous brown, with some 

 dark grey mottlings on the upper part of the foot. It may be 

 tlistinguished by the very different arrangement of the warty pro- 

 tuberances on the epidermis, these being well raised, isolated, and 

 elongately diamond-shaped. 



"Total length 44, length of mantle IG, breadth 11 mm." 

 ( Godwin-Austen.) 



Hah. India : Darjeeling, about 7000 ft. (Blanford). 



" There is no doubt of its distinctness from all other species I 

 have seen, but I defer figuring it until I receive a large collection 

 in spirit now on its way from Sikkim," {Godwin- Austen.) 



