34 HYGROMIA HISPIDA. 
In the British Isles it is well diffused over England, Wales, and Ireland, 
and extends over the southern half of Scotland, but is quite unknown 
beyond, except that Mr. A. W. Stelfox has reported his discovery of the 
species at Stromness in the Orkney Islands. Its occurrence there may be 
regarded as correlated with its presence in Iceland and the Faroes. 
: NS ain s 72 ens ss, J 
Fie. 42.—Geographical Distribution of Hygromia hispida (Linné). 
BBR Recorded Distribution 
GERMANY. 
H. hispida las been recorded under that name from Alsace, Baden, Bavaria, 
3randenburg, Bremen, Darmstadt, Franconia, Gotha, Hanover, Hesse-Cassel, 
Holstein, Lippe-Detmold, Lorraine, Liineberg, Lusatia, Magdeburg, Mecklenburg, 
Merseburg, Nassau, Oldenburg, Osnabruck, East, West, and Rhenish Prussia, 
Pomerania, Posen, Pyrmont, Reuss, Saxony, Schleswig, Silesia, Suabia, Thuringia, 
ayer, Westphalia, Wurtemburg, and the Islands of Heligoland, Usedom, and 
ugen. 
NETHERLANDS. 
Holland—Known from Friesland, Gelderstein, North and South Holland, Lim- 
burg, Utrecht, and Zealand. 
Belgium — Throughout the kingdom, and records are known for Antwerp, 
Brabant, Flanders West, Hainault, Liége, Limburg, Luxemburg, Namur, and the 
Grand Duchy of Luxemburg. 
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Probable Range 
FRANCE. 
_ As H. hispida it has been generally spoken of as inhabiting all or almost all 
France, and has been specially noted from Ain, Aisne, Allier, Alpes Maritimes, 
Ardennes, Ardeche, Ariége, Aube, Aude, Auvergne, Aveyron, Basses Alpes, Basses 
Pyrénées, Bouches-du-Rhéne, Calvados, Champagne Meridionale, Charente Inféri- 
eure, Cantal, Cote d’Or, Cétes-du-Nord, Dréme, Eure, Eure-et-Loir, Finistére, 
Gard, Gers, Gironde, Haute Garonne, Haute Loire, Haute Marne, Hautes Pyrénées, 
Haute Savoie, Herault, Ille-et-Vilaine, Indre, Indre-et-Loire, Istre, Jura, Landes, 
Loire Inferiéure, Loiret, Lorraine, Lozere, Maine-et-Loire, Manche, Morbihan, 
Meuse, Moselle, Nievre, Nord, Oise, Orne, Pas-de-Calais, Puy-de-Doéme, Pyrénées 
Orientales, Rhone, Sadne-et-Loire, Sarthe, Savoy, Seine, Seine Inférieure, Seine- 
et Marne, Seine-et-Oise, Somme, Var, Vaucluse, Véndee, Vienne, Vosges, Yonne, 
and the Island of Corsica. 
LPATGY: 
Recorded by Prof. Lessona from Piedmont; by Adami and Pini from Lombardy ; 
by Strobel from the north slope of the Appenines in Emilia; it is also reported from 
Venetia and the province of Catangaro, Calabria, by Mr. G. K. Gude, though not 
included by Marchioness Paulucci in her Malacological Fauna of Calabria; and 
specimens labelled ‘‘Sicily” are in the University Museum, Manchester. 
