TESTACELLA MAUGEI. 27 
FRANCE. 
In several maritime departments bordering upon the Atlantic Ocean. 
Charente-Inférieure— La Rochelle (G. & F., Mon. Test., 1856, p. 39). 
Finistére —Common about Brest, also at Moulin Blane, commune of St. Mare 
(Daniel, J. de Conch., 1883, p. 376). 
Gironde— Bordeaux, Gradignan and Blanquefort (G. & F., 1856, op. cit., p. 39). 
Loire-Inférieure —Cleons, near Nantes (Cailliaud, Cat. Moll. Loire-Inf., 1865, 
p- 206). 
Morbihan— Pare de Roguédas, near Vannes (Bourg., Mal. Bret., 1860, p. 44). 
Seine-Inférieure—Dieppe, Dugué (G. & F., 1856, op. cit., p. 39.) 
SPAIN AND PORTUGAL. 
Spain— Asturias (P. Fischer, Man. de Conch., 1883, p. 202). Algeciras in Anda- 
lusia, 1889, J. H. Ponsonby ! 
Portu gal—From the parallel of Coimbra as far as the shores of the Algarve 
(Morelet, eMBil Port., 1845, p. 18). Lisbon, March 1852, R. McAndrew. Algeés, A. 
Nobre (Mal. Tage et Sado, 1886, p. 122). Oporto (Simroth, Nacktsch. Portug.- 
Azor., 1891, p. 210). 
NORTH AFRICA. 
Morocco —Among dead leaves in damp spot in garden and under similar condi- 
tions at foot of a wall ina deep ravine, Tangiers, J. H. Ponsonby! These specimens 
were erroneously recorded as 7. bisuleata by Herr Hesse (Mal. Bliitt., 1885, p. 9). 
ATLANTIC ISLES. 
Azores—Cultivated grounds in S. Miguel, Sta. Maria and Fayal (Wollaston, 
Test. Atl., 1878, pp. 13, 14). 
Canaries—C ultivated land in Teneriffe and Gran Canary. Rev. Dr. Watson 
also found it sub-fossilized at Tafira, Gran Canary (W ollaston, Test. Atl., 1878, 
Deealy: 
_ Madeira—In cultivated grounds about Funchal ; at the Val, at S. Goncalo, and 
Camara de Lobos; in Dr. Rendall’s garden at Val Quinta and near 8. Martinho 
(Wollaston, Test. Atl., 1878, p. 73). 
ETHIOPIAN REGION. 
Cape Colony—Collected abundantly at Cape of Good Hope about 1857 by the 
late Mr. E. L. Layard ! 
NEARCTIC REGION. 
United States —Greenhouse at Lower Roxburgh, Philadelphia, Pa. (Robert 
Walton, Nautilus, 1891, He 83), also in greenhouse in School Lane, Germantown, 
Philadelphia (M. Schick, D Nautilus, April, 1895, p. 133). 
AUSTRALASIAN REGION. 
New Zealand—Prof. Hutton has deseribed a Zestacella from gardens about 
Auckland, under the name of vayans, which Mr. Cheeseman, of the Auckland 
Museum, thinks may prove to be maugei (C. T. Musson, Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S. 
Wales, 1890, p. 885). 
Fic. 42.—The classical locality for Testacedla mauget, 
Durdham Down Nurseries, Clifton, as they appeared half-a-century ago. 
