AGRIOLIMAX AGRESTIN. 119 
ITALY. 
tecorded as inhabiting the whole of Italy and its islands. In its various forms, 
which include Eichwald’s variety iberus and Issel’s variety efruscus, of which the 
descriptions have not been accessible, it has been reported from Calabria, Emilia, 
Liguria, Lombardy, Piedmont, Rome, Tuscany, Umbria, Venetia, and the Islands 
of Capri, Sardinia, and Sicily. 
AUSTRO-HUNGARY. 
Has been found in Austria, Bosnia, Bohemia, Galicia, Goritz, Hungary, Istria, 
Slavonia, Styria, Transylvania, Tyrol, and Upper Carinthia. 
SPAIN AND PORTUGAL. 
Spain—Graells says it is found in various provinces. It has been definitely 
recorded from near Santiago in Galicia; from Barcelona and Olot in Catalonia; from 
Lorea in Murcia; from the White Mountain in Aragon; as common in garden at 
Valencia ; and Mr. E. J. Lowe found it common in May 1860, at Hoy de Barcena 
near Santander in Old Castile; while the var. panormitana is recorded by Simroth 
from Gibraltar in Andalusia. 
Portugal—Simroth reports this species from Lisbon and Cintra in Estremadura, 
Coimbra in Beira, and Braga and Oporto in Minho. Morelet records the varieties 
nigra and cinerea as common in Estremadura, Alemtejo, and Algarve, and the var. 
rufescens as living in various moist places. 
Balearic Isles—Plentiful in Majorca, Minorea, ete. 
BALKAN PENINSULA. 
Servia—(Heynemann, Jahrb. Deutsch. Mal. Ges., June 1885, p. 254). 
Montenegro—Cettinje (Clessin, Nachrichtsbl., 1885, p. 179). 
SCANDINAVIA. 
Norway— Very common throughout Norway, extending even to Kistrand, 70° 25’ 
north lat. ; it abounds also about Tromso at 70° north lat. In these northern regions, 
however, the animals scarcely exceed an inch in length, and according to Miss 
Esmark are mostly uniform light-brown in colour, but grey specimens are also 
found, as well as maculate ones. 
Sweden—Very common throughout, and extending to the extreme northern con- 
fines of the country, being recorded by Westerlund for Karesuando in Swedish Lap- 
land at 68°-69° north lat. 
Denmark—(Heynemann, op. cit.). Miiller records his Limax reticulatus from 
gardens in Fridrichsdal and Rosenbure. 
It is also recorded for Greenland, Southern Iceland and the Faroes. 
RUSSIA. 
Has been recorded from Courland, Livland, Esthland, Moscow, Kharkov, Pol- 
tava, Tchernigov, Crimea, Poland, Abchasia, and according to Luther is common 
throughout Middle and Southern Finland. 
Siberia—Westerlund gives numerous localities along the whole valley of the 
Jenissei from Kolmogorowa in the south, 59° 30’ north lat., where the examples 
were strongly maculate ; the finely spotted varieties were more boreal in their dis- 
tribution, but not met with beyond Baklanovskaia at 64° 50’; still further to the 
north, the pale, immaculate form only was found, and extended as far as Selivan- 
inskoj, 65° 55’ north lat. It has: also been recorded by F. Schmidt as found on 
Brjochow [or Bregovski] Island in the estuary of the.Jenissei at 70° 50’. 
On the Lower Amur, Schrenk found it abundant about Dshare, Nikolajevsk, and 
on the Island Uisut in the Liman or estuary of the Amur. Maack found it on the 
banks of the Ussuri, a tributary of Amur, and Middendorff found a small slug in 
the Stanowoi Mountains which Schrenk regarded as this species (Sibir. Moll., 1877). 
MONGOLIAN SUB-REGION. 
Turkestan—Limax fedtschenkoi is said to be peculiar to the district between 
Aral and Kokhand (Westerlund, Sib. Moll., 1877, p. 13).; 
China—L. setchuanensis Heude, which is probably a synonym of A. agrestis, is 
moderately abundant in the mountains of Tchen-k’eou, the province of Se-Chuen 
(Heude, Moll. Terr. Fleuve Bleu, 1885, p. 99). 
Japan—Probably the Limax varians of A. Ad., from Hakodadi, Refunsiri, and 
Risivi are really referable to Agriolimax agrestis. 
