150 MILAX GAGATES. 
Tunis—At foot of Djebel Abdellah near Cap Roux; Ariana near Tunis (Bour- 
guignat) ; and at Djebel Regas (Letourneux & Bourguignat, Mal. Tunisie, 1887). 
Egypt—(Scharff, Slugs of Ireland, 1891, p. 535). 
ATLANTIC ISLES. 
Azores—Universal, inhabiting every isle of the group (Wollaston, Test. Atl., 
1877, p. 10). 
Madeira—Extremely common in Madeira, on cultivated land and elsewhere, up 
to an altitude of 3,000 feet (R. B. Watson, J. de Conch., 1876, p. 221). Found around 
Funchal, at the Pico do Infante and other places. Mr. Lowe found it near Alegria, 
at the Mount in Cayados Ravine, and also at the summit of the Pico do Castello 
on Porto Santo (Wollaston, Test. Atl., 1877, p. 69). 
Canaries—Extremely common (Simroth, Nachrichtsbl., 1895). 
Ascension—(T. D. A. Cockerell, Science, June 23, 1893). 
St. Helena—(E. A. Smith, Proce. Zool. Soc., 1884, p. 278). 
Tristan d’Acunha—Obtained by the Challenger Expedition (Smith, op. cit. ). 
NEARCTIC REGION. 
Idaho—Milax hewstoni, Coeur d’Alene, H. F. Wickham (T. D. A. Cockerell, 
Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., Nov. 1843, p. 337). 
Washington State-—M. hewstoni, Seattle (Cockerell, op. cit.). 
Pennsylvania—M. hewstoni, Phipps’ Conservatory, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, 
G. H. Clapp. 
California—Wilax hewstoni, tirst noticed about 1885 on the grass plots of San 
Francisco ; it soon became abundant, and has extended its range to Seattle, Wash- 
ington State, in the north and San Diego in the south (R. E. C. Stearns, Science, 
April 27, 1900, p. 655). About Williamstown University, Los Angeles Co. (M. 
Burton, Nautilus, Jan. 1890). Oakland, 1890, H. Hemphill; Santa Barbara, Miss 
Cusack ; Haywards, Feb. 1890, Dr. J. G. Cooper (T. D. A. Cockerell, op. cit., 
p- 337). 
Mexico—Milax hewstoni, near overflow of San Tomas river, Lower California 
(H. Hemphill, J. de Conch., 1881, p. 35). 
NEOTROPICAL REGION. 
Brazil—(Heynemann, op. cit.). 
Bermuda—Obtained by the Challenger Expedition (E. A. Smith, op. cit., p. 276). 
Juan Fernandez—Collected by the Challenger Expedition (E. A. Smith, Proce. 
Zool. Soc., 1884, p. 279). 
ETHIOPIAN REGION. 
Cape Colony—Obtained in Noy. 1873 at Cape of Good Hope by the Challenger 
Expedition, probably the Limax capensis Krauss (E. A. Smith, op. cit., p. 276). 
Port Elizabeth, J. H. Ponsonby (T. D. A. Cockerell, op. cit., p. 337). 
Natal—(Melvill & Ponsonby, Proce. Mal. Soe., 1898, p. 172). 
AUSTRALASIAN REGION. 
New South Wales—Tamworth, C. T. Musson; Gladesville, H. Deane; abun- 
dant about Sydney, J. Brazier; under stones at Darling Point, near Sydney, in 
company with Agriolimax agrestis, G. Neville (C. T. Musson, Proe. Linn. Soe. 
N.S. W., 1890, p. 891). 
Victoria—-Ballarat, under garden rubbish, stones, and wood, also on cabbages, 
coming out at night and early morning (C. T. Musson, op. cit.). 
New Zealand—Ohaupo and Auckland (C. T. Musson, op. cit.). 
Sandwich Islands—Isle of Maui (Collinge, Proe. Mal. Soe., 1896, p. 49). 
