66 -—--HYALINIA AULIARIA. 
Va 
aS re SPAIN AND PORTUGAL. 
g Spain—Recorded for the province of Murcia, on the authority of Schmidt ; and 
-—*¥ the var. wwtabrica Westl. from Bilbao in the Basque provinces. 
Posrtugal—Reported hy Bourguignat under the name of Hyalinia nitideformis, 
as ranging from Portugal to England. 
SCANDINAVIA. 
Norway—Dr. Jeffreys records this species from Bergen; and G. O. Sars from 
Christiania; while Westerlund mentions Arendal, Modum, Hole, Norderhoug, 
Herstad, ete., and Miss Esmark says it is uncommon, and adds to the known 
localities Ringerive and Laurvik, in Christiania, and Lillesand in Christiansand. 
Sweden—Hartmann records it from about Stockholm ; and Westerlund from 
the provinces of Skane, Blekinge, Ostergotland, Westergotland, Orebro, and 
Sodermanland, as well as from the vicinity of Stockholm, and the Botanical 
Gardens at Upsala. The sub-var. anceps has been found at Lund and the Island 
of Gothland. 
Denmark—Westerlund records it as existing in many loealities in the islands 
and on the peninsula. Schlesch remarks that it is spread over all Denmark, though 
everywhere sparingly. He especially cites as localities Frederiksdal, Ordrup, 
Taarnby, and Valby, all near Copenhagen. He also reports it as very common 
on the Isle of Bornholm. 
Iceland—Recorded from the west coast by Méreh (J. de Conch., 1876, p. 212). 
Faroes—Occurs at Thorshavn, Tage, and Suderé, H. Schlesch, 1907. 
RUSSTA. 
Recorded by Luther for South-west Finland, and has also been recorded for the 
Crimea (Mal. Bl., 1881). 
NORTH AFRICA. 
Algiers—The var. suwballiaria is recorded from Algiers by Westerlund. 
ATLANTIC ISLES. 
“St. Heiena— Wollaston (Test. Atl., p. 536) describes this species as now estab- 
lished on the island, and-astending to the highest parts of the great central ridge, 
and it is now said to be universally distributed above 2,000 ft. elevation, particularly 
in the dampest parts, under stones and moist rotten wood and among the cabbage 
trees. Mr. Benson, who found it in 1832 between Plantation and Stitch’s Ridge, as 
well as in the valley, near Napoleon’s Tomb, described it as new under the name of 
Helix remota. Mr. Layard also found it between Jamestown and Longwood. 
NEARCTIC REGION. 
Greenland —Irederiksdal in South Greenland, 1906, H. Schleseh. 
United States —Park’s Nursery, Brooklyn, New York, Thos. Bland (specimens 
1 
in the Binney Collection, Washington). Found in a greenhouse at Boulder, 
Colorado, Jan. 1907, by G. H. Mason (T. D. A. Cockerell). 
AUSTRALASIAN REGION. 
New South Wales—The Zonites nitidus, recorded by Mr. C. T. Musson on the 
authority of Mr. Brazier as often found in hot-houses, should be referred to the 
present species, Mr. Musson himself concurring in this correction. 
New Zealand—Recorded as Zonites nitidus from beneath logs by Lake St. 
John, Auckland, by Mr. C. T. Musson. Mr. W. Denison Roebuck found it plenti- 
fully in Feb. 1905 at Tapuwaeharuru Spa, within a hundred yards of the hot 
sulphur stream which, at a temperature of 106° Fahr., flows through the Spa 
Valley! Sandhills, Taranaki! H. Suter. At the roots of a New Zealand species 
of Adiantum in a greenhouse in Wellington ! Miss M. Mestayer, 1905. All these 
localities are in the warm North Island. 
Le 
Autograph of Mr, J. S. Miller, the discoverer of HY. adliavia. 
