HELICIGONA ARBUSTORUM. 445 
NETHERLANDS. 
Holland—Dr. E. von Martens and Van den Broeck record this species from 
Gelderland, Groningen, South Holland, and Zealand; while Mr. Sikes has found 
it in Friesland and North Holland. 
Belgium—Reported by M. Jules Colbeau and others from Anvers, Brabant, 
Flanders, Liege, Luxemburg, Namur, and Grand Duchy of Luxemburg. 
FRANCE. 
Well distributed in the eastern provinces and departments, but only few records 
from the south and western districts. It is known to occur in the Ain, Aisne, 
Allier, Alpes Maritimes, Ardennes, Aube, Auvergne, Basses Alpes, Comtat, 
Céted’ Or, Dauphiny, Dréme, Doubs, Hautes Alpes, Haute Loire, Hautes Pyrénées, 
Ifaute Savoie, Isere, Jura, Loire, Loire Inférieure, Maine-et-Loire, Meuse, Moselle, 
Niévre, Nord, Oise, Pas-de-Calais, Provence, Puy-de-Dome, Rhone, Sarthe, Savoy, 
Seine, Seine-et-Marne, Seine-et-Oise, Seine Inférieure, Somme, Vienne, and Vosges. 
ITAL. 
Confined to the northern portions of the peninsula, and hitherto only reliably 
found in Lombardy, Piedmont, and Venetia, though reported from Emilia by Jan. 
The records for Sicily by Aradas and Maggiore are certainly erroneous as indicative 
of a natural habitat. 
SPAIN. 
Only reported from Camprodon and other localities in Catalonia, and from near 
Alar in Old Castile by Mr. E. J. Lowe. 
AUSTRO-HUNGARY. 
Helicigona arbustorum in this empire takes on some of its most interesting 
forms, and is probably found throughout the whole region, being definitely recorded 
from Austria, Bohemia, Carinthia, Carniola, Galicia, Hungary, Istria, Moravia, 
Salzburg, Styria, Transylvania, and Tyrol, while Dr. Picaglia adds Dalmatia. 
SWITZERLAND. 
Distributed throughout the country, and recorded from Aargau, Appenzell, 
Basel, Berne, Geneva, Glarus, Grisons, Lucerne, Neuchatel, St. Gall, Schwyz, 
Solothurn, Thurgau, Ticino, Uri, Valais, Vaud, and Zurich, 
BALKAN PENINSULA. 
Roumania—Recorded by Clessin from Brostheni in Moldavia. 
SCANDINAVIA. 
Norway — Distributed throughout the country, probably to its most extreme 
northern limits, and ascending the mountains to an elevation of almost 2,000 feet 
in Maalselvdalen in the Amt of Tromsé. 
Sweden—Found throughout the country, though not yet known around Stock- 
holm ; it also oceurs on the Islands of Gothland and Oeland, and in Lapland at 
Sakok, where according to Odhner it inhabits the Upper Birch zone at an altitude 
of about 2,500 feet. 
Denmark—Distributed almost over the whole kingdom, being recorded from 
Zealand, Jutland, Moen, Bogo, Lolland, Funen, and Bornholm. 
Iceland—The sub-var. fusca found by Mr. W. Eagle Clarke in Sept. 1884 at 
Seydisfjord ! and at Nordfjord in 1912 by Mr. F. H. Sikes. 
R l TSSTA . 
Found chiefly in the western moiety of the country, being reported from the 
governments of Archangel, Courland, Esthland, Finland, Kharkov, Livonia, 
Podolia, Poland, Tauria, Tchernigoyv, and Volhynia. It is also found on the Aland 
Isles, the Islands of Moon, Osel, Hogland, ete. 
