160 PULMONATA. 



7. Philomycus FLEXUOLARIS. 



Fulvous ; back varied with flexuous brown lines, slightly cross 

 ridged, attenuated behind ; tail l)lunt. Length 1 or 2 inches. 



Philomycus flexuolaris, Rafinesgue, Ann. of Nat. 10. 

 Ferussac, Tab. Syst. 15. 96". 



Hab. N. America; the Catskill Mountains. 



8. Philomycus nebulosu.s. 



Body nearly cylindrical, roimded at each end ; back with a 

 cross of black and grey spots ; tentacles brown. Length 1 inch. 



Eumeles nebulosus, Rafinesque, Ann. of Nat. 10, 1820. 



Ferussac, Tab. Syst. 15. 96^'. 

 Limax nebulosus, Blainv. Man. Malac. 464. 

 Hab. N. America ; Ohio and Kentucky. 



9. Philomycus lividus. 



Back smooth, convex ; lurid brown, grey beneath, blunt be- 

 hind ; tentacles black. Length 1 inch. 



Eumeles lividus, Rafinesque, Ann. of Nat. 10, 1820. 



Ferussac, Tab. Syst. 15. 96". 

 Hab. N.America; Ohio; Indiana; Kentucky. ' 



2. MEGHIMATIUM. 



Body rather depressed, convex above, rounded at the end. 

 Mantle smooth. Respiratory aperture on the front of the right 

 side. Tentacles four. 



Shell none. 



Asiatic. Scarcely to be distinguished from the former as a genus. 



Meghimatium, Van Hasselt, Bull. Univ. Sci. 1824, iii. 82. 



Cuvier, Reg. Anim. ed. 2. 



Desk, in Ferussac, Hist. Moll. ii. 96^. 



Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1847, 170. 

 Incilaria, Benson in Cantor, Chusan (animal), Ann. Sf Mag. N. H. 

 1842, ix. 486. 



Pkilippi, Handb. Conch. 238. 



The name is from incite, a gutter, with reference to the gutter- 

 like channel which divides the mantle from the foot. — Benson. 



1. Meghimatium striatum. 



Body elongate, attenuated at each end, pointed behind ; back 

 convex, white, with narrow black longitudinal lines ; upper ten- 

 tacles elongate, cyUndi'ical, lower shorter. 



