50 NEW- YORK FAUNA — MOLLUSCA. 



Pupa ovata. 



PLATE IV. FIG. 50. — (STATE COLLECTION.) 



Pupa ovata. Vkrtioo id. Say, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sc. Vol. 2, p, 375. 



P. modesta. Id. Long's Exped. St. Peter's, Vol. 2, p. 259, pi. 15, fig. 5. (Immature.) 



P. modesta ? Gould, Invertebrata of Mass. p. 188, fig. 119. 



P. ovata. Adams, Am. Journal of Science, Vol. 40, p. 271. 



Description. Shell minute, subovate, thin. Apex obtuse. Whorls five to six, rounded, 

 apparently smooth, but with minute transverse wrinkles. Aperture semioval, oblique. Lip 

 reflected, but not flattened. Teeth five, slender and sharp : three on the pillar-lip, parallel 

 to each other, the upper and lower small, the latter sometimes obsolete; the two other 

 approximate, extending at right angles to the three preceding ones. Umbilicus small, but 

 distinct. 



Color. Amber or dusky brown. 



Diameter, 02; height, 05-0'l. 



Occurs in moist places under pieces of wood, from Vermont to Pennsylvania. 



Pupa corticaria. 



PLATE IV. FIG. 49. — (STATE COLLECTION.) 



Pupa corticaria. Sat, Nich. Encycl. Am. ed. No. 1, pi. 4, fig. 5. 

 P. id. Gould, Bost. Jour. Nat. Hist. Vol. 3, p. 397. 



Description. Shell nearly cylindrical. Apex rounded. Whorls four to five, not perceptibly 

 wrinkled or striate. Aperture suborbicular, often irregular : lip reflected. A tooth on the 

 pillar-lip, which is near the outer angle. Inner angle with an angular projection resembling 

 a second tooth, sometimes obsolete. 



Height, 0*1. 



Common under the bark of trees. 



Pupa pentodon. 



PLATE IV. FIG. 48 j AND PLATE XXXV. FIG. 33T. 



Pupa pentodon. Vertioo id. Sat, Jour. Acad. Nat. Sc. Vol. 2, p. 376. 

 P. curvidms. Gould, Invertebrata of Mass. p. 189, fig. 120. 

 P. tappaniana. Adams: 



Description. Shell minute, subovate, approaching cylindrical ; apex obtuse, rounded. Suture 

 distinct, but not deeply impressed. Whorls five, convex, glabrous. Aperture semioval. Pillar- 

 lip bidentate, of which a single prominent one is medial ; the other much smaller, remote, and 

 placed in the basal angle of the columella. Lip regularly arcuated, tridentate ; the tooth 



