CLAUSILIA. 307 



271. Clausilia waageni, Stoliczka. 



Clausilia waageni, Stoliczka, J. A. S. B. xli, 1872, p. 209, pi. 9, 

 % 19 ; Pfeiffer, Mon. Helic. Viv. viii, 1877, p. 520 ; Theobald, 

 J. A. S. B. xlvii, 1878, p. 147 ; ibid., op. cit. 1, 1881, p. 48. 



Clausilia (Phaedusa) waayeni, Nevill, Hand List, i, 1878, p. 185. 



Clausilia (Phaedusa (Euphaedusa)) waageni, Boettger, Ber. Often- 

 bacher Ver. Naturw. 1878, Mitt. p. 53 ; Pfeiffer & Olessin, 

 Noinencl. Helic. Viv. 1881, p. 391. 



Original description : " Cl. testa conoideo-turrita, corneo- 

 fusca, apice obtusiuscula, sub-rimata; anl'ractibus 11, paulo 

 convexis, sutura simplici junctis, lateraliter apicem versus paulu- 

 lum concava ; omninis transversim oblique confertim costulato- 

 striatis, ultimo antecedente vix latiore, prope aperturam costulato, 

 basi pauluni contracto, convexiusculo ; apertura rerticali, postice 

 (vel supra) angulata ; peritreinate modice incrassato, vix expanse, 

 albescente, antice recedente, interne soluto, antice rectiusculo, 

 biplicato, plica postica (aut superiore) brevi, altera vix conspicua ; 

 lunella distincta, plica longa, tenuissima superposita, altera brevi, 

 a terminatioiie supera lunellae haud separata. 



" Long, tota 18, diam. 4 ; loug. apert. obliq. 4, ejusdeni lat. 

 2-7 mm." (Stoliczka.) 



Hab. India: Changligalli, near Murree, W. Himalayas, alt. 

 9000 feet ( Waagen, Stoliczka) ; Tandiani, Hazara (Theobald). 



11 This is the most westerly known species of the genus in 

 India. A single, but perfect, specimen was found by Dr. W. 

 Waagen, together with Cl. cylindrica, under the bush of an old 

 tree at the above mentioned locality. The nearest allied species 

 is 0. ids, but the larger size of the shell, comparative shortness of 

 the two last whorls, larger and more straight aperture readily 

 distinguish this new form." (/Stoliczka.) 



The author in referring to C. ios as the nearest ally of this 

 species, appears to have overlooked C. monticola, described by 

 Blanford in the same paper, a form which has still closer affinity 

 with it. From this it differs in having the upper part of the 

 spire less attenuated and the striae are a little coarser. 



Eour specimens, from Tandiani, in the Theobald collection are 

 somewhat larger than the type, their length being 19-5 mm. 

 Having, by kind permission of the authorities at the British 

 Museum, opened one of these shells, I am in a position to report 

 on the internal armature. The upper parietal fold is interrupted 

 and the inner portion becomes more elevated, gradually decreasing 

 again as it ascends. The subcolumellar fold rises about the 

 beginning of the last whorl close to the coluinella and becomes a 

 rather broad flexuous fold at once, terminating even more abruptly 

 at a distance of about 0'25 mm. behind the peristome, half-way 

 between the termination of the coluinellar fold and the lunella. 

 The columellar fold rises a little higher up at the commencement 

 of the last whorl and continues as a fine thread for about half a 

 whorl, when it suddenly increases in height and becomes a flexuous 



