306 MR. A. GARRETT ON THE TERRESTRIAL [Mar. I, 



I received four examples of this singular species from the Museum 

 Godeffroy. One specimen has the last whorl separated from the 

 penultimate a distance of 4 millim. It may he distinguished by 

 its depressed form, undulated whorls, and crenulated spiral lines. 



3. OsTODES STRiCTUs, Mousson. 



Ostorles strictus, Mousson, MS., Museum Godeffroy, 188.5. 



Shell umbilicated, depressed, turbinate, solid, rugose, decorticated, 

 cinereous, sometimes with a ruddy tinge on the last whorl ; spire 

 depressedly conoid, apex exserted ; suture impressed ; whorls 5, con- 

 vex, transversely rugosely wrinkled, closely lineated with spiral 

 elevated lines, becoming evanescent on the rounded body-whorl ; 

 umbilicus wide, freely exhibiting all the whorls, spirally lineated 

 with raised lines, and the margins slightly angulated ; aperture 

 oblique, subcircular ; peristome straight, simple, nearly continuous, 

 briefly joined to the body-whorl. 



Major diam. 13, height 7 millim. 



Vatu Lale. 



Three examples received from the Godeffroy Museum. It is very 

 closely related to Gould's 0. strigatus, a Samoa species, and, excepting 

 in size, can scarcely be distinguished from the New-Caledonian 

 O. bocageanus. 



Genus Pupina, Vignard. 

 1. Pupina viTiENSis, Garrett. 



Pupina vitiensis, Garrett, Proc. Phil. Acad. Nat. Sci. 1873, p. 233, 

 pi. 3. fig. 62; Schmeltz, Cat. Mus. Godeff. vi. pp. 83, 104. 



A somewhat rare species, found beneath damp decaying leaves at 

 Gomea Island. Mr. Liardet records a species of Pupina as occur- 

 ring on Taviuni, which is probably the same as the Gomea shell. 

 Schmeltz erroneously assigns it to Kandavu. 



A brilliant, highly polished, oblong, whitish corneous species, with 

 slightly swollen spire, the left side more convex than the right, and 

 the columella with a tongue-like projection forming a deep notch. 

 An ohtuse plait on the upper part of the parietal wall. Length 7 

 millim. 



Genus Omphalotropis, Pfeiffer. 



1. Omphalotropis moussoni. Pease. 



Omphalotropis ovata, Mousson (not of Pease), Journ. de Conch. 

 1865, p. 198, pi. 14. fig. 10; Paetel, Cat. Conch, p. 124 ; Schmeltz, 

 Cat. Mus. Godeff. iv. p. 75. 



Omphalotropis moussoni. Pease, Journ. de Conch. 1869, p. 147; 

 Schmeltz, Cat. Mus. Godeff. v. p. 101. 



Realia {Omphalotropis) moussoni, Mousson, Journ. de Conch. 

 1870, p. 194, 1871, p. 27 ; Pfeiffer, Mon. Pneum. iv. p. 224. 



I found a few examples of this species at Vaima Balavo, where 

 Dr. GriifPe discovered the type specimens. The Doctor subse- 

 quently found it on Yiti Levu, Ticombia, and at Tongatabu, one of 



