66 
CycLiostoma PARvuM, nob., Thes. Conch. part 3. pl. 31. f. 254, 
255. Cycl. testd subcrbiculari, depresso-conoided, tenui, levigatd, 
fulvescente, radiatim fusco strigatd, spird brevi, submucronatd, 
anfractibus quinque, rotundatis, tenerrime spiraliter striatis, obso- 
letissime 4—5-carinatis ; aperturd circulari, peritremate simplici, 
postice subemarginato ; umbilico magno ; operculo corneo, crasso. 
Var. a. Found under decayed leaves at Daleguete, island of Zebu. 
Var. 6. Found under decayed leaves at Dingle, isle of Panay. 
Cyctostoma macutosvum, Thes. Conch. part 3. pl. 31. f. 256, 257. 
Cycl. testd suborbiculari, depressd, crassiusculd, levi, castaned, 
albido-maculosd, spird paululiim levatd, apice nigricante ; anfrac- 
tibus 4, rotundatis, obsoleté spiraliter striatis ; apertura subcircu- 
lari, peritremate subincrassato, subreflexo, postice acuminatiusculo ; 
umbilico maximo, spiraliter castaneo lineato. 
In Mr. Cuming’s collection. 
Mr. Gulliver then communicated his notes on the blood-corpus- 
cles of the Stanley Musk Deer. 
«« Since my observations* have shown that the blood-discs of the 
Napu Musk Deer (Moschus Javanicus, Pallas) are minuter than those 
hitherto described of any other mammal, the size of the red particles 
of other allied species has become an interesting question. 
««The following measurements which I have lately made of the 
blood-discs of the Stanley Musk Deer (Moschus Stanleyanus, Gray) 
are expressed in vulgar fractions of an English inch :— 
ago \ Common sizes 
1-10664 : 
1-16000 Small size. 
1- 8000 Large size. 
1-10825 Average. 
“Hence the corpuscles of this animal are nearly as minute as those 
of the Napu Musk Deer and smaller than those of the Ibex and of 
the Goat, as may be seen by a reference to the comparative measure- 
ments given of the corpuscles of the three last-named animals in my 
paper on the blood-corpuscles of the Ibex, published in the Proceed- 
ings of this Society, August 9, 1842.” 
Various species of Bats from the Philippine Islands, collected by 
Hugh Cuming, Esq., Corresponding Member, were placed on the 
table, and Mr. Waterhouse read his notes relating to them. He ob- 
served that the specimens exhibited formed part only of the extensive 
series brought home, and that he should lay the remaining portion 
before the Society on a future occasion. 
Of the genus Pteropus, as now restricted, Mr. Cuming’s collection 
* Trans. Roy. Med. Ch. Soc. v. 23; Dublin Med. Press, Nov. 27, 1839; 
Froriep’s Notizen, No. 268; Valentin’s Repertorium, 1840; Appendix to 
Gerber’s Anat., pp. 5 and 44. 
