ARION StTBFUSCUR. 209 



NETHERLANDS. 

 Belgium— Recoided from Brabant, Li6ge, Luxemburg, Naniur, etc. 



FRANCE. 

 Arion siibf metis is recorded from tlie following departments or districts, but is 

 said to be most abundant in the soiithern and central regions : — Aube, Aude, 

 Ariege, Basses Pyrenees, Cantal, Champagne Meridionale, Cotes-du-Nord, Cote 

 d'Or, Finistfere, Gironde, Hautes Alpes, Haute Garonne, Haute Loire, Hautes 

 Pyrenees, Herault, Hle-et-Vilaine, Isere, Landes, Loire Inferieure, Maine et Loire, 

 Morbihan, Moselle, Nievre, Oise, Pas-de-Calais, Puy-de-Dome, Pyrenees Orientales, 

 Savoie, Seine, Seine et Oise, Somme, Tarn, Var, and Vosges. Sub-var. ftiscata in 

 woods around Paris, department of the Seine. 



SWITZERLAND. 

 This species has been recorded from the cantons of Aargau, Lucerne, Solothurii, 

 St. Gall, and the Grisons ; the sub-var. gaudefroyi from St. Gall. 



ITALY. 

 Arion siibfascus is, according to Pollonera, confined to the hilly regions of the 

 north, and the records of this species fur Central and Southern Italy are due to 

 errors of determination. 



SPAIN AND PORTUGAL. 

 Spain — Arion subfuscus is recorded from several places in Catalonia, and from 

 Aragon and Navarra by Fagot. 



Portugal — Arion fidigineus is recorded by Morelet from a roadside wall near 

 Ponte do Lima in the province of Bouro. 



BALKAN PENINSULA. 

 Roumania — Indicated by Simroth as an iuhabitant of Rouraania. 



A USTRO-HUNGARY. 

 Recorded as found in Austria, Bohemia, Carinthia, Carniola, Goritz, Hungary, 

 Moravia, Styria, Tyrol, and Transylvania. 



SCANDINAVIA. 



Norway — Found throughout Norway as far north as North Cape, 71° 8' north 

 latitude, and StangeuEes at the mouth of the Tana in East Finmark. It is common 

 on Tromsoen and Ando, and also about Trondjhem, Bergen, and Christiania. 



Sweden— This species is found almost throughout Sweden, and has been noted 

 as far north as Ofver-Lulea in Norbotten ; it is also recorded from Jemtland ; about 

 Stockholm in Svealand; in Gothland at Ronneby, Gothenburg, and Christians tad t ; 

 near Frollinge in Halland, Balaberg in North Scania, and the Island of Bornholm. 



Denmark — Common in Zealand, and rare in Jutland. It is also, reported from 

 Iceland and the Faroes. 



RUSSIA. 



Found throughout European Russia, extending eastwardly to the Ural Moun- 

 tains about the 65th parallel, and also over the Arctic and wooded northern districts, 

 having been found by Wallenberg near the coast on the shores of the arctic sea in 

 Russian Lapland, at 69° north latitude. It is plentiful about Reval in Esthland ; 

 Dorpat in Livland ; in Courland; in the Ukraine; about Moscow; and in many 

 localities about Warsaw in Poland. It is met with in the Aland Isles, also 

 throughout Finland, the specimens inhabiting the tract adjoining the Gulf of Fin- 

 land having been distinguished as var. fennica, but have been recorded by others 

 from thence as Arion cUer. 



Sub-var. fiuicata, according to Kaleniczeuko, inhabits shady woods about Nejin 

 and Borozda, Tschernigov ; and moist woods about Izium, Kharkov. 



Siberia— Under the name of A. hortensis, Schrenk describes what is probably 

 this species as generally distributed in Amui-land ; on the Lower Amur, it was 

 fonnd in damp deciduous woods near Teutscha, and at Dshare. It is also probable 

 that the Arion collected by Dr. Theel in June and July, 1876, at Mikoulina on the 

 Jenissei, are properly referable to Arion subfuscus. 



NE ARCTIC REGION. 



New York — Arion fuscus, Lloyd's Neck, Long Island (H. Prime, Oct. 1895). 



Massachusetts — A. fusciis, in yards and gardens. New Bedford ; (J. H. Thomson, 



J. of Conch., Oct. 1885); gardens between Chestnut and Mount Vernon streets, 



above Willow street, and elsewhere in Boston (W. G. Binney, Manual Anier. Land 



Shells, 1885, p. 459). 



AUSTRALASIAN REGION. 

 New Zsa.la.nd— Arion fuscus Miill. introduced into New Zealand (Hutton, Trans. 

 N.Z. Inst., xvi., p. 211). 



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