APPENDIX — GEOMALACUS MACULOSUS. 291 



York S.E.— North Grimston ; Weltondale ; Drewtondale ; North Cave and in 

 ravine at Filey ; also not uncommon at Hornsea and amongst moss and dead leaves 

 in marshy places at Roos Bog; Bale Wood; Aldborough ; Tansterne ; Hedon ; 

 Kelsey Hill and Spurn (T. Fetch, Moll, of East Riding, 1904, p. 130). 



York N.E.— Waterfall and Kildale Woods, Guisborough, Aug. 1906 ! W.D.R, 

 York Mid W.— Grass Wood. Grassington, Sept. 1906 ! P. Booth. Rare, Burt 

 Bridge, Sept. 1887, F. R. Fitzgerald. 



SCOTLAND. 

 Perth N.— Persie Inn, Glenshee ! W. Evans. 

 Ebudes N. — Isle of Eigg ! W. Evans. 

 Ross W.— Balmacarra, Aug. 1906, Rev. R. Godfrey. 



IRELAND. 



Down— Near Newry, Dec. 1904, P. H. Grierson. 



Armagh— Common 'in Ford Wood, Tandragee (Irish Nat., July 1906, p. 175). 



Louth— Ardee ; Druracar ; Annagan-on ; Blackball Demesne and Collon, Sept. 

 1904 ; Beaulieu, Oct. 1904 ; and near Townley Hall, May 1905, P. H. Grierson. 



Meath— Nobber, July 1904; Stamullen, Oct. 1904; Longwood, March 1905; 

 and Batterstown, May 1905, P. H. Grierson. 



Kildare — Staffan and Lyons, Aug. 1904, P. H. Grierson. 



Wicklow — Powerscourt, Nov. 1904, P. H. Grierson. 



King's Co.— Edenderry, Nov. 1905, P. H. Grierson. 



Leitrim — Near Cloonee, Dec. 1899, P. H. Grierson. 



Galway W. — Marvellously abundant in a small wood beyond Dog's Bay, 

 Roundstone, Sept- 1906, R. Sta'nden. 



Galway E.— Abundant at Ballindooly, Sept. 1906, R. Standen. 



SWITZERLAND. 

 Old fir-wood near Lucerne, Sept. 1902, Rev. R. Godfrey. 



Var. plumbea Collinge. 

 Surrey— Brockham, Nov. 1906 ! Lionel E. Adams. 



Genus GEOMALACUS Allman. 



Geomalacus maculosus Allman. 



Kerry — Miss M. J. Delap records (Irish Naturalist, Aug. 1906, p. 190) finding 

 specimens in June 1906 amongst old ruins on the west face of Bolus Head, and in 

 similar situations on the eastern slope of Kilkeeneragh Mountains near the pass 

 between that mountain and Killemlough Hill. 



ADDENDUM. 

 L. maximus van bicolor Taylor. 



A reference to Am Stein's description of his Limax cinereus var. albii,s discloses 

 that this form is not synonymous with the var. Candida L. & P., as tentatively 

 suggested on page 41, but is really identical with the var. bicolor. 



Two examples found in a cold and damp garden at Louth in Lincolnshire by 

 Mr. C. S. Carter ; one of them, found in July 1906, is very characteristic and 

 exactly corresponds with the fig. 5 on plate vi. ! 



