[663] INVERTEBRATE ANIMALS OF VINEYARD SOUND, ETC. 369 
and salt-ponds along the shores of Vineyard Sound, Buzzard’s Bay, 
and Long Island Sound. Abundant ina small pond near Holmes’ Hole; 
in New Haven Harbor, in ditches near Fort Hale. 
CYLICHNA ORYZA Stimpsoa. Piat2 XNV, fiz. WL (p. 432.) 
Smithsonian Check List, p. 4, 1250; Gould, Iovert., el. ii, p. 221. fig. 512. Balla 
oryza Totten, Amer. Jonr. Science, vol. xxviii, p. 35), fig. 5, 1335; Gould, 
Invert., ed. i, p. 153. fig. 93. 
Cape Cod to South Carolina. Not uncommo.i in Vineyar.1 Sound, 
Buzzard’s Bay, and Long Island Sound. This species was recorded as. 
from Casco Bay by Dr. Mighels, but as this habitat has not been con- 
firmed subsequently, it was probably based on an erroneous identifica- 
tion. Fossil in the Post-Pliocene of Canada (Dawson). 
CYLICHNA ALBA Loven. Plate XXV, fig. 163. (p. 505.) 
Ofversigt af Kong]. Vet.-Akad. Forhandlingar, vol. iii, p. 142. 1-43; Goald, 
Invert., ed. ii, p. 220, fig. 511. Volraria alba Brown, Ill. Conch. G. B., iii, p. 
3, figs. 43,44. Bulla triticea Couthouy, Boston Jour. Nat. Hist.. vol. ii, p. +3, 
Plate 2. fig. 38, 133+; Gould, Iuvert., ed. i, p. 1635, fig. 0-. 
Near Block Island, northward to the Arctic Ocean ; northern cousts 
of Europe to Bergen ; and on the northwest coast of America, south to 
Sitka. Fossilin the Post-Pliocene of Canada and Great Britain. 
Most of the specimens of this shell dredged in the Bay of Fundy are 
opaque, yellowish brown or chestnut color, but those from Case» Bay 
are nearly all clear white and translacent, although of equal size. 
UTRICULTS CANALICULATUS. Plate XXV, fig. 160. (p. £32.) 
Stimpson, Smithsoniam Check-List, p. 4, 1560; Gould, Invert., ed. ii, p. 219. fig. 
510. Volearia canaliculata Say, Jour. Acad. Nat. Sciences, Philadelphia, vol. 
Vv, D. 211, 1326; Binney’s Say, p.121. Bulla canaliculata Gould, Invert., ed. i, 
p. 165, fig. 97. Tornatina canaliculata H. and A. Adams, Genera, vol. ii, p. 13. 
Massachusetts Bay to South Carolina. Commonin Bazzard’s Bay and 
Vineyard Soand, in 2 to 8 fathoms; less common in Long Island Sound. 
Fort Macon, North Carolina, abundant, (Dr. Yarrow). Fossil in the 
Post-Pliocere of North and South Carolina; and the Pliocene of South 
Carolina. 
AMPHISPHYRA DEBILIS Verrill. Plate XXV, fig. 162. (p. £32.) 
Bulla debilis Gould, Amer. Journ. Science, ser. i, vol. xxxviii, p. 196. 1249: In- 
vert., ed. i, p. 164, fig. 95, 1541. Diaphana debilis Gould, Invert.; ed. ii, p. 216, 
fig. 507. Bulla pellucida Brown, 1-44. Amphisphyra pellucida Loven. op. cit., 
p. 143, 1446. Bulla hyalina Turton, Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. vii, p. 353, 1254, (t- 
Jeffreys), (non Gmelin). 
Cape Cod to the Arctic Ocean ; and on the northern coasts of Europe, 
southward to Great Britain, Madeira, ete. Stonington, Connecticut, 
from stomach of cod (Linsley). Not uncommon in Casco Bay and Bay of 
Fundy, and northward, in 6 to 50 fathoms. Very rare south of Cape 
Cod. Fossilin the Post-Pliocene of Canada, Great Britain, Norway, and 
Sweden. 
