464 STUDIES ON AUSTRALIAN MOLLUSCA, X., 



were collected by my wife at Eagle Hawk Neck, Tasmania; and 

 Mr. J. H. Gatliff has sent it to me from Flinders, Victoria. The 

 latter he recorded as S. obliqua Watson,* which Kerguelen shell 

 seems from its figure to be of different contour. As in Schismope 

 atkinsoni, the sculpture varies from cancellate to nearly smooth. 

 The rosy colour of the apex is fugitive. 



Haliotis scalaris Leach. 



Padollus scalaris Leach, Zool. Miscell. i. 1814, p.66, P1.28. 



In the last Part of these Studies (p. 521) it was noted that, 

 whereas, in the latest monograph, this species was called Haliotis 

 tricostalis Lamk., an earlier name, Padollus rubicundus Montfort, 

 should be preferred. I now find that Haliotis rubicundus is pre- 

 occupied by Boltenf for another species. It is therefore necessary 

 to resume the above name by Leach, which also antedates that of 

 Lamarck. 



MONILEA APICINA Gould. 



Gould, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. viii. 1861, p. 14. 



This unfigured species, collected between 1853 and 1856 in 

 Port Jackson by W. Stimpson, has never been recognised by Aus- 

 tralian conchologists. Dr. Paul Bartsch has kindly sent me a 

 photograph of the type preserved in the U.S. National Museum. 

 This portrait enables me to refer Gould's species to Monilea 

 angulata A. Adams.| 



Trochus tinctus Watson. 



Watson, Chall. Rep. Zool. xvi. 1886, p.63, Pl.xvii. f.2. 



Watson's account seems to apply so closely to an immature 

 Calliostoma allporti that I think his name should be reduced to 

 a synonym of the species Tenison- Woods described ten years 

 previously. 



* Prit. & Gatliff, Proc. Roy. Soc. Vict. xv. 1903, p. 181. 



t Mus. Bolt. (2), 1798, p. 14. 



% A. Adams, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1851, p. 190. 



