LAND AND FRESH WATER SHELLS. 2QAY 
and in spring come forth besmeared with dirt 
derived from their hybernacula. 
Bulimus lubricus.— Found pretty commonly 
under stones, and in wet hedges among moss. 
Bulimus fasciatus.—In fields bordering on the 
sea. 
Bulimus lineatus.—Mr. Colley states that he has 
found this species, but I have not yet noticed it. 
*Bulimus decollatus._F ound formerly at Watton 
Court in this county. 
Balza fragilis—Not common. In moss attached 
to the trunks of trees, in old walls, and on rocks. 
I have occasionally found it in the cylindrical 
holes bored by insects in rotten stumps of trees. 
Succinea oblonga.—In poolsandstreams attached 
to stones and aquatic plants. In corroboration of 
Dr. Turton’s view of the difference of this species 
from Succinea amphibia, 1 may mention that it 
is found here without any admixture of the last 
named. 
Carychium minimum. Common among wet 
mosses, leaves and stones. I have found great 
numbers of dead shells in summer among the moss | 
attached to rocks on hills ; the heat of summer 
destroying the moss, the shells are in their turn 
sacrificed. 
Pupa umbilicata.—Found with Clausilia rugosa, 
and equally common. It gets also amongst rubbish 
in wet situations. 
Pupa marginata.—Chiefly in spots near the sea, 
under stones. Not common. 
Pupa edentula.—four specimens of this shell 
have occurred to me under stones in woods, two of 
them belong to the “ more elongated and cylindri- 
cal” variety. 
* Vertigo pygmxa.—Found by Mr. T. Colley 
under stones in a damp situation at Bovisand. 
Hills about Torquay. (Dr. Turton.) 
G é 
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