78 
BULLETIN OF WISCONSIN NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. VOL. 4, NO. 3. 
The present species does not appear to have reached Chicago, 
however. 
32. Agriolimax campestris Binney. 
Lake bluffs south of Whitefish Bay ; Mud Creek valley at 
North Milwaukee ; Menomonee valley above Wells street ; 
Currie greenhouses. Unlike the exotic species this is not very 
common anywhere. 
33. Philomycus ( Pallifera) dorsalis Binney. 
Lake bluffs south of Whitefish Bay resort. 
No one who has described this species seems to have men- 
tioned the reddish color of the mouth and forward margins of the 
foot. This was very noticeable in the three specimens obtained 
above, and in others observed by me in Monroe county, New 
York, recalling the colors of the animal in the next species. It is 
probably a constant character of this form, and does no indicate 
a variety as at first supposed. 
34. Pyramidula (Patula) alter nata Say. 
Lake bluffs north and south of Whitefish Bay resort ; Mil- 
waukee river valley at Coney Island and mouth of Mud Creek ; 
Menomonee river dredgings and valley above Wells street ; woods 
south of Wauwatosa, Johnson's woods, Reynolds' woods ; Hale's 
Corners, Town Greenfield ; Oak's farm, Cudahy ; Oak Creek, near 
South Milwaukee ; Mishicot, Manitowoc Co., under conifers. 
5720, Humboldt, W. M. W T fieeler. Johnson's woods, A. W. 
Slocom. 11132, Baraboo, Mrs. E. C. Wiswall. Kenosha, Mrs. 
Wiswall's list. "Milwaukee, W 7 is., I. A. Lapham," Smith. Misc. 
Coll., VIII, 76. 
One of the most abundant species everywhere. 
35. Pyramidula (Gonyodiscus) perspectiva Say. 
One very typical specimen only, from the bluffs south of 
Whitefish Bay (the Helicina locality), verifies the citation in 
Smith. Misc. Coll., VIII, 80, "Milwaukee, Wis., I. A. Lapham." 
The species is not recorded from the Chicago area; see Baker, 
Moll. Chic. Area, p. 212. 
36. Pyramidula (Gonyodiscus) striatella Anthony. 
Bluffs south of Whitefish Bay; Mud Creek valley at North 
Milwaukee and at mouth : Menomonee valley, from Twentieth 
