538 
ZOOLOGICAL LITERATURE. 
also hei'trandi (Payr.) and secalina (Phil.) j 10. riifa (Mont), with the 
varieties lactea, aemioostata, tdideana (Thomps.), cranchii (Brown as 
Fu8tt8)f and angusta) 11. turricula (Mont.), including as variety Tri~ 
tonium roseum of Sars j 12. trevelyana (Le&ch)=^woodiana (Moller). 
Bela americana, sp. n.,=iFusus turricula (Gould, not Mohtagli), Packard, 
Mem. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. p. 283, pi. 7. fig. 11, the American representative 
of the European B. turricula. Other species from Labrador are : — B. nobilis 
(Moller), scalaris (Moller), icoodiana (Moller) = Fastis harjnilarius, Gould, and 
JS. exarata (M6]ler)=P/ewro^oma rugulosa of Beeve, Conchol. Icon. fig. 345; 
B. decussata (Stimps.), pleurotomaria (Couth.) = (Beck), pyramidalis 
(Stimps.), cancellata (Migh.), which is different from pingelii (Moller) ; B. 
violacea (Stimps.) and borealis (Reeve) = (Moller). Packard, 1. c. 
pp. 286, 287. ' 
Lachesis, see MuBicroiE (p. 625). 
Pleurotoma {Befrancid) crassilabrum (Reeve), from Hakodate, Schrenck, 
1: c. p. 409. 
Clathurella zonataj sp. n., Angas, Proc. Zool. Soc. p. 113, pi. 13. fig. 17, 
Port Jackson. — Cl. tumida, violacea, and canaliculata, spp. nn., Pease, Am. 
Journ. Conch, iii. pp. 218, 219, pi. 15. figs. 15-17, Paumotu archipelago ; Cl. 
maculosa, Pease (Proc. Zool. Soc. 1862), figured 1. c. fig. 16. 
Mangelia splendida, sp. n., A. Adams, Proc. Zook, Soc. p. 309, pi. 19. fig. 26, 
Gotto Islands, Japan. 
Cithara decussata, brevis, paudcostata, and dcedalea, spp. nn.. Pease, Am. 
Conch. Journ. iii. pp. 217, 218, pi. 16. figs. 10-13, Paumotu archipelago and 
Tahiti. 
Daphnella crenulata, varicifera, and cm'ta, spp. nn.. Pease, 1. c. p. 221, ph 15. 
figs. 20-22, Paumotu. 
.Terebridaj. 
Terebra fulgurata (Phil.), Gulf of Tartary. Schrenck, 1. c. p. 460. 
Acus {Abretia) bicolor and assimilis, Angas, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1867, 
p. Ill, pi. 13. figs. 7 &8, Port Jackson. 
EuLIMIDiE. 
Ftilima. Jeffreys describes as British the following six species : — 1. polita 
(L.), with a variety, ruhrocincta ; 2. intermedia (Oa.nir.') =.nitida of Philippi, 
not of Lamarck ; 3. distorta (Desh.) ; 4. stenostoma (Jeffr.) ; 6. suhulata (Do- 
novan) ; and 6. bilineata (Alder) [rejecting as undistinguishable ” the so- 
called genus LeiostracaJ. Brit. Conch, iv. pp. 200-210. 
Eulima venusta, exilis, and injiexa, spp. nn.. Pease, Am. Journ. Conch, iii. 
p. 293, pi, 24. figs. 24-26, Tahiti and Paumotu. 
Eulima adamantina, proca, gibha, elegantissima [very near Liostraca samoen- 
sis, according to Crosse], elodia, and opalina, spp. nn,, Folin, Mel^agrinicoles, 
pp. 62-66, pi. 6. figs. 2-7. All on pearl-oysters from Panama. 
Fklima conspecta and rutila, spp. nn., Carpenter, Proc. Calif. Acad. Nat. Sc. 
1866, p. 221, San Pedro and Monterey, California. 
Leiostraca. An account of this genus is given by Sowerby in Reeve’s Con- 
chologia Iconica, pts. 266 & 257 ; new species are : — L. acutissima, Sydney ; L. 
pyramidalis, subventricosa, and vincta, localities unknown. — L.samdmsis, sp. n., 
Crosse, Journ. Conch, xv. p. 300, pi. 11. fig. 2, Samoa Islands. 
