18 Moll. 
MOLLUSC A. 
more southern species, as Testacella, Helix cespitum and cincta, &c. ; (4) 
the Karst, very drjr and poor in Mollusks, Clamilia (Charp.), 
being the only peculiar species ; (6) the sea-shore, or littoral region, 
exhibiting many decidedly South-European species, as Helix pisana^ 
JJuliminua*' acutus, Slcnoyyra decollaiaf Clamilia papillarie, &o. 
Altogether, 149 terrestrial, 67 freshwater, and 3 submarine species 
(Auriculido) and 'IVuncateUa) are enumerated. 
Some notes on terrestrial shells of Lombardy, by N. J*ini, Atti Soc. 
Ital. xix. pt. 4. 
Northern Apennines, P. Strobel enumerates 69 terrestrial and 13 
freshwater species found on the northern slope of the Apennines 
between the rivers Tidone and Secchia, S.W. of Modena, Oentral- 
European and Southern species being intermingled, e.g.. Helix fruticum^ 
hispida, pomatia^ Buliminus detritus^ Balea fragilis^ and Clausilia 
laminata among the former, Hyalina olivetorum, Helix lucorum, cincta^ 
ccespitann^ Pupa variabilis ; the former are not found on the southern 
slope, where Helix cingulata, planospira, aspersa, aperta^ variabilis, Pupa 
cinerea and Clausilia papillaris make their appearance ; 41 species are 
common to both slopes, 46 confined to the northern, 18 to the southern 
slope. Bull. Soc. mal. Ital. iii.pp. 81-135. 
Abruzai. Additional notes on the land shells by Tiberi, Bull. mal. 
V. [1872] pp. 14-31. 
Capri. 34 land shells and 1 freshwater species, Bithynia similis 
(Drap.), enumerated by Miss J. Fitzgerald, Q. J. Conch. No. 12, pp. 
249-251. 
Corsica. A list of terrestrial and freshwater shells has been published 
in 1872 at Ajaccio, together \y^ith a list of rare and remarkable plants, by 
R. J. S. (? Shuttleworth), see J. de Conch, xxv. p. 295. 
Malta. 22 land-shells collected by G. Schweinfurth, one new, enume- 
rated by the Recorder, Bull. mal. vi. [1873] pp. 26-29. 
Smyrna. Terrestrial shells collected by Prof. G. Fritsch, determined 
by the Recorder, SB. nat. Fr. 1877, pp. 196 & 200. 
3. Northern Asia. 
Siberia. C. A. Westerlund recapitulates all hitherto known con- 
cerning its land and freshwater Mollusks, and fully describes those col- 
lected on the Yenissei expedition by Prof. A. Nordenskiold and Dr. A. 
Stuxbergin 1875 & 1876, in North-western Siberia, viz., 29 terrestrial and 
35 freshwater species belonging to the genera Arion, Limax, Vitrina^ 
Hyalina, Helix, group Eulota, Trichia, Vallonia, and Patula, also Coch- 
licopa [^Cionelld], Pupa, subgen. Pupilla and Vertigo, Succinea, Limncea, 
Physa, Planorbis, Valvata, Bythinia, Anodonta, and Sphcerium, inch Caly- 
culina and Pisidium ; for the most part, European species, some new, but 
very like others from Northern Europe. Sv. Ak. Handl. (2) xiv. pt. 2, 
No. 12, 111 pp. 1 pi. 
Two species of Succinea and 18 species of freshwater shells, including 
Planorbis borealis (Lov6n) and Cyclas asiatica (Martens, 1864, hitherto 
only known in the fossil state), the rest well-known European species. 
