GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. 
Moll. 25 
Moravia. Ulicny’s list of Mollusca found near Briinn [mentioned 
Zool. Rec. xix. Moll. p. 12], 22 pp., with a plate, enumerates 70 terrestrial 
and 27 fresh- water species ; the more remarkable among them are Daude- 
bardia rufa and heldii , Hyalina glabra , Helix solaria , rupestris, bidens, 
unidentata, liberta (figured), sericea, granulata (fig.), transsylvanica (fig.), 
carpatica, caridicans, austriaca (but no nemoralis ), Buliminus tridens , 
montanus, Pupa doliolum, alpestris (fig.), 8 species of Clausilia , Paludina 
vivipara (no fasciata ), Paludinella austriaca , and Sphcerium corneum var. 
scaldianum (fig.). The great majority of the species aro also found in 
most parts of Middle and South Germany. 
Upper Hungary. Malacological notes by J. Hazay. The trachytic 
regions uourish many slugs, but only few shells, and in some spots none 
of the latter could be found. The limestone regions are much richer in 
land shells; Helix lutescens and faustina have been found only here. 
Helix pomatia is confined in some regions to the ruins of old castles. 
The springs of 10°-12° R. nourish Lithoglyphus pannonicus ; those which 
are somewhat colder, Bylhinella tornensis (Haz.). Mai. Bl. (2) vi. 
pp. 88-109. 
Switzerland. Notes on the occurrence of some rarer species of shells, 
especially Hyalina, and a new Pupa, by Sterki, Nachr. mal. Ges. 1883, 
pp. 71-74. Additions to a former list of shells found near Solothurn 
[Zool. Rec. xviii. Moll. p. 21], by J. Blum, l. c. pp. 162 & 163. Notes on 
the shells found at St. Moritz, Yiamala, Geneva, Lausanne, and on the 
Rigi, by R. M. Christy, J. of Conch, iv. pp. 56-60. 
St. Bernard , Mont Cenis, &c. Some terrestrial shells, found by H. 
Simon, enumerated by 0. Bottger, Ber. offenb. Yer. xxii. pp. 157- 
161. 
Southern Tirol. Malacological notes on the environs of Ratzes, near 
Schlern, and the occurrence of several species in the Dolomitic parts of 
the Alps of Tirol, Pupa inornata , Vitrina annularis, and Helix arbusto- 
rum var. rudis, being confined to the Dolomites, and Helix preslii nearly 
so, by Y. Gredler in Prossliner’s “ Das Bad Ratzes in Siidtirol,” 1883, 
pp. 62-64, taken from a Programme of the Gymnasium in Bozen by Y. 
Gredler in 1863. 
Transsylvania. M. V. Kimakowicz gives a new systematic list of the 
land snails of this country, which differs from the second edition of 
Bielz’s Fauna, chiefly in the introduction of subgeneric names, somewhat 
more quotations from older and foreign authors, and somewhat different 
opinions concerning varieties and species ; Yerh. siebenbiirg. Yer. xxxiii. 
73 pp. 
6. Southern Europe and Shores of the Mediterranean. 
Northern Spain. Malacological excursions at Bilbao and Orduna 
described by W. Kobelt, JB. mal. Ges. x. pp. 201-212. 
Gibraltar. 20 species, some new, collected by W. Kobelt, J. of Conch, 
iv. pp. 1-9. 
H. Drouet describes, in a special pamphlet, 80 species of Unionidae 
from Italy, including several new species and many others regarded by 
