HELIX. 
137 
hispida. Leach^ Moll, Syn, 71.-- Helix rufescens jun. 
Mont, T.B. supp. 145. t. 23. f. 2. inner. — Helicella hispida. 
Fitz. Syst. 96.— Fruticola hispida. Held. Isis^ 1837, 914. — 
Bradjbsena hispida. Beck^ Ind. 20. 
Inhab. woods, under stones, in shady places. 
Animal grey, foot white, thick; tentacles very 
slender, dark. 
Shell about a quarter of an inch in breadth, and 
hardly as much high, horn-co- 
loured, with a slight paler band 
in the middle of the larger vo- 
lution ; periostraca clothed with 
close fine hairs which are very 
caducous, under which it is a 
little striate, but not granular, like the H, granulata ; 
aperture moderate, (fig. 40.) 
55. 22. Helix concinna. Neat Snail.— Shell rather 
depressed, slightly keeled, rather shining, reddish 
brown, concentrically grooved, with scattered 
deciduous whitish hairs; whorls five or six; 
mouth roundish lunate, margined; umbilicus 
broad, (t. 11. f. 135.) 
Helix concinna. Jeffreys,, Linn. Trans, xiii. 337. ; Alder,, 
Mag. Z, and B. 107. — Helix hispida, var. Forbes and 
Hanley, B. M. iv. 69. — Helix depilata. Pfeiffer, i. t. 35., 
t. 2. f. 18. (?) ; Alder, Mag. Z. and B. 107. —Helix 
rufescens. Siviss Conchologists. 
Inhab. under stones, and dry places, among 
nettles, &c. 
Animal reddish, very polished ; tentacles longish. 
Shell very like the former, but differs in being 
rather larger, the umbilicus wider, and the hairs 
further apart and much more deciduous, which 
Fig. 40. 
