Surer.—Land Mollusca of Little Barrier. 205 
Fam. PHENACOHELICIDA. 
(2.) Flammulina (Allodiscus) urquharti, Suter. 
Distribution.—This minute brown shell is, no doubt: easil 
overlooked ; and, on the other side, it must be mentioned that 
all the species of the subgenus Allodiscus are not common 
shells at all. The type was found on Mount Pirongia and 
specimens from the Hunua Range are also in my collec- 
tion. North Island only. 
(3.) Flammulina (Therasia) celinde, Gray. 
Distribution.—A fairly common shell in the northern parts 
of the North Island, but has not been found on it further 
south than the Urewera country. In the South Island it was 
found in Happy Valley, Canterbury, where also Phenacharopa 
novoseelandica, Pir., occurs. 
(4.) Flammulina (Therasia) decidua, Pfeiffer. 
Distribution.—Found from Auckland to Otago. This is 
one of the very few New Zealand snails I have seen leaving 
its hiding-place after a warm rain and crawling up on shrubs 
with smooth bark, or devoid of it. 
(5.) Flammulina (Suteria) ide, Gray. 
Distribution.—Occurs over the entire North Island, in moist 
situations of the bush, and the northern part of the South 
Island. Its southernmost limit is, to my knowledge, néar 
Lake Mahinapua, where it was found by Dr. A. Dendy. 
(6.) Flammulina (s. str.) pilsbryi, Suter. 
Distribution.—Like most minute forms, this species is 
widely distributed over New Zealand, and is found on both 
Islands. In the South Island I found it near the Mueller 
Glacier in some native bush. 
Fam. LAOMIDA. 
(7.) Laoma (s. str.) poecilosticta, Pfeiffer. 
Distribution. —This is a North Island shell, not uncommon 
in the bush near Auckland, but rare in the southern parts. 
It is one of the few specifically northern species that has 
reached the South Island, as specimens were found in Marl- 
borough. 
(8.) Laoma (Phrixgnathus) glabriuscula, Pfeiffer. 
Distribution.—Hitherto only known from Auckland fe 
vince, Hawke’s Bay, and Taranaki, in the N orth Island, but, 
like the foregoing species, also from Marlborough. 
