290 Bulletin American Museum of Natural History [Vol. LIII 
while on the east coast the southernmost record is from the Manuan 
Creek in Zululand. Several species have been described from Madagas- 
ear: C. carinulata Dautzenberg, C’. colbeauz (Craven), C. grandidiert 
(Crosse and Fischer) and var. suwbmutica (Crosse and Fischer), C. 
madagascariensis (Crosse and Fischer),! C. mangaroensis Ancey, C. 
multilirata Ancey, and C. trabonjiensis E. A. Smith. | 
30. 40 
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Map 4. Distribution of the genus Cleopatra. 
The following is a list of the species known from the African con- 
tinent: 
Cleopatra africana (EK. v. Martens) = Paludomus africanus EK. v. MarTENs, 
1878, Monatsber. Ak. Wiss. Berlin, p. 297, Pl. 11, figs. 11-13. Finboni, on the coast of 
Kenya Colony.’ 
eee 
1This was described as a Paludina (1872, Journ. de Conchyl., XX, p. 210). In 1880 (in Martini and 
Chemnitz, ‘Syst. Conch. Cab., I, 25, Paludomus,’ p. 48, Pl. vim, fig. 7), Brot described as new a 
Paludomus madagascariensis, which is evidently also a Cleopatra. There is a possibility that it is the 
same species as Crosse and Fischer’s Paludina madagascariensis, so that it will not need be renamed. 
_#C. ferruginea (Lea), C. zanguebarensis (Petit), C. amxna (Morelet), C. africana (v. Martens), C. 
kynganica Bourguignat, and C. cameroni Bourguignat are closely allied species of the East Coast of 
Africa. Connolly (1912, Ann. South African Mus., XI, 3, p. 261) treats all these names as synonyms of 
C. ferruginea. Having no material for comparison, we prefer to list them separately. 
