PROCEEDINGS OF THE Biolopal Society of Wasliinglon VOLUME XI 1897 WASHINGTON PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY 1897 COMMITTEE ON PUBLICATIONS C. HART MERRIAM, Chairman T. S. PALMER F. H. KNOWLTON JuDD & Detweii.er, Printers (ii) CONTENTS Page Officers and committees for 1897 •^^' Proceedings .^~~Yii-xiT^ Descriptions of the Species of Cycadeoidea or Fossil Cycadean Trunks from the Iron Ore Belt, Potomac Formation, of Mary- land, by Lester F. "Ward 1-17 Revision of the Coyotes or Prairie Wolves, by C. Hart Merriam. 19-33 Collomia inazama, a New Plant from Crater Lake, Oregon, bv Frederick V. Coville ". 35-37 Delphiniinn riridescois and Sumbucus leiosperma, Two New Plants from the Northwest Coast, by John B. Leiberg 39-41 Descriptions of Two New Murine Opossums from Mexico, bv C. Hart Merriam '. . . 43-44 Fhenacomys preblei, a New Vole from Colorado, b)' C. Hart Mei'- riam 45 Notes on the Lynxes of Eastern North America, with Descrip- tions of New Forms, by Outram Bangs 47-51 Description of a New Red Fox from Nova Scotia, by Outram Bangs 53-55 The Itinerary of John Jeftrej', an Early Botanical Explorer of Western North America, by Frederick V. Coville 57-60 The Technical Name of the Camas Plant, by Frederick Y. Coville. 61-65 Description of a New Vole from Oregon, by Gerrit S. Miller, Jr.. 67-68 A Species of Shearwater (Puffinus assimiUs Gould) New to the North American Fauna, by Jonathan Dwight, Jr 69-70 Descriptions of Two New Red-backed Mice {Evotomys) from Oregon, by C. Hart 3Ierriam ■ 71-72 The Voles of the Subgenus Chilotus, with Descriptions of New Species, by C. Hart ^lerriam 73-75 Synopsis of Voles of Genus Fhenacomys, by Gerrit S. Miller, Jr. . 77-87 Synopsis of the American Sesarmse, with Description of a New ' Species, by Mary J. Rathbun 89-92 Synopsis of the American Species of Palicus Philippi, with De- scriptions of Six New Species, by ]Mary J. Rathbun '.13-99 Two New Moles fi'om California and Oregon, by C. Hart Merriam . 101-102 Three New Jumping Mice (Zupus) from the Northwest, by C. Hart Merriam ." 103-104 Description of a New Species of Sphaeroma , by Harriet Richardson . 105-107 Synopsis of the American S^iecies of Elhusa, with Description of a New Species, by Mary J. Rathbun 109-110 Revision of the Genus Eiotomi/s, by Vernon Bailey 113-138 Description of a New Bat from Margarita Island, Venezuela, bv Gerrit S. Miller, J r ". 139 Description of a New Vole from Kashmir, by Gerrit S. Miller, Jr. 141 Description of a New Muskrat from tlie Great Dismal Swamp, Virginia, by C. Hart Merriam 143 Descriptions of a New Eagle from Alaska and a New Squirrel from Lower California, by C. H. Townsend 145-146 Lepus haileyi, a New Rabbit from Wyoming, by C. Hart Merriam . 147-148 The African Swimming Crabs of the Genus CaUiiiectes,hy ^larvJ. Rathbun " ". . 149-151 A Revision of the Nomenclature of the Brachvura, bv 3Iarv J. Rathbun .". " '. . . . 153-167 Two New Plants from Blount Mazama, Oregon, by Frederick V. Coville and John B. Leiberg 169-171 Notes on the NomenclatureofFourGeneraof Tropical American INIammals, by T. S. Palmer 173-174 A New Fur-seal or Sea-bear {Arctocephalus toumsendi) from Guada- lupe Island, otf Lower California, by C. Hart Merriam 175-178 (iii) jy^^^i iv Contents and Illustrations. Page A New Antrozous from California, by C. Hart Merriam 179-180 Description of a New Genus and Species of Sphteromidae from Alaskan Waters, by Harriet Richardson 181-183 Description of a New Baiaration. Vol. XI, pp. 1-17 March 13, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THK. BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON DESCRIPTIONS OF THE' SPECIES OF CYCADEOIDEA, OPv FOSSIL CYCADEAN TPvUNKS, THUS FAR DIS- COVERED IN THE IRON ORE BELT, POTOMAC FOR- MATION, OF MARYLAND/^ BY LESTER F. WARD. On November 4. 1893, I read a paper before this Society on ' Cycadean Trunks in the American Cretaceous,' which under the fuller title, ' Fossil Cycadean Trunks of North America, with a Revision of the Genus Cycadeoidea Buckland,' was published in the ninth volume of its Proceedings.f At that date only one species of cycadean trunks had been published from the Iron Ore beds of Maryland. This was founded on four specimens that had long lain in the Museum of the Maryland Academy of Sciences at Baltimore. The}' had been collected by Philip Tyson before the civil war, and he had mentioned them in his report as State Agricultural Chemist in 1860, recognizing their cycadean character and applying to them the term " Cycas," apparently without intending thereby to refer them to the living genus by that name, but merely to denote their resemblance to the trunks of plants familiar to all under that name. Much interest, I learn, was excited at the time by the discovery of these specimens, and the Mar^yland Academy of Sciences is said to have discussed their nature at a number of its meetings. Indeed, I have been * Read before the Society February 27, 1807. Pnhli^hed by peniiission of the Director of the U. S. National iluseum. t Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. IX, Washington, 1894, pp. 75-88. 1 — Hior,. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (1) 2 Ward — Species of Cycaiieoidm from Mari/hind. told that tlio subject came at last to monopolize its proceedings and that considerable asperity was ultimately created in the dis- cussions, so much so that all at length became tired ol" the subject and it was allowed to drop completely out of their deliberations, never to be revived. At all events, it was nearly twenty-five years before any one s attention was again prominently called to these objects. Mr. Tvson, however, had taken the trouble during the time that the question was uppermost to have })hotographs made of one of these specimens. He had also found much silicified wood in the Iron Ore beds, and he caused some large blocks of this to appear in the same view with the cycad trunk. Prints of this view were sent to many of the prominent paleontologists of this country and Europe. Among those receiving them Avas Dr. J. S. Newberry, and since his death his copy has been found at the Geological Museum of Columbia University and kindl}' placed in my hands by Dr. Arthur Hollick. In 1885 Mr. W J McGee, having learned that these specimens were still in the Museum of the Maryland Academy of Sciences, was permitted, through the kindness of the president of the Academy, Professor P. R. Uhler, to have a series of photographs taken of the two principal trunks. Copies of these photographs are also in my hands, and the}^ were shortly after reproduced and published, forming i)lates clxxiv to clxxx of Professor Fontaine's Potomac or Younger Mesozoic Flora.* As stated in my former paper. Professor Fontaine de- scribed these trunks under the name Tysonia Marylandlca, but as they do not belong to a genus distinct from those of Europe, Capellini and Solms-Laubach restored them to Buckland's genus Cycadeoida. The specimens are now in the Geological Museum of Johns Hopkins University. Soon after the appearance of Professor Fontaine's work in 1890, Professor Uhler succeeded in obtaining a few additional fragments, but interest in the subject was not fairly aroused until al)out the 3'ear 1893, when Mr. Arthur Bibbins of the A\'oman's College of Baltimore began his remarkable series of discoveries which has resulted in bringing to light no less than fifty-nine specimens of these interesting objects. An account of his re- searches and results was published by me in 1894, f at which time * Mop.ographs of the U. S. Geol. Survey, vol. XV, Atlas. t Recent Discoveries of Cycadean Trunks in the Potomac Formation of Maryland. Bull. Torr. Bot. Clul), vol. XXT, Xo. 7, July 20, 1S«I4, pp. 291 -29! t. Sjjecic^ of Cijcadcoldca from Marij/aiid. 3 lie had already added thirty-five specimens to all that had heen hitherto reported. Since that date he has continued actively to prosecute this work and has secured many more. Too great praise cannot be bestowed, either upon him for his successful method of work and his untiring zeal and industry, nor upon the Woman's College and its able president, Dr. John F. Goucher, for the liberal spirit shown, the keen scientific interest mani- fested, and the substantial aid rendered in advancing this work. I also stated in the paper last referred to that through the senerositv of President Goucher and all connected with that in- stitution this entire collection had been loaned to the United States National Museum, and turned over to the Department of Fossil Plants for systematic elaboration, and the additional speci- mens, as fast as they were discovered, have also been regularly sent to Washington to join the rest. I had already commenced work on the important material of tlie same general nature from the Black Hills, an account of which was given in the paper presented to this Society of which I have spoken. It was de- cided to embody all the material in the Museum and all that could be secured from any American deposits in one general monograi)h of the Fossil Cycadean Trunks of North America, Dr. F. H. Knowlton to assume charge of all that pertained to the microscopic study of the internal structure and I to deal with the extenial and macroscopic aspects. I had hoped to have completed my part of the work before this, but many causes conspired to retard progress. Other pressing duties, both in the field and in the office, reduced the amount of time that it was possible to devote to it. The necessity for seeing the European s[)ecimens practically obliged me to spend a season on the other side of the Atlantic, the results of which had to be worked up and jjublished.* The amount of labor involved was also very great, and the progress made is as satisfactor\^ as could be ex- pected under the circumstances. Much has been done on all classes of the material, but latterly I have been devoting myself chiefly to the Maryland specimens. It has been necessary to study anew all those obtained by Tyson, now in the Geological Museum of Johns Hopkins University, ample facilities for whicli have been generously extended to me by Professor W. B. Clark. Professor Uhler has also kindly allowed me to describe those in the Museum of the Mar^dand Academy of Sciences, and he sent *See the Sixteenth Annual Report of tlie U. S. Geological Survey, pp. 463-542: 4 Ward — Species of ('j/enrleoidea fmni 3If(ryla)id. the two ])rincipal ones to Washington for tlie purpose. Artistic photographs have been taken of these and of all the more im- portant trunks in Mr. Bibbins' collection. A year ago I had proceeded far enough to have discovered that the cycadean trunks from the Iron Ore beds of Maryland embraced no less than seven good species which could be clearh^ separated and described, and since that time I have accomplished the work of describing and naming these species and of assign- ing each si^ecimen to its appropriate specific group. As it is very convenient in the general discussion to 1)e able to speak of these forms in a definite way, I have decided to publish these names with the descriptions, so that the new species may not need to be mentioned prior to such description, thereby cum- bering the literature with nomina nudn. It is, however, clearly to be understood that these descriptions are not final, as they are based entirely on external characters and such macroscopic observations as I have lieen able to make of the internal parts prior, for the most part, to the cutting of sections, and do not embody an}^ results that may be arrived at by Dr. Knowlton after a microscopic study of the various tissues. This latter, however, can scarcely result in reducing the number of species, as the more general characters are those that have been chiefly relied upon ibr specific differentiation, and if it results in increas- ing the number by showing that some of the specimens possess internal characters that cannot Ije specifically united with the others, this will lead to no confusion. With regard to the classification adopted, I may remark that Buckland, in studying for the first time the fossil trunks from the Purbeck beds of the Portland quarries, called to his assist- ance the great contemporary Ijotanist, Robert Brown, whom he expressly credits with the suggestion that the differences between the fossil and living forms are sufficient to establish a new family distinct from t he existing fiimily of Cycadea3, and tp which the name Cycadeoldese was given. The generic name Cycadeo'ulca was also employed at the same time, but it afterwards transpired that this was not approved by Robert Brown, who only proposed the family name. Brown must therefore be credited with the name Cycadeoidea? and Buckland with Cycadeoidea. The wisdom of Brown's suggestion has l)een abundantly vindicated by the sulj- sequent study of these forms, and the more their internal anatomy is made known, especially the nature of their inflorescence and Species of Ci/cadcoidcufro'in Maryland. 5 fructification, the clearer it becomes that all fossil cycadean vege- tation from beds below the Tertiary represented a group distinct from the recent Cycadaceic. When the nature of the reproductive apparatus was made known 1)}' Carruthers in the remarkable spec- imen which came from Luccomb Chine, on the Isle of Wight, he proposed for it a new generic name Benneltites, and Count Solms- Laubach established on the same data the family name Bennettifete. But it soon became obvious that the restricting of this name to this one form was sim})ly based on our ignorance of the reproduct- ive apparatus of other trunks, and wherever further data as to the latter have been brought forward they have strengthened the ])resumption that most or all fossil forms possessed a similar re- })roductive apparatus. Count Solms has therefore, in his latest important paj^er on the Bennettitea? of the Italian museums, re- ferred them all to Buckland's genus Cycadeoidea. In this, too, he incidentally includes man}' other European and some Ameri- can forms, while adhering to the one species of Bennettites, B. Gibsonianus, in which the fruit is known, and as a result of an examination of photographs of our American forms he has stated in letters to me that certain of them are certainly to be referred to Bennettites. But in such studies as I have been able to make of these forms, whether from Maryland or from tlie Rocky Mountain region, I am unable to see anything that can be called a generic difierence, and they all resemble the Italian forms more closely than they do those from Portland. I therefore, in the former paper, grouped them all as Cycadeoidea, and I have not since seen any reason for departing from tbis view. Until their internal structure is further studied I shall adhere to this name, and in view of all that lias been said I am disposed to extend Robert Brown's group name to all the Mesozoic cycadean vegetation, Avhether represented by trunks or by foliage, fruit, or other organs, on the general assumption that however many genera there may have been, if they could be correlated the foliage, etc., would belong to the trunks found in the same general beds. In a matter of which so little is known, all is at best provisional, and a convenient and flexible nomenclature is the chief result to be aimed at. The full classification of the Cycadaceae would therefore be to use that term to represent the entire family, both living and fossil, and to subdivide it into the two subfamilies, the Cycadea3 for the living forms and the Cycadeoidese for the fossil forms. This is the classification adopted below. (') llV/r(/ — Species of Cj/codeoldea from Moryhtud. Siibkingdom 8PERMAT0PHYTA. Class GYMXOSl'KKM.Ti. Family CYCADACE.E Lin.Uey. Subfamily Cvcaukoide.e Robert Brown. Fossil cycadean vegetation of INIesozoic age represented I)}' trunks, foliage, and fruits, and embracing a large number of genera and species, the trunks usiiall}' not accompanied by other organs than the bases of the leafstalks, and reproductive axes included in a false bark or "armor" generally of considerable thickness; foliage usuall}' also found separate from other i)arts, and fruits and rarely flowers similarly isolated. The number of genera and species is therefore necessarily duplicated and mul- tiplied, owing to the impossibility of correlating the detached parts, but that those found at similar horizons and localities be- longed together admits of no doubt. The trunks differ in size and form much as do living Cycadacea3 (Cycadere), and characters of all parts show resemblances to existing genera. It is, however, probably incorrect to say that the latter have descended from the f(n-n'ier, or that the fossil forms are embryonic types of the living forms, and the correct conception of the subfamily is em- bodied in the law of sympodial development.* according to which the principal trunk line of descent wduch the fossil forms repre- sent, and wdiich attained its maximum development in Mesozoic time, became extinct, while inferior lines or branches represented by living forms ])ersisted into modern times. This accounts for the lac t so prominently insisted ui)on by Count Solms-Laubach and otliers that the fossil forms, at least those in which the re- ])roductive organs are preserved embedded in the armor of the trunks (Benncttites), are structurally more advanced than the living Cycadacea^ a fact which tinds its counterpart in the Ijcpi- dophyta and Calamarite of the Carboniferous and in the Dino- sauria of the Mesozoic. Genu.s Cycadeoidea Buckland. 1827. Ci/c(tdeo!dea Buckland, Proc. Geol. Soc. London, vol. I, Xo. 8, pp. 80-81 (session of June 6, 1827). 1828. Cijcadeoidea Buckland, Trans. Geol. Soc. London, 2d ser., vol. II, pp. .';75-401, pi. xlvi-xlix. Fossil trunks of Cycadeoidese, chiefly low (30-90 centimeters in height) and more or less conical or oval in sliape (15-75 centimeters in diameter), *Prof. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. Y, Washington, 1890, p. 24. Lester F. Ward: Tiie Course of Biologic; Evolution (reprint of above), p. 2. species of Cycachmdea from Maryland. 7 usually simple, hut sonietiiues branchiug, witii a dein-essiou at tlu- sum- mit, in the middle of whieh, when not deca3'ed, there is a terminal hud of conical shape ; terminal hud, liowever, usually wantinu' in the fossils, leavin.s a cavity commonly known as the "crow's nest," hy which name for this reason the specimens from the Portland quarries ai-e 2>opularly known. The armor consists of appendicular and reproductive organs surrounding and enveloping the axis, the former being the hases of the leafstalks or petioles, which are surrounded by a dense mat of ramentum or fine hairs. The leaf stalks are normally four-sided and four-angled, the lateral angles acute and nearly equal, the vertical angles obtuse l)ut unequal, the lower much sharper than the uj^per, so a.s to render the cross section sub- rhombic. This form varies on the one hand to a true rhomb, and on the other hand to a true triangle, the most frequent intermediate type being that in which the upper angle is wanting, and the two up2)er sides are re- duced to a simple curve or arch, so that the cross section assumes the form of a drawn bow and bowstring, the arch formed by the two up])er sides representing the bow and the two lower sides, with their reentrant angle, representing the bowstring. In size the leaf stalks vary from h5 to o5 millimeter.s in width measured between the lateral angles, and from o to 20 millimeters in height measured between the vertical angles, or from the lower angle to the summit of the arch formed by the two upper sides. The line joining the former is not generally horizontal or at right angles with the axis of the trunk, but one is usually slightly lower than the other. The line joining the latter is not generally vertical or pai'allel to the axis of the trunk, but one is usually a little on one side of the other. The only portion of the leaf bases that is always preserved in the fossil state is the mat of ramentaceous hairs that surrounds them. In the great majority of cases the petioles themselves are decayed to a greater or less distance below the sunnuit of these mats, which thus constitute walls surrounding and enclosing the j^ortion that remains of the })etioles, if any, and in their absence forming definite cavities having the shape of the cross section of the leaf stalks, which constitute the leaf scars. These leaf scars, with or without the lower p()rti(ui of tlie leaf leases, penetrate to the axis of the trunk and form a varying angle with it. Normally this angle is a right angle overall the central portions of the trunk, while below the organs are slightly descending and above more and more as- cending to the apex, where they become vertical. At the summit, too, they diminish in size and usually in form, and are reduced in and imme- diately around the terminal bud to small triangular or polygonal bracts {penilre of Miquel). In some species {€'. Uhleri) all the organs of the body of the trunk are deflexed, and in one (C. Goucherlaiia) there is a definite zone near the middle of the trunk, below which they are descending and above which they are ascending. Tlie leaf scars are arranged in a more or less exact quincunx order, and usually in two sets of spiral rows around the trunk, in one of which they ascend from the base in the direction from left to right and in the other from right to left, crossing eacii other at varving angles, and both rows making a certain angle witli the axis of 8 Ward — rSpecles of Ci/cadco idea from Maruhmd. the trunk, which varies witli tlie species and more or less with different specimens of the same species. One of tlie two sets of rows is usually more distinct than the other, but the more distinct rows sometimes pass upward from left to right and sometimes from right to left. The bases of the petioles when present and well preserved often show at the surface presented to view a row of pits all round parallel to the walls and at differ- ent distances from the margin rejiresenting the vascular strands. Other such pits are sometimes present near the center. The petioles are fre- quently disarticulated at a natural joint, which may fall near or at the summit of the scar, or it may fall some distance within the scar. In some species there are two such joints sepai'ated by a node. Occasionally these joints consist of a thin membranous diaphragm stretching across the petiole, of firmer texture than the rest of its substance. Even where the petioles are wholly absent the position of the joints or diaphragms can sometimes be determined by a sharp ridge round the inside of the scar. The walls are made up of the ramentnm of two adjacent petioles. In some cases these matted masses are so dense as to produce a simple homogene- ous plate on all four of the sides, which, where the petioles are wanting, forms a deep, angled cavity of exactly the shape of a cross section of the petiole. Usually the portion of the wall furnished by each of the adjacent petioles can be distinguished by a junctiDU line or commissure, visible along the outer edge of the wall. This commissure sometimes takes the form of an intermediate plate of a less dense consistency than the two outer plates. In other cases this central plate is much thicker than the two outer ones, which latter may be reduced to the appearance of thin linings of the scars. In still other cases the central portion is more or less open and cavitous. The walls vary fi-om 1 millimeter or even less to 5 millimeters or, in rare cases, 8 millimeters in thickness. The other class of organs that help to make u{) the armor are the repro- ductive organs. These are l)orne on all parts of the surface of the trunks except, perhaps, in immediate connection with the terminal bud, which is exclusively an organ of growth. They are scattered about with very little order over the surface among the leaf scars. They are usually of a harder substance than that of the foliar organs and better adapted to re- sist erosive inffuences to which the fossil trunks are exposed. Where the trunks are worn, therefore, the re])rodiictive axes are liable to protrude somewhat. Viewed from without, they usually present an organ with an elliptical cross section, the longer diameter being nearly horizontal, vari- able in size, but always larger than the leaf scars. The central portion is often wanting, and a funnel-shaped cavity less deep than. the leaf scars takes its place. When the central portions are [)resent they show mark- ings having the form which the outer ends of the essential organs 2)i*e- sent, which is very variable and usually obscure. Surrounding the cen- tral portions are several rows of open scars arranged concentrically. These s(;ars are sometimes triangular, quadrangular, polygonal, or nearly circular; but the most of them, esi)ecially the outer ones, are somewhat crescent-shaped, having tiie concave side toward the center. The inflo- rescence is a spadix surrounded by an involucre consisting of the concen- Species of Cycadeoidea from Maryland. 9 trically arranged bracts or scales whose scars were last described. The spadix has a receptacle at the base, located near the inner surface of the armor and supplied with fibers from the axis. From the receptacle there rise two kinds of organs, first, peduncles or filaments, known in a few specimens to bear seeds and conjectured in one specimen to Ijear anthers at their summits, and, second, elongated chaff-like scales more numerous than the latter and rising above them, the upper portions expanding and forming a dense mat or covering over the essential parts. In most cases all these organs are wholly included in the armor, the only seeds that have thus far been found being deeply embedded in the tissues. The organs of inflorescence are probably axillary, but owing to the proximity of the leaf scars this is not generally apparent. In regions of the surface where they occur they usually crowd the leaf scars and cause variations in their shape. This effect is most marked on the u[)per sides of the scars, often quite obscuring or obliterating their normal features. The axis of the trunk inclosed in the armor when comjjlete consists of four parts, which, enumerated from without inward, may be denomi- nated respectively as (1) the libro-cambium, (2) the parenchymatous wood, sometimes called the cortical parenchyma, (3) the wood proper or fibrovascular zone, and (4) the medulla or pith. In many cases the libro- cambium zone cannot be definitely distinguished from the cortical paren- chyma, and nothing is visible but the large and numerous vascular bun- dles i)assing out from the interior into the leaves; but sometimes there occurs a definite line or thin zone of loose tissue immediately below the bases of the leaf stalks. There is usually a zone of apparently homoge- neous cellular tissue, often of considerable thickness, filling the interval between the armor and the woody axis. The woody zone consists of one or more rings of exogenous tissue traversed by medullary rays. Where more than one, they are separated by thin interstices of parenchymatous tissue. The medulla is usually large and composed of coarse parenchyma. Cycadeoidea Marylandica (Font.) Cap. and Solnis. ISfiO. Qican sp. Tyson, First Rei)ort State Agric. Chem. Maryland, p. 42. 1870. BenneUites sp. Carruthers, Trans. Linn. Soc. London, vol. XXVI, p. 708. 1879. Cijmdeoldm sp. Fontaine, Am. Journ. Sci., 3d ser., vol. XVII, p. ' 157. 1889. Ti/sonia, Marylandica Fontaine, Potomac or Younger Mesozoic Flora, " Monogr. U. S. Geol. Survey, vol. XV, p. 193, pi. clxxiv-clxxx. 1892. C'l/cailcoidea Manilandka ( Font.) Cap. and Solms, ]Mem. Keal. Accad. 'Sci. 1st Bologna, ser. V, tom. II, pp. 179, 180, 186. Trunks of medium or rather large size, almost always more or less later- ally compressed so as to be elliptical in cross section, conical in shape or slightly narrowed near the base with a terminal l)ud set in a slight de- pression at the summit, simple, or in one specimen, apparently having one branch ; mineral constitution very variable according to mode of preservation, but usually not hard, flinty, or heavy and compact ; reddish, pinkish, drab, or ash colored ; 2o to 45 centimeters high, 24 to 40 centi- ■2 — Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1S97 10 Ward — Species of Cycadco idea from Maryland. meters in longer and 12 to 26 centimeters in shorter diameter, with a girth of from 70 centimeters to one meter; organs constitnting tiie armor ]iro- ceeding at a riglit angle to the axis except above, where tliej^ are ascending, and near the base, where they are sometimes slightly descending ; leaf scars arranged in two series of spiral rows crossing each other usually at a different angle to the axis of the trunk, the angle var3'ing from 30° to 75°; scars usually sul)rlioml)ic, /. ('. , with the lateral angles nearly equal and the vertical ones unequal, the lower more acute than the upper, the latter often reduced to a mere groove or wanting entirely and the two upper sides together forming an arch, the whole scar simulating a drawn bow and bowstring, but sometimes triangular, the upper sides joined along a horizontal line, or more irregular in shajje, occasionally with four curved sides and four acute angles; the width as represented by a line joining the two lateral angles varying from 15 to 25 millimeters, and the height as rei^resented by a line joining the two vertical angles (which would rarely be parallel to the axis of the trunk) varying from (S to 15 milli- meters; j-emains of the petioles usually present in the scars at differ- ent distances from the summit, often bearing evidence of having been disarticulated at a natural joint, sometimes indicating the existence of two sucii joints at different depths in the scars, and showing that these joints consist of a diaphragm across the petiole which may remain after the substance of the petiole has jiartly decayed lielow it leaving a hollow space, portions of the outermost diaphragms also sometimes adhering to the sides of the scars in the form of a ridge surrounding them ; vascular bundles rarely visible under an ordinary lens, but occasionally seen in the form of a row near the outer margin all round the leaf base with a few near the center; i-amentum walls usually rather thick, but vary- ing from less than I millimeter to 9 millimeters, ordinarily with a more or less distinct line marking the junction of tiie parts belonging to ad- jacent petioles (commissure), sometimes with a distinct plate or layer of less compact tissue between these, occasionally but rarely affected with pits or small bi-act scars especially in the angles; reproductive organs usually abundant, often solid and protruding, generally more or less dis- tinctly marked in the center by the remains of the essential organs and surrounded by bract scars in several concentric rows, but often decayed in various degi'ees, leaving corresponding funnel-shaped cavities, com- monly elliptical in cross-section, wider than high, very variable in size, the major axis 15 to 40 millimeters and the minor 10 to 30 millimeters; armor thin, 2 to 5 centimeters, usually joined to the internal parts by a clear line, but without measurable thickness, but sometimes very irregu- larly so joined and occasionally showing a thin libro-caml)ium layer; woody zone 3 to 10 centimeters thick, usually with two or three more or less distinct rings, the outer or parenchymatous zone thicker and firmer than the inner or fibrovascular zone ; medulla usually homogeneous in structure, elliptical, the major axis 8 to 17 centimeters, the minor 3 to 9 centimeters. Eighteen specimens are referred to this species. The type specimens are of course the originals of T3'son, of which the one i)hotographed by species of f'l/radcoidca from 3Ian/Ioii(f. 11 him should stand at the head. 1 sliall refer to it as No. 1 of the speci- mens at tlie Johns Hopkins University, although Professor Fontaine calls it No. 2. It is the largest and most perfect of the trunks belonging to this species. The other nearly perfect trunk of the original lot, which Professor Fontaine calls No. 1, will be referred to as "Johns Hopkins Cycads No. 2." The other two specimens described by Professor Fon- taine were fragments, and were called by him "fragment No. 1 " and "fragment No. 2." The first of these belongs to another species, as will be seen below. His " fragment No. 2" probably belongs to this species, but is somewhat anomalous. It will be referred to as " Johns Hopkins Cycads No. 3." A few years ago Professor Clark informed me that an- other specimen had been found about the University buildings, but he could give no further account of it. With his permission I have exam- ined and described it and have had photographs made not only of this, but also of the other two fragments, which had not hitherto been illus- trated. The newly found specimen, although not an entire trunk, is much more complete than either of the other fragments. It clearly be- longs to this specie.s, and will be referred to as " Johns Hopkins Cycads No. 5." The largest specimen in the Museum of the Maryland Academy of Sciences also belongs to this species, although it has suffered murh from wear and many of the characters are obscured. It will be referred to as "Maryland Academy Cycads No. 1." The remaining thirteen specimens belong to the Woman's College and embrace the following numbers of the museum of that college: 1192, 1428, 1481, 1480, 1656, 1657,3050, 3051, 3056, 3057, 3324, 3328, 3341. Many of these are fine specimens, consisting of nearly complete trunks, and of the specific identity of such there is no doubt, but there are several small and im- perfect fragments, which scarcely show characters enough to render their specific assignment safe. In these and all similar cases I reserve the right to alter the assignment in case further study or future (liscoverj' shall seem to require it. The most important of these sj^ecimens is No. 1481, because, besides being a nearly perfect trunk, showing all the typ- ical characters, it is the only one of Mr. Bibbins' specimens whose exact stratigraphical position is definitely determined. Cycadeoidea Tysoniana n. sp. Trunk medium sized or large, more or less compressed laterally ; leaves slightly ascending; leaf scars arranged in spiral rows, 9 millimeters high, 22 millimeters wide, subrhombic, empty to some depth, petioles persistent at base, the vascular bundles arranged in one row near the exterior and a group near the center, often persisting after the decay of the remaining substance; ramentum walls thin, often with a layer of spongy substance in the middle, wrinkled on the edges ; reproductive organs few and small ; armor 5 centimeters thick ; libro-cambium zone sometimes distinct. 3 millimeters thick; woody zone 6 to 8 centimeters thick, consisting of a broad outer parenchymatous layer 4 to 6 centimeters thick, and a narrow inner vascular zone 1 centimeter thick, the latter usually between open 12 Ward — Species of Cycadeoidea from Mnrijlnnd. tissue without and witliin, its inner wall strongly marked with l(jngi- tudinal grooves; medulla distinct and homogeneous, light and porous. This species is represented only by a single specimen, No. 1472 of the Woman's College. It approaches C. Marylandica in some respects, but differs in the larger leaf scars, thinner walls, thicker armor, and the great paucity of reproductive organs. It is to be regretted that Professor Fon- taine did not name the original species with which ]Mr. Tyson's name Avill always be so intimately connected in his honor instead of the genus, which must fall before the laws of nomenclature. I have endeavored in the above name to supply the defect in some small degree. Cycadeoidea McGeeana n. sp. Trunks low and tlat, with ample diameter, sometimes three times as tliick as high, yellowish, brown, or nearly black, more or less jwrous and spongy, and of low specific gravity ; leaves and si)adices set nearly at right angles to the axis ; leaf scars arranged somewhat definitely in quincunx order and disposed in spii-al rows around the trunk, small and uniform in shape, subrhombic witb the vertical angles obtuse, the lateral ones acute, narrow-elongate, G to 10 millimeters in vertical by l(i to 20 millimeters in lateral dimensions, averaging 8 by 20 millimeters, usually empty by the disappearance of the leaf bases, at least to a considerable depth ; ramen- tum walls thin, often less than one millimeter, with or without evident commissure, and with occasional punctations ; axes of inflorescence few and scattering, sometimes projecting and filled with the substance of the spadix, sometimes cavitous from the decay of the essential organs, sur- rounded by obtusely triangular or somewhat crescent-shaped bract scars ; armor 4 to 5 centimeters tliick; liljer and caml)ium sometimes distin- guishable; woody zone usually diviiled into two or three rings; medulla large, porous. A very distinct species of low and squat trunks, some of them having almost the form of a car wheel, only a very small part of which can be due to vertical compression. The external organs, however, closelv re- semble those of C. TysonUma. It embraces seven specimens, all belong- ing to the Woman's College, as follows : Nos. 1471, 1659 and 1659a, which belong together, 3055, 3068, 3323, 3;]25, and 3349. The most complete specimen is No. 1471, which is taken as the type and which has been cut tlirough vertically and the surfaces polished. The specimen consisting of the two complementary fragments 16.59 and 1659« is also very interest- ing, though representing only about two-thirds of the whole trunk. The other specimens are all fragments. I have named the species for Mr. W J IMcGee, by whom the Potomac formation was named and whose extensive studies in that formation are well known. As stated above, it was largely through his efforts that in- terest in the cycads of the formation was revived, and he it was who caused the photographs to be taken that were used to illustrate Professor Pontaine's monograph of the flora. Speclca of i'jjcadcoidcn Jroni Murylaial. 13 Cycadeoidea Fontaineana n. sp. Trunks small and low, usually much compressed or flattened vertically, light brown to whitish in color, often spongy or porous and of low speciiic gravity ; leaves and spadices set nearly at right angles to the axis ; leaf scars not obviously arranged in spiral rows or imperfectly so arranged, variable and irregular in shape, usually with four angles and four curved sides, often in the form of a cross, rarely subrhombic, small, S to 12 milli- meters in vertical and 14 to 25 millimeters in lateral measurement, averag- ing 10 by 19 millimeters ; ramentum walls thick, 4 to 10 millimeters, usually without commissure or punctations ; leaf bases rarely present, when so, spongy or porous without visible bundles ; terminal bud (present in one specimen) 6 centimeters high, 65 millimeters broad at the down- wardly convex base, definiteh^ bounded below, symmetrically conical above, consisting of a mass of densely matted bracts imbricated along a central axis ; reproductive organs few and imperfectly defined, usually cavitous in the center and sometimes surrounded by irregular-shaped bract scars; armor rather thin, 2 to 4 centimeters; liber and cambium obscure ; woody axis divided into several rings, sometimes consisting of a loose, open structure separated by thin, firm plates, the inner face next the medulla definitely marked by the remains of vessels and medullary rays ; medulla large, marked on the external surface by thin longitudinal ridges or lamelhe varying from 1 to 3 centimeters in length, the ends over- lapping adjacent ones {Cycadeoimjelon Saporta), internal parts coarse and porous or somewhat chambered. This species resembles C. McGeeana in the general form of the trunks, but the external organs are very different. It embraces fifteen specimens, all but two of which belong to Mr. Bibbins' collection. The two smaller specimens in Museum of the ^Maryland Academy of Sciences have been somewhat doubtfully referred to this species. They are fragments, and show so few characters that their .specific relations are obscure. The other specimens bear the following numbers of the Museum of the Woman's College of Baltimore: 1467, 1470, 1473, 1485, 14S8, 1658, 3046, 3122, 3326, 3327, 3346, 3347, 3350. I^o. 1467 has been taken as the type of the species, although it does not show quite all the characters. It has the most per- fect terminal bud in the entire collection, and a vertical section of the specimen has been made which passes through the center of the bud. There are two other specimens of special interest ; one of these is No. 1470, which consists of a fine piece of the medulla, with its characteristic ex- ternal markings {Cycadeomyelon of Saporta), to which is attached a por- tion of the armor and connecting tissues in such a manner as to show their relations. The other is No. 3046, called the "chicken trough " because so used by its owner at the time of its discovery. The large decayed cavity at the summit affords an excellent view of the structure of the in- ternal parts. The remaining specimens are fragments of greater or less completeness. In naming this species I have wished to commemorate the pioneer in- vestigator of the deposits from which the cycads are derived and to whom 14 ]\\ird — iSpecies of Cijradcoi.dca frorn Marijhiiid. science is indebted for the gi-eater part of all that is known of the flora of these deposits. Cycadeoidea Goucheriana n. sp. Trunk large, cylindrico-conieal with elliptical cross section, 30 to 50 centimeters high, 25 to 50 centimeters in diameter, light colored and of low specific gravity, somewhat chalky and friable ; lower leaves some- what defiexed, ujiper ones ascending, the line between the two definite and encircling the trunk near the middle; leaf scars arranged in two sets of spiral rows, both having nearly the same angle to the axis, 45° or greater; scars variable in size and shape, chiefly subrhoml)ic to nearly triangular with curved or fluted sides, inner wall of the tubes marked by a raised line around it; scars averaging 11 millimeters in vertical and 2o millimeters in lateral measurement; leaf bases usually absent or only adhering to the bottom of the scars ; ramentum walls thick, moi-e or less divided into irregular laminpe or scales with fissures between them, their outer edges ragged; reproductive organs numerous, well marked, irrogu- lai'ly scattered over the surface, most abuntlant at tlie narrower sides, usually cavitous in the center, sometimes solid and i)rotruding, surrounded by concentrically arranged crescent-shaped bract scars, sometimes well exposed and clearly distinguishable into spadix and involucre, the scales of the latter imbricated, the entire organ conical with the a23ex toward the axis of the trunk : armor 3 to 5 centimeters thick, separated from the wood by a definite line ; woody zone 4 centimeters thick, consisting of an outer parenchymatous ring 3 centimeters thick, a thin ring of loose open structure, and two thin plates separated by another ring of coarse cells divided by i-adial partitions, the inner walls of both plates marked with the scars of the medullar}- rays, the pattern different in the two cases, the scars on the inner plate 13 millimeters long, those on the outer longer and taijering upward; medulla large, elliptical, tapering upward, of a coarse, homogeneous structure. Only one specimen referable to this si)ecies lias thus far been brought to light, l)ut this is one of the most perfect and also one of the most beau- tiful of all that have been discovered in the Iron Ore beds. It is further of special interest from the circumstance that its exact stratigraphical and local ])osition when found is so thoroughly vouched for that there is little room for doubt in the matter. It is with great pleasure that I name it in honor of Ur. John F. Goucher, president of the Woman's College of Balti- more, to whose liberal and munificent policy the entire collection is due. Cycadeoidea Uhleri n. sp. Trunks small, 28 centimeters high, 20 centimeters in diameter, 50 to 60 centimeters in girth at the thickest part, circular, or only slightly ellip- ti(;al in cross section, conical or somewhat cylindrical-conical in shape, contracted at the base, silicified, but porous and light, reddish or gray in color; leaf scars definitely arranged in (]uincunx order and spiral rows Species of Cj/cadcohlca froDi Man/la nd. 15 around the trunk, one of these sets of rows ascending at an an<:le of 45° to the axis, the other at a much greater angle; snhtriangular, the upper side arched and sometimes slightly grooved, lateral angles acute, inferior angle obtuse or rounded; scars uniform in size, IS millimeters wide and 9 millimeters high ; ramentum walls 4 to -"i millimeters thick, commissure distinct, the whole punctured with minute rhombic, ti'iangular. or ellij>- tical bract scars, deeply penetrating the structures; leaf bases usually wanting, but sometimes nearly tilling the cavities ; vascular bundles few, arranged in a row near the upper side of the petiole and others scattered over other parts; petioles all reflexed or pointing downward at a strong angle; reproductive organs numerous, situated directly over the leaf scars, i. e., axillary, ellipical in outline, 15 millimeters wide, 10 milli- meters high, the center occupied by the remains of the essential oi'gans or by a circular cavity where these have disappeared; l)ract scars small and numerous, somewhat curved and arranged concentrically around the spadix, also passing out into the ramentum walls ; armor 3 to 5 centi- meters thick ; woody zolie 15 to 35 millimeters tliick, divided into two or three rings ; medulla about 5 centimeters in diameter, cylindrical or elliptical according to the shape of the trunk, heterogeneous in composi- tion, being traversed by dike-like plates of a hard substance dividing it into chambers, often wanting, leaving a hollow center to the trunk. Only two specimens are refei'able to this species, both of which agree almost exactly and show the distinct specific characters which so clearly separate it from all the others. The most perfect of these specimens w'as kindly sent me by Professor Uhler for comparison with the one in INIr. Bibbins' collection, whicli bears the number 1429 of the Museum of the Woman's College. Tliis latter is a fragment freshly broken fi-om a larger piece, which has not yet been recovered, although considerable is known of its history. It must have been taller than the perfect trunk and per- haps more cylindrical in sliape. Tlie other and almost complete conical trunk also has a history wdiicb I have not as yet sufficient data to record, but this much seems clear, that both these specimens were originally found at nearly the same spot. No one has taken greater interest in the fossil cycads of Maryland than Professor P. R. Uhler, so long president of the Maryland Academy of Sciences and now Provost of the Peabody Institute of Baltimore, and it is fitting that this species should bear his name. Cycadeoidea Bibbinsi n. sp. Trunks large, 40 to 60 centimeters high, laterally compressed, girth of largest specimen 1 meter, of next in size 88 centimeters, shorter axis of cross section one half to two thirds of longer axis, contracted to- ward the summit, terminating in a conical bud 30 centimeters high, or, where this is wanting, in a concave depression, thoroughly silicified throughout, heavy and solid, of a dark color ; all the organs of the armor nearh' at right angles to the axis of tlie trunk ; leaf scars arranged spirally around the trunk in imperfect quincuncial order, subrhoml)ic, l6 Ward — Sjiecies of Cijcadeoidcn fro)n Mai'iiland. the lower wn^^Xe much sharper than the upper, the latter sometimes re- duced to a curve, ]4 millimeters high, 26 millimeters wide; ramentum walls moderately thick, usually solid ; vascular handles of the petioles arranged in a row entirely around them and near the margin of a ci'oss section, also sometimes a few near the center ; spadices abundant, irreg- ularly scattered over all parts of the surface, usually showing the marks left by the essential floral organs or a central cavity occupying their place, surrounded by curved or crescent-shaped pits concenti'ically arranged in several rows and set concave to the axis of the spadix, representing the involuci'al bracts ; armor varying from 25 to 75 millimeters in thickness, this variation often great in different parts of the same specimen ; cam- bium layer indistinct; liber zone not generally distinguishable from the wood; the latter in two or three zones, medullary rays faint; medulla well marked, homogeneous, usually spongy in appearance. This species represents a type quite distinct from all the others, and the cycadean trunks of the Iron Ore deposits of Maryland might be divided into two classes, one of wliich should emlu-ace all the forms included in the six species above described and the other those that have been re- ferred to this species. The fact that the rock in the latter is always firm, hard, and heavy and usually dark colored is not merely an accident of preservation, but results in some ol)scure way from the nature of the vege- table tissues. The trunks are generally larger and the leaf scars much larger, though they have nearly the same form and arrangement. The reproductive organs are more abundant anil usually very regular and definite in their character. Eighteen specimens belong to this group, all but one of which are of Mr. Bibbins' collecting. The one exception is the fragment in the ^lu- seum of Johns Hopkins University that Professor Fontaine described as " Fragment No. 1," which I call No. 4. The most typical specimen is the great "Polly Jones Trunk," No. 1427 of the JMuseum of the Woman's College of Baltimore. Tlie other sixteen in their numerical order are as follows: 1420, 1462, 1463, 1464, 1465, 146(), 1468, 1478, 1480, 1482, 148:5, 1484, 1487, 3047, 3054, 3348. Of these, Nos. 1462, 14(!3, 1465, 1468, and 1482 are large, nearly perfect trunks, and Nos. 1463, 1468, and 1482 have the terminal bud preserved. The rest are fragments, but many of them are quite full and show important chai'acters on the fractured surfaces that do not appear in the more complete specimens. No. 1483 has been cut through and the surfaces polished, and admirably shows the internal arrangements of the leaves, fruiting organs, and vascular strands supply- ing tliem. Nos. 1484 and 3054 give the maximum development of the leading characters, especially those of the fruiting organs. In many respects this species represents the most important and inter- esting group of Maryland cycads, nearly all the specimens of which, as we have seen, having been secured by ]\Ir. Bibbins, and I have therefore sought in causing the species to bear his name to make that name forever inseparable from the class of objects which he has done more than all others combined to bring out of their hiding places into the light of scien- tific investigation. Specif!^ of Cycadeoidca from 3fari/laiierta. On the adjacent arid plains from eastern Colorado to Montana and Assiniboia it is re- placed by and probably intergrades with the veiy pale C. palli- das. In cranial characters C. ■pallldus is closely related to the form inhabiting the plains of the Columbia in eastern Oregon and Washington, which appears to grade insensibly into C testes, the Coyote of the Transition zone from the dry interior of south- ern British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon southward over the higher lands of the Great Basin, the Sierra Nevada, and the Rocky Mountains to the plateau of northern Arizona, and thence along the continental divide to the Mexican boundary. It is not improbable, therefore, that the three members of the latrans group intergrade, though no skins showing intergradation have been seen. The three members of the frustror group, on the other hand, are probably specifically as well as geographically distinct. Still, the limits of their ranges are unknown. Canis frmtv or inhabits the Gulf region of Texas from Nueces Bay northward and will probabh^ be found throughout the Lower Sonoran area of Texas, (Oklahoma, and Indian Territory. Its distant relative, C. cagottis, is known from only the southern part of the tableland of Mexico, but probably ranges northward along the west side of the table- land. The third member of the series, C. peninsulae, is supposed to be restricted to the peninsula of Lower California. The microdon group contains five very different forms. Of these, C. microdon inhabits the arid tropical or ' Tamaulipan ' fauna of northeastern Mexico and the Lower Rio Grande region in Texas; C. vigilis the arid tropical coast region of Colima in western Mexico; C. mearnsi the Lower Sonoran areas of north- ern Sonora and southern Arizona ; C. estor the adjacent Lower 22 Mcri'idiii — llrvhioti of flic (Aiijotcx. Soaoran deserts of eastern C^alifornia, Nevada, and Utah, and C. ocJiropits the Lower Sonoran San Joaquin Valley of California. Apparently the only forms in this series which can possibly in- tergrade are C viearnsi and the pallid C estor. ]t should be observed that two of the groups — the latrans and the microdon — have each a pallid representative, and that these re})resentatives (pallidus and esUn-) resemble one another exter- nally so closely that they are hardly distinguishable excejjt by size, while a glance at their teeth shows that they belong to op- posite extremes of the whole series. It is not impossible that the third (or frudror) group also has a pallid member, but no s}jeci- mens from the southern plains have come to hand. Good skins with skulls are much needed from all parts of Mexico, Texas, Indian Territor}^ Oklahoma, New Mexico, south- ern Colorado, western Arizona, the Painted Desert in eastern Arizona, the coast ranges of southern California, eastern North Dakota, Manitoba, and the northwest coast region. The pelage is in best condition in early winter immediately after the fall molt, usually in December and January. History and Nomenclature. Fortunately the Co^'otes have escaped the complicated history and involved synonymy with which most groups are encum- bered. This is due in the main to the widespread belief that all of the small wolves of North America belong to a single species. So far as I have been able to ascertain, onlv four names have t)een proposed for the Coyotes. These are Cauls latrans Say, 1823, for the Upper Mississip[)i Valley animal ; Canis ochropns Eschscholtz, 1829, for the species from the interior of California ; Oinls frustror Woodhouse, 1851, for the Indian Territory (and Texas) animal; and Lyckcus cagottis Hamilton Smith, 1839, for the one from tlie southern end of the tableland of Mexico. All of these names are here recognized as designating valid forms. General Characters. The pattern of coloration is tlie same in all the Coyotes. Ex- cept in the ])ale desert forms (pallidas and estor), in which the fulvous tints are replaced by ])uti', the muzzle, backs of the ears, outer side (sometimes the Avhole) of the fore and hind feet and Bccisioii nf fhr Coyok'S. 23 legs, and distal half of the under side of the tail are some shade of fulvous. The ground color of the back also varies from buff, or even buify-white in the desert forms, to dull fulvous in the animal from southern Mexico, and the abundance of black- tipped hairs is usually proportionate to the intensity of the ground color. The up})er side of the tail is like the back, and about one-third the distance from root to tip it is marked by an elongated black spot. The tip is always black, although it some- times contains a tuft of white hairs, most often present in C. ochropiis. The males are decidedly larger than the females. Compared with the large Wolves, the Coyotes are slender, lithe, and graceful.-'' The}' are swift of foot, and in ordinary seasons feed chiefly on rabbits, both jackrabbits and cottontails, but they also catch ground squirrels and other small mammals, snakes, lizards, birds, and insects, and when put to it by hunger do not hesitate to eat carrion. They are also fond of fruit. Unless the contrar}^ is stated, all of the measurements in the present paper were taken ' in the flesh ' by the collector. All are in millimeters. Descriptions of Species. Caiiis latrans Say. Canis latrans Say, Long's Expedition to Rocky INIountains, I, 168, 1823. Type locality. — Council Bluft's, Iowa. Characters.— Size largest of the Coyotes ; coloration rather pale ; pre- molar and carnassial teeth very large and greatly swollen. Color. — Muzzle dull and rather pale fulvous, finely sprinkled with gray hairs (chiefly above) and with black hairs (chiefly on cheeks) ; top of head from front of eyes to ears grizzled gray, the pale fulvous zone of under fur showing througli, but the gray predominating; ears deep rich fulvous, sparingly sprinkled with black hairs; upper parts from ears to tail coarsely mixed huffy gray and black ; under parts and up{)er lip whitish ; long hairs of throat sparingly tipped with blackish, giving the broad collar a grizzled appearance; fore legs and feet dirty whitish, be- coming dull clay color on outer side of leg ; hind legs and feet dull fulvous on outer side, white on inner side and on dorsal surface of feet, the change from fulvous to white rather abrupt; tail narrowly tipped with black; its under side whitish basally, becoming pale fulvous on distal half and tipped and edged with black. * It is hoped that no one will be misled, either as to the form or coloring of the Coyotes, by the gross caricature bearing their name in Mivart's re- cent ' Monograph of the Cauidte.' 24 Mvn'htm — Ecrtsion of fJic Coyotes. Cranial and denial characters. — Skull* and teeth, particular!}' the latter, largest of the group; frontals flatter than in the other forms; premolars very mucli swollen, particularly the lower ones; carnassial teeth very thick and tumid. Tlie only Coyotes whose skulls approach C lahxais in size are pallidus, lestes, frustror, and ochropus. The two latter may be dis- missed at once on account of the great disparity in the teeth, the carnas- sials anil premolars being hardly more than two-thirds as large as tiiose of latraus. C. frustror differs furtlier in having the frontals more elevated than in any other member of the group, while in C. latrans they are the flattest and most depressed. Large male skulls of C. ocliropns sometimes have the rostrum (measured from back of last molar to front of incisors) of the same length as small males of la(ra)is, but the rostrum is always very much narrower and the postpalatal part of the skull smaller. The difference between latran.s and ochropus in size of teeth is very great, the upper carnassial and first molar together measuring 35 millimeters in an adult male lalratis, contrasted with oO in an adult male ochropus having the entire tooth row of exactly the same length. In C. latrans the pre- molars are so large that the tooth row is crowded, while in ochropus they are widely spaced. The teeth of the female laira])s are decidedly larger than those of the male ocliropus. The species having teeth sufficiently large to require comparison with latrans are pallidus and lestes. In both of these the lateral teeth of the male equal or exceed those of the female latrans. Comparing skulls of the same sex, the upper carnassial and first molar and the premolars in both jaws, particularly the lower, are larger, more swollen, and more crowded in latrans. In latrans also the inner cusp {protocone) of the upper carnassial averages decidedly larger than in either of the others. Mea-nirements. — Female young adult from Elk River, Minnesota: total length, 1219; tail vertebrse, o94; hind foot (in dry skin), 179. Cranial measurements. ^(^ adult from Elk River, Minnesota: basal length, 190; basilar length of Hensel, 186 ; zygomatic breadth, 109 ; pala- tal length, 96; mastoid l>readth, 65; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, 22. The skull of an adult female from Elk River measures: basal leiigtli, 175 ; basilar length of liensel, 172; zygomatic breadth, 100 ; pala- tal length, 96; mastoid breadth, 62; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, 20.5. Canis pallidus sp. nov. Type locaidij. — Johnstown, Brown County, Nebraska. Type No. 77093, cJ' young adult, U. S. National ]\Iuseum, Department of Agriculture col- lection. Collected March 12, 189(5, by E. E. Fast. Clniracters. — Similar to C. hdrans. but everywhere jaaler; backs of ears buff instead of fulvous ; skull and teeth smaller. C'o/or.— Muzzle dull ochraceous buff; top of head grizzled grayish fainily tinged with bufi'; ears buft"; upper parts ])ale huffy whitish or soiled white * The skulls of C. latrans used in the present comparison are from Elk River, Minnesota. Uevision of the Coyotes. 25 spariiio'ly mixed with black hairs, es^peoially along middle of Ijack ; under ]tai1s wiiite ; no distinct collar (long hairs of throat not noticealdy tipjied witli l)lack) ; fore and hind legs and feet soiled white with faint hutly suffusion on outer side of fore legs, and tinged with palest fulvous on outer side of hind legs; tail pale, under side white hasally, becoming butl", and narrowly tipped with black. Cranial and denial charQCters. —f^kuW and teeth similar to those of C. latranst, but slightly smaller. The lower premolars and carnassial and the upper carnassial and first molar are decidedly smaller and less swollen than in latrnns. Eemarks. — C, jMxUidus is a pale arid-land representative of latran.i. It inhabits the Great Plains fr-om eastern Coloi'ado northward into Canada, and is common throughout Montana except in tlie mountains. On the southern plains, from eastern Colorado southward, it is replaced by another species. Specimens of both have been obtained at Arkins, Colorado. Measurements. — Unfortunately we have no flesh measurements of the type specimen, but the hind foot (dry") measures 77 millimeters. The form averages a little smaller than C. lalrans. airii, is liardK' half grown. Revision of the Coyotes. 27 spriiikletl witli blark hairs which reach down more than half way to lieel ; under side of tail fulTOUs, white basall}S anil witli hairs of distal half conspicuously tipped with black. Cranlnl, and dental c/(amcters.— Skulls from Padre Island and Nueces Bay are similar to those of C. pmlnsahv from Lower California, except that they are somewhat larger, have decidedly longer rosti'ums and more ele- vated frontals. The elevation of the frontal shield postei'iorly is greater than in any other Coyote. The teeth, though relatively smaller, are almost as large as in peninmlx. In the Nueces Bay skulls the upper carnassial is peculiarly swollen and rounded anteriorly, with the inner cusp set back consideralily behind the anterior plane of the tooth. Remavl-s.—Canisfrustror (assuming the name to apply to the Padre Island specimen above described) resembles C. pen'mmlx from Lower California in general characters, differing chiefly in somewhat larger size, paler colora- tion, shorter ears, larger amount of black on forearm, and longer rostrum. Measurements. — J^ young adult. Padre Island, Texas : total length, 1190 ; tail vertebrae, 320 ; hind foot, 200. Cranial measurements.— c^ adult from Padre Island, Texas : basal length, 182 ; basilar length of Hensel, 179 ; zygomatic breadth, 102 ; palatal length , 94; mastoid breadth, ()3; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, 19. Canis cagottis (Hamilton Smith). Lijciscus cagottis Hamilton Smith, Jardine's Nat. Library, Mammals, vol. IV, 164, 1839. f Canis nigrirostris Licht., Abhandl. K. Akad. Wiss., Berlin (1827), pp. 105- 10(), 1830. Ti/pe. locality.— B\o Frio, between City of Mexico and Puebla, Mexico. Characters.* — Similar to C.perdnsuhe, but slightly larger and redder, with somewhat shorter ears, larger teeth, and broader rostrum. CoZor.— Muzzle bright ferruginous; top of head grizzled buffy-grayish and fulvous, the fulvous predominating, especially posteriorly; crown, nape, and ears fulvous, deepest on the ears ; rest of upper parts grizzled fulvous, buffy, and black (the black-tipped hairs worn off in the Cerro San Felipe specimen, but probably very aliundant and conspicuous in winter pelage) ; fore legs and feet dull fulvous, with very little black over wrists; hind legs and feet deep fulvous on outer side, the legs abruptly whitish on inner side and feet much i^aler on upper surface; under sur- face of tail fulvous, whitish basally ; hairs of terminal third black-tipped. Cranial and dental characters.— The skull of the adult male from Cerro San Felipe agrees with that of the type specimen of Canis peninsuhc in size and general cranial characters, but has the base of the rostrum very much thicker and more swollen, a broader and shorter palate (remarkably broad posteriorly), broader interpterygoid fossa, and much shorter mandible, which is strongly bellied under the carnassial and molars. The teeth are larger and heavier, particularly those of the lower * The present description is based on a specimen {(^ adult) from the Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, INIexico, in summer pelage. 5— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1807 28 Merriam — Revision of the Coyotes. jiiw. Tlie upper cariiassial is much more i^wollen and broadly rounded anteriorly, with a relatively insijjnificant inner cusp {pi-otocme) . The first upper molar is very large and broad and is broadly rounded on the inner side, without the posterior emargination of C. peiiiusujR\ The last upper molar is suljquadrate and in contact with the first for nearly half the length of the anterior face. The lower premolars and carnassial are much larger, heavier, and more crowded than in peninsulx, but the pos- terior molar is minute on one side and absent on the other (without trace of alveolus). A very young skull from the volcano of Toluca, which has not shed the milk teeth, has enormous audital bulke ; but very young skulls of wolves always have larger bullae than adults. Remarks. — Hamilton Smith's original description of cagoitis is as follows : " The Caygotte of the Mexican Spaniards, and most probably the Coyotl of the native Indians, is a second species, but slightly noticed by trav- elers. Mr. William Bullock observed it near Eio Frio, in the Mexican Territory, and was informed by muleteers then with Iiim that it was the Caygotte, a very fierce kind of wolf. The individuals lie saw were in size equal to a hound, of a brownish rusty gray, with buff'-colored limbs, and rather a scanty brush." While there is nothing distinctive about this description, it may be assumed, on geographic grounds, to apply to the animal from the Cerro San Felipe. For the same reason one would expect Lichtenstein's C. nigrirostris to belong here also ; Ijut Lichtenstein states that his animal has a black muzzle and short pointed ears, characters not possessed by any Coyote known to me. Lichtenstein's specimen was col- lected by Deppe at Real de Arriba, in the State of Mexico. If its skull is still in the Berlin Museum, its relations to the Cerro San Felipe skull may be easily ascertained. If not a freak it may be the large wolf of southern Mexico. Measurements — Adult jj' from Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca: total length, 11P.2; tail vertebne, 304; hind foot, 195. Cranial ntedsiireineiits. — -Adult (5^ from Cerro San Felipe: basal length, 1()4 ; basilar lengtli of Hensel, 160 ; zygomatic breadth, 98 ; palatal length, 84; mastoid breadth, 59; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, 21. Canis peninsulae sp. nov. Type locality. — Santa Anita, Cape St. Lucas, Lower California. Type No. 74245, (^ adult, U. S. National Museum, Department of Agriculture collection. Collected May 15, 1895, by J. E. McLellan. General characters. — Similar to C. ochropus in size, large ears, and rich coloration, but colors darker and redder, underside of tail blacker ; belly marked with black-tipped hairs ; rostrum nmch broader. Color. — Muzzle cinnamon rufous, the cheeks abundantly mixed with black hairs, almost forming a black patch under eyes ; top of head griz- zled grayish fulvous, mixed with black hairs between and above eyes ; ears rich fulvous; upper parts buffy-ochraceous profusely mixed with l)lack (under fur pale fulvous) ; underparts strongly washed with bufiy- ochraceous or even pale fulvous, with numerous black-tipped hairs be- Revision of the Coyotes. 21) tween fore legs ami along middle of belly ; long hairs of throat forming a strongly marked collar, tinged with bufi'y and conspicuously mixed witli black-tipped hairs; fore and hind legs and feet fulvous; underside of tail fulvous, whitish basally ; distal half with long hairs conspicuously tipped with black, forming a black veil over the fulvous. Cranial and dental characters. — The skull whic;h Canis 2)euf».s»?;i' i-esem- bles most (-losely is an adult male from the Cerro San Felipe, State of Oaxaca, JNIexico, assumed to belong to the species named cagottis by Hamilton Smith. The skull of the type specimen of peninsulse agrees with the Cerro San Felipe skull essentially in size and general characters, but the rostrum is not so short and broad (in the Cerro San Felipe skull it is remarkably broad posteriorly), and the lateral teeth, though large, are uniformly smaller and less swollen. The diflerence is most marked in the lower jaw. Compared with C. fruslror from Texas, the skull of 'peiiiujiulic is shorter, the frontal shield lessel evated posteriorly, and the lateral teeth larger. Compared with its neighbor from the interioi- of California, C ochvopus, the rostrum is ver\^ much broader, the wliole skull heavier and more massive, the horizontal ramus of the mandible deeper and more ' bellied,' and the lateral teeth larger and thicker. Cranial measurements. — Type skull, (5^ adult : basal length, 1(J9 ; basilar length of Hensel, 167 ; z\'gomatic breadth, 9!) ; palatal length, 90 ; mastoid l)readth, 57; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, 20.5. Canis microdon sp. nov. Type locality. — Mier, on Rio Grande River, State of Tamaulipas, ^Mexico, ^o. 3^ei4, (^ adult, U. S. National Museum, Department of Agriculture collection. Collected April 28, 1891 , by William Lloyd. Original No. 478. Characters. — Size small ; coloration rather dark ; upper surface of hind foot whitish; belly sprinkled with black-tipped hairs; carnassial and molar teeth very small. Color. — Muzzle pure cinnamon rufous ; top of head grizzled grayish and ochraeeous; ears fulvous; rest of upper parts buffy-ochraceous, pro fusel}' mixed with black hairs (under fur buffy or butF\'-ochraceous; ; under parts whitish between fore legs and between thighs; middle of belly bufFy, with black-tipped hairs extending all the way across and also reaching forward along median line to long hairs of throat, which latter are strongly marked with black-tipped hairs ; fore legs and feet fulvous, becoming whitish on inner side of leg; upper side of forearm strongly mixed with black; hind legs and feet pale fulvous on outer side, chang- ing to white on inner side of leg and upper surface of foot ; under .side of tail pale bufty fulvous, whitish at base, and with hairs of distal half broadly tipped with black. Cranial and dental characters. — Skull short and broad ; muzzle and palate exceedingly short and broad ; teeth small, particularly the carnassial and first upper molar. Remarks. — Canis microdon does not require close comparison with any known wolf. From its nearest relative, C. mearnsi, it differs in shorter 30 Mcrrlaiti — Rii-ixion of the (hiiofrs. rostrum, smaller upper carnassial, aud more emarginate first upper molar. P^xternally it differs from )neanm. conspicuouslj-, the upper parts being darker and the fulvous tints deeper, duller, and less extensive. In mearnsi the whole of the legs and feet are bright orange-fulvous. In vdcrodon. the white of the under parts reaches down on the inner side of the legs all the way to the wrists and ankles, and the upper surface of the hind feet is white. Canis microdon is distantly related to C. vlg'dis, of the south M'est coast of Mexico, but it differs from rigUis in numerous and imj^ortant characters. The palate is shorter and broader, and the carnassial and molar teeth of the male are about the size of those of the female ri gills. The external differences are even more marked. The sides of the ftice lack the con- spicuous black hairs of rigUia ; the under fur of the back is buffy or pale buffy-ochraceous instead of fulvous; the belly is white and buffy, abun- dantly mixed with l)lack-tii)ped hairs instead of everywhere saturated with fulvous; the fulvous of the fore and hind legs is pale and less ex- tensive ; the black of the forearm less extensive ; the color of the hind legs and feet entirely different : the outer side only of the hind leg is ful- vous, the inner side being white and the upper surface of the hind foot white or wliitish. In r/y/Z/.s tlie hind legs and feet are deep fulvous all round. Tlie hairs of the distal half of the tail are broadly tipped with black, while in rigilis they are fulvous throughout. Measurements. — Type specimen, ^ adult: total length, 1070; tail ver- tebrae, 320; hind foot, 181) ; weight, 28 pounds. Cranial ineasareinents. — Basal length, 161 ; Ijasilar length of Hensel, 158 ; zygomatic breadth, 93.5 ; palatal length, 84 ; mastoid breadth, 57 ; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, 16.5. Canis mearnsi - sj). nov. Tgpe lomlitg. — Quitobaquita, Piuia County, Arizona. No. 59899, (^ young adult, U. S. National Museum. Collected February 5, 1894, by Dr. Edgar A. INIearns. Original No. 2925. Characters.— ii'vLQ small; ears medium ; coloration rich and bright, the fulvous tints exceedingly bright and covering the whole of the fore and hind legs and feet. Skull and teeth small. Color. — ^luzzle cinnamon rufous ; space between eyes grizzled grayish and fulvous; top of head, nape, and ears rather light fulvous; rest of upper parts buffy-ochraceous bountifully mixed with black-tipped hairs (under fur bright bufly-ochi-aceous) ; under parts in pectoral and inguinal regions whitish, middle part of belly suffused all the way across with ])ufry-ochraceous; throat buffy, the long hairs black-tipped; fore and hind legs and feet bright orange-fulvous all round ; upper side of fore * Named in honor of Dr. PMgar A. iMearns, U. S. A., whose name will always be associated with the mammals of the ^Mexican boundary, and through whose courtesy I am indebted for the opportunity of describing the species. Revision of the Coyotes. 31 legs moderately mixed with lilack ; underside of tail pale fulvous, whitish at very base, hairs of distal half black-tipped ; extreme end of tail black, usually with a few white hairs. Cranial and dental c/(«rad('/-.s.— Skull and teeth small and light as in C. extur; a little larger tlian in C. micmdon from Mier, Tamaulipas. lieniark.^.—Cauis mearnsi is the handsomest of the Coyotes. It differs from C. microdon of the Lower Rio Grande region in slightly larger size and in the greater extent and much brighter tints of the fulvous parts. The fore and hind legs and feet are bright orange- fulvous all round ; in C. microdon the fulvous is deeper and duller and the white of the inguinal region reaches down on the inner side of the hind leg to the ankle and covers the upper surtiice of the foot, and in the fore leg a white stripe reaches all the way down the posterior aspect of the leg to the wrist. Compared with microdon, the throat and middle part of the belly are more oohraceous and have fewer black-tipped hairs— the belly practically none. The skull and teeth of meartisi are almost exactly like those of estor, but in coloration the two animals differ so widely as to require no comparison. Nevertheless, specimens collected by Dr. Mearns atTinajas Altas, Arizona, are so much paler than typical mearnsi as to suggest intergradation. Measitrementx.— Female adult from type locality: total length, 1100; tail vertebra, 330; hind foot, 180 (measured in flesh by Dr. ^Nlearns). Cranial measurements.— Type specimen, (^ young adult, not fully grown : basal length, 163; basilar length of Hensel, 160 ; zygomatic breadth, 83; palatal length, 88 ; mastoid breadtli, 5().o ; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, 19. Canis estor sp. nov. Type Zom^/7//.— Xoland's ranch, San Juan River, Utah. No. 57141, ? adult, U. S. National Museum, Department of Agriculture collection. Collected November 20, 1893, by J. Alden Loring. Original No. 1379. Characters.— Size small; coloration pale, but not quite so pale as in paUidus; carnassial and molar teeth small. Color. — Muzzle exceedingly pale fulvous; top of head grizzled grayish and ochi-aceous buffy ; ears and nape ochraceous buff; upj^er parts huffy, sparingly mixed with black hairs; under parts whitish; long hairs of throat conspicuously black-tipped ; some black-tipped hairs along median line of breast; outer side of fore legs bright buff, pale on inner side and on fore feet ; outer side of hind legs and feet buffy-ochi-aceous ; inner side of hind leg and upper surfiice <>f hind foot white or whitish ; under side of tail ochraceous, becoming white basally, the hairs of distal half con- spicuously tipped with black ; black tip short. Cranial and dental cltaracte rs. —'SkuW and teeth similar to those of C. mearmi, but lateral teeth slightly larger. Compared with typical ocltropns, the rostrum is somewhat more swollen in the females and conspicuously more in the males. Remarks. — Ca)iis estor bears the same relation to C. meartisi that pallidas does to lutrans. Both are pale desert forms, slightly smaller than the o2 Merri(un — Revision of tJir Coijofcs. species from which they have been derived. The collection of the Biologi- cal Survey contains siJcciniens of C. entor from the Mohave Desert, Death Valley, the Panamint and Inyo ranges, Owens Valley, the San Juan in southeast Utah, FlowintiSin-ingsand Humboldt Wells, Nevada, and Playa Maria Bay, Lower California. The latter are not typical. Meamn'nmds. — Type specimen, 9 adult: total length, 1052; tail verte- bne, 300; hind foot, 179. Measurements of an adult male from Granite Well (base of Pilot Knob), Mohave Desert: tail vertebne, o40 ; hind foot, 1V)5. Cranial measuremeid-s. —Type skull, $ : basal length, 159 ; basilar length of Hensel, 155; zygomatic breadth, 89; mastoid breadth, 57; palatal length, 84 ; length of upper carnassial, 17.2 Canis ochropus Eschscholtz. Cauls oHiropiis Eschscholtz, Zool. Atlas, HI, pp. 1-2, pi. 11, 1829. Ti/pe fo«(/i7//.— 'California.' (Specimens from Tracy, San Joatjuin County, California, assumed to be typical.) Characters. — Externally similar to C. lafraus and Icstrs^ but smaller, darker, and much more highly colored, with very much larger ears, and very much smaller skull and teeth. Color. — ]\ruzzle dull grizzled cinnamon rufous ; top of head grizzled grayish fulvous ; ears rich fulvous ; nape sometimes fulvous ; rest of upper parts buffy-ochraceous, profusely mixed with black hairs ; under parts usually whitish, with a soiled yellowish wash across middle of belly, l)ut sometimes sufi'used with pale fulvous; long bail's of throat strongly griz- zled with black-tipped hairs, forming a conspicuous ' ruff,' the black- tipped hairs sometimes following the median line over the breast; fore and hind legs and feet dull fulvous all round, but paler on inner side and most intense on outer side of hind leg; upper side of forearm strongly marked with black ; outer side of thighs strongly grizzled with bhuik- tipped hairs; underside of tail pale fulvous, white basally, and tii>i)ed and etlged with black ; hairs of terminal third of under side of tail usually black tii)ped; extreme tip often white. Cranial and dental characters. — The skull (if Canis ocliroyins is dispropor- tionally large for the size of the teeth, and the rostrum is long and slender. (Compared with C. estor, probably its nearest relative, the skull is slightly larger, the r(.»strum decidedly hjiiger and more slender, and the teeth very slightly larger. Compared with its neighbor, C. lestes, with which the skull agrees essentially in length, the entire cranium is jiarrovver, par- ticidarly the rostrum, and the lateral teeth are so much smaller as to need no comparison. Measurements. — Average of four females from Tracy, California: total length, 1110; tail vertebse, 295; hind foot, 180. Cranial measurenients. — (^ adult, Tracy, California: ba.sal length, 177; basilar length of Hensel, 174 ; zygomatic breadth, 94 ; palatal length, 98 ; mastoid breadth, 62; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, 19. An Revision of the Coyotes. adult female from same place measures : basal lenixtli. 171 : l)asilar leuiitli of Heusel, 107; zygomatic breadth, 94; palatal leugth, 90; mastoid breadth, 59; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, IS. Canis vigilis sp. nov. Ti/pe locality. — Manzanillo, Colima, Mexico. Type No. Htlh 9 young adult, U. S. National ]Museum, Department of Agriculture collection. Collected February 6, 1892,-by E. \V. Nelson. Original No. 1840. Characters. — Similar to C. peninsuhe, but darker and more highly col- ored, with more black on forearm and no black on under side of tail ex- cept at tip ; upper carnassial and first molar much smaller. Color. — Muzzle dull cinnamon rufous; top of head grizzled bu fly ful- vous and black ; ears fulvous, upper parts buflFy-ochraceous, jirofusely mixed with black (under fur fulvous) ; under parts strongly suffused with pale fulvous ; throat collar with black tips strongly marked ; fore and hind legs fulvous, as in ochropm^, but deeper, especially on forefeet; Ijlack on upper side of forearm more e.xtensive; outer side of thigh and leg strongly intermixed with black-tipped hairs, which reach down to or below knee ; under side of tail dull pale fulvous, whitish basally, and tipped with black (hairs of under side anterior to black tip not tipped with black). Cranial and dental cliaracters. — The skull of the type specimen of Canis vigilis, a young adult female, agrees in general characters with an adult female peninsuhe from Cape St. Lucas, but is somewhat lai'ger, with slightly broader rostrum and longer and more slender mandible. The upper carnassial and molar teeth, however, are ver}' much smaller and show that the two animals belong to diffei'ent sections of the group. Com- pared with Canis mearnsi, its nearest neighbor on the north, C. rlglli>< has a larger skull and very much smaller teeth, particularly the u])per car- nassial and first molar. The first upper molar is decidedly smaller than in any known form excejst (,'. microdon, from which it differs in being deeply notched posteriorly. Measurements.— Type specimen, ? young adult: total length, 1155 ; tail vertebrae, 335 ; hind foot, 190. Cranial mea.surements.— Type specimen : basal length, 166 ; basilar length of Hensel, 163; zygomatic breadth, 87; palatal length, 85; mastoid breadth, 59; length of crown of upper carnassial tooth, 17.5. Vol. XI, pp. 35-37 March 13, 1897 PROCEEDINGS ^^ , p BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON /'^ ^ L ! ; COLLOMIA MAZAMA, A NEW PLANT FROM THE VICINITY OF CRATER LAKE, OREGON. BY FREDERICK V. COVILLE. In August, 189C>, while engaged with ^\i\ John B. Leiberg in an examination of tlie flora of Crater Lake and vicinity, in the state of Oregon, a violet-flowered Collomia was discovered. It was at once recognized as a probably new species, and a descrip- tion was drawn in the field from the fresh specimens. In the transmission of our season's collection to the National Herba- rium at Washington, however, the specimens of this plant, with several other species from the same vicinity, were lost, and even after a most careful search could not be traced. Fortunately a single complete set of the numbers collected had l)een withheld from the main shi})mentand stored at a remote and, for a por- tion of the winter, snowbound point in Idalio. The two sheets of specimens in this set finally reached Washington late in Februar}^ and now make possible the publication of the species. Collomia mazama sp. nov. Plant pereimial, few to many-.steinmed from a slender tap-root, 15 to 30 centimeters liigh, ))elow the intiorescence o;labrous or with a few arachnoid viscid hairs on the stem and leaf-margins ; stems terete, commonly 1 to 2 millimeters in diameter, simple np to the inflorescence ; leaves ol)lono- lanceolate to lanceolate, commonly 3 to 6 centimeters in length, acute at apex and base, acutely and somewhat laciniately 3 to o-toothed above, the uppermost entire and sessile, the lower often oblanceolate and tapering into a short narrowly margineil petiole; iuHorescence suhcapitately cymose, sometimes with additional short-pediincnlate clusters of flowers from one or two of the upper axils, glaiidular-haii'}^ and strong-scented • bracts similar to the uppermost leaves, entire, the lower usualfv 2 to 3 cen- 6— HioL. Soc. Wash., Vul. XI, 1S97 (35) 36 Covillr — (hll(/iiiii( iiuiZdtiia . tiinetor^, long and slight!}' exceeding the flower-eluster ; calyx coniiiionly 7 to i» niiliinieteris long, with the [dicate sinuses characteristic of tiie genus, the lohes equalingthe tube, triangular-lanceolate, acuminate, in fruitreach- ing a length of 5 or 6 luillimetens ; corolla about 15 millimeters long, deep blue to violet-[)ui-i)le, above the calyx exjianding into a funnel-shaped throat, the narrowly ol)loiig-obovate obtuse moderately divergent lobes about 5 millimeti'rs in length ; stamens slightly exserted, the anthers white, the filaments of somewhat unequal length, but inserted almost equally about halfway from the sinuses to the base of the tube; ovule single in each cell of the ovary ; style also exserted, the stigma 3-lobed ; capsule al)out half as long as the fruiting calyx, narrowly obovate, truncate or de- pressed at the three-lobed summit, loculicidal in dehiscence, the 3 valves partially breaking away from the axis; seed about 3 millimeters long, olive-brown at maturity, linear-oblong, obtuse at l)oth ends, sulcate on the axial fiice and attached to the placenta for ahjiost its whole length, dull i)ut without distinct markings, developing the characteristic spiracles of CoUomia in water. Type specimen in the United States National Herbarium, collected Au- gust b3, 1896, near Crater Lake, in the Cascade INIountains of Oregon, at an altitude of l.ilOO meters, by Frederick V. Coville and John B. Leiberg, No. 429. This showy luid beautiful Collomia is remarkable for its peren- nial habit and tlie dee}) violet-lilue color of its flowers. The glandular hairs of the calyx and peduncles give oflf the odor characteristic of most of the Collomias and some of the Phacelias. The only other blue-flowered, perennial species of the genus is Collomia deb Ills (Wats.) Greene, a variable plant, first collected in southern Utah, later in western Montana, the Cascade Mountains, and tlie nortliern 8ierra Nevada, one or more of its various forms probabl}'' susceptible of varietal or specific separation. The plant grows in abundance in slightly moist, open, spar- ingly grassy places in the forest, in the vicinity of streams and wet meadows, about five kilometers west of the U2:)per camping ground at Crater Lake, and continues southeastward at about the same altitude, at least as far as the lower camping ground, about two and a lialf kilometers south of the rim of the lake. For one starting from tlie junction of the Rogue River and Fort Klamath roads and traveling northward toward Crater Lake, the most convenient and iirobably the first i)lace for finding the plant is on the fiat ground where the road first crosses the stream on which the lower cam[)ing ground is situated. Specimens were seen here, but not in abundance. At the time of collect- ing, the species was in full [lower, nnd very few of the specimens had prodiice(l mature seeds. PROC. BIOL. SOC. WASH., XI, 1897 PL. I COLLOMIA MAZAMA Coville Colh>)ii!(t iiia'.rnnn. 37 ^fazama was the aboriginal designation of the Rocky Monnt- ain goat, and was proposed also by Rafinesque as a generic name for the same animal. The name is now well known tlirough the organization of mountain-climbers called the Mazamas, who, on August 21, 1896, with appropriate ceremonies, bestowed the name ]Mount Mazama upon the mountain within whose walls Crater Lake is enclosed. To this mountain and to the members of the organization itself this plant is now dedicated. EXPLANATION OF PLATE I. Fig. a, Collomia mazama, flowering i^ilant; h, flower; c, corolla, split down one side, showing the stamens and pistil within ; d, fruiting calyx ; e, capsule, after dehiscence, showing the valves and central axis ; /, seed, viewed from the inner fiice. Figure « is two-thirds natural size, figures 1i to e enlarged two diameters, and figure /four diameters. Vol. XI. pp. 39-41 March 13, 1897 PROCEEDINGS BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON / /r ^ DELPHINIUM VIBIDESCEXS AND SAMBUCUS LEIO- SPERMA, TWO NEW PLANTS FROM THE NORTHWEST COAST. BY JOHN B. LEIBERG. In the collections of plants recently made by the United States Department of Agriculture in Oregon and Washington occur a red-berried elder which api)arently should be separated from the other known species, and a remarkable larkspur w^ith greenish- l)urple flowers, differing conspicuously in this respect from an}!- other American member of tlie genus. Descriptions of these two ])]ants are given herewith. Delphinium viridescens sp. nov. Stem 1 to 1.5 meters hiyh from fascicled subfusiform rootn, smooth Ijelow or sometimes minutely pal:)erulent, the upper portion and the inflores- cence dense!}' pubescent witii spreading yellow hairs from glanduhu- flask-shaped bases ; basal an,l t-auline leaves glabrous, thin in texture, semicircular in outline, 8 to 10 centimeters broad, on jietioles 12 to 1(5 centimeters long, deeply 5- parted, the divisions o to 5-lobed or cleft ; ui)per cauline leaves pubescent, pinnately 3-parted, the divisions 3 to 7-cleft or broadly lobed, often stalked, diminishing upwards and becoming linear ; inflorescence a strict narrow raceme about 30 centimeters long, in very robust plants reaching a length of 1 meter ; flowers secund or sometimes subdistichous in the raceme, small for the size of tlie plant, on pedicels about 10 millimeters in length ; lower sepals ovate-acuminate, about 8 millimeters long and 5 millimeters wide, pilose when young, becoming nearly glabrous in age, brown tinged with dull pur})le ; spur straight, about 1 centimeter long; laminae of lateral petals deeply cleft, densely pilose, about 5 millimeters long and 4 millimeters wide, dull i)ur])le in color, the claws narrow and about 6 millimeters in length ; upper petals 7— Hioi.. Sof. Wash., Vol. XI, ISUT (3U) 40 LeUx'i'iJ — I)<'Ij>lilnlii III rirldc.srciis (iii(hSainl)iicii.<: leiosperma. about 1.7 centimeters loiip, inrliulin,ir tlie sliort spurs, bidentate at the apex; follieles a))out 7 inilliineter.s long and 2.5 millimeters wide, erect, ])ubescent ; seeds nearly cubical, about 2 millimeters long and of nearly the same -width, narrowly scarious-winged at the angles. Collected near Peshastin, Okanogan County, Washington ; altitude, 500 meters; No. 56o, Sandberg and Leiljerg, 1893. Type specimen in the United States National Herbarium. A well-marked species atid in aspect very different from all our northwestern forms. By its technical characters it occupies an intermediate })Osition between D. hespenum and D. distichum. From the former it difiers in its fusiform roots and much larger, thinner, glabrous, less divided basal leaves ; from the latter spe- cies it is separated by its conspicuously yelloAV-pilose inflores" cence, its less dissected cauline leaves, shorter follicles, and more open raceme. By the small, inconspicuous brownish or green- ish-purjde flowers the plant may be separated at a glance from any of the described North American species of Delphinium. The plant is common in the wet meadows along the Wenatchee River, in the State of Washington. It is commonly a very robust species, sometimes reaching a height of 2 meters, the basal leaves often 20 centimeters broad. Sambucus leiosperma sp. nov. Shrubby, 1.3 to 2 meters in height, forming with its spreading stems loose open clumps; pith of two-year-old shoots yellowish-brown ; leaflets 5 to 7, varying from oblong to lanceolate, 4.5 to 8 centimeters in length, 1.5 to 3 centimeters in width, acute or acuminate, subsessile or short- petioled, sharply serrate, the apices of the teeth usually inflexed, smooth, or witli a scattered short pubescence, especially on the petioles and the lower surface of the leaves along the midrib; stipules present on the Howering shoots, subulate, about 1 centimeter long and 0.5 millimeter wide; cyme oblong, somewhat flattened when in fruit, scabrous-puberu- lent, tlie branches membranaceously margined at tlie forks ; flowers yel- jowish-white, drying the same color ; berry scarlet, containing 3 to 5 seed-like nutlets, these very smooth, 2 to 3 millimeters long and about 1.5 millimeters wide. Collected at Crater Lake, Oregon ; altitude 2230 meters, No. 370, Co- ville and Leiberg, 1896. Type specimen in the United States National Herbarium. This is the red-fruited elder of the higher Cascades of Oregon and Washington. It extends northward also into Alaska, as in- dicated by specimens in the National Herbarium, collected on Kadiak Island, in 1888, by Mr. C. H. Townsend, naturalist of the Delphinium viridcaccnti and jSaiubucas IciuspcDiia. 41 'Albatross.' S. pubens JSl\chx., S. melanncarpa Gray, and S. leio- sperma form a group wherein the specific distinctions lie almost wholly in the color of the mature fruit and the character of the surface of the nutlet. To these three species should be added a fourth, the ^S. odlicarpa of Greene (as restricted). The character of the hard covering of the nutlets in the latter species is still a mat- ter of uncertainty, as the descriptions contain no reference to this point. Assuming, however, that certain specimens of red-fruited elder in the National Herbarium collected in central and south- ern California correctly represent that species, Ave can arrange the group as follows : Mature fruit scarlet. Surface of nutlets transversely rugose S. inibens. Surface of nutlets puncticulate S. callicarpa. Surface of nutlets smooth S. leiosperma. IMature fruit black. Surface of nutlets transversely rugose S. melanocarpa. Vol. XI, pp. 43-44 March 16, 1897 PROCEEDINGS i^.^/ BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON/^ ^ ^•^ Ut 6 DESCRIPTIONS OF TWO NEW MURINE OPOSSUMS FROM MEXICO. BY C. HART MERRIAIM. Two very different type.s of pi.omy opossunLS are known from Mexico — -the 'red' or rufous Mnrmosn miiriiia (Linn.) and tlie pale asli}^ gray M. canesccns (Allen). Mr. Nelson obtained rep- resentatives of M. murina at Chicharras and Huehuetan, C/iiapas, and Jutpiila, Oaxoca, and of M. canescens at Santo Domingo de Guzman, Isthmus of Tehuantepec (the type locality); Puerto Angel, Tlapancingo, and Oaxaca, Oaxaca ; Amolac, Fuehla ; Tlapa, Lochi. and Aca}julco, Guerrero, and Hacienda Magda- lena. CoUvin. The specimens of the M. murina type are paler rufous than the tyi)ical form and have the middle of the face abruptl}^ lighter, so that it is necessary to recognize them as a geographic race or subspecies. The Oaxaca specimens of the r((nescens type are markedlv darker than typical canescen>< and differ in other re- spects. The form is here described as distinct under the name M. oaxacx. Marmosa oaxacae sp. nov. Ti/pe {vom City of Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico. No. (38240, 9 adult, U. S. National Museum, Biological Survey collection. Collected August 14, 1894, by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original No. 6571. Geogniplilc didrihittion.—Sonoran fauna of highlands of Oaxaca ; limits of range unknown. General character.^.— Size smuW, amMer than a iialf-grown rat; similar to M. canescem (Allen), hut very much darker, and with the dark of upper parts reaching wrists and ankles ; feet and ears smaller. 8— Bior. Soc. Wash., Vc\. X[, 1897 (4:i) 44 3Irrrl«iiii — Two Nciv Murhic Opos^inii>< from Mexico. Color. — Upper i)art8 from just bcliind t^ves t(i ])ase of tail dark sepia brown I almost dusky in fresh pelage); under parts ])utly yellow, murh deeper than in raufxceiiK ; median fiiee i)atch (from no.se to ))ehin(l eyes) l)ale buti'y brown ; orbital rings large and black, connected posteriorly by dark top of head ; dark color of upper parts reaching wrists and ankles ; tail l)icolor, dark ul)ove, whitish beneath. Craitialchardders. — Skull and teetli similar to those of D. canescens, but frontal plate a little broader. Measurements of skull of type specimen : basal length, 29; zygomatic breadth, 18.5; palatal length, 17; interor- bital bi-eadth, 4.8; greatest breadth of frontals, 8. lieiiiarks. — Marmosa cxtxaac is an upland or Sonoran representative of the tropical M. canescens of J. A. Allen. The type o{ cuncscens came from Santo Domingo de Guzman, on the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. Specimens collected b}' Mr. Nelson extend its range northwesterly over the arid tropical hills and lowlands of the States of Oaxaca, Guerrero, and Micho- acan to the Hacienda Magdalena, in Colima. A specimen was obtained as far inland as Ainolac, Puebla. Marmosa oaxac:^, on the other hand, inhal)its the Sonoran highlands of Oaxaca, at the extreme southern end of the tableland of ^Mexico — a very different fauna. The two forms may he found to intergrade where the Sonoran fauna passes into the tro[)ical, but no evidences of intergradation are to be seen in the eleven specimens of canescens obtained by Nelson and Goldman. The new s])ecies rests on two specimens — the type, an old female, and an immature male — both from Oaxaca Measurements (of type specimen in flesh). ^Total length, 263 ; tail, 144 ; bind foot, IS. Marmosa murina mexicana subsp. nov. Ti/pe from Juquila, Oaxaca. No. 71526, c? im., U. S. National Museum, Biological Survey collection. Collected Februai-y 28, 1895, by E. W. Nel- son and E. A. Goldman. Oi-iginal No. 7571. (h'oi/rapliic ili^lrihntidii. — Southern Mexico, in States of Oaxaca and Chiapas. General clnirurlirx. — Similar to M. murina, but rufous of upper parts de- cidedly paler, and middle of face from between eyes to nose abruptly Imtfy [in true nmrina the rufous reaches forward to nose] ; eai'S smaller. Color. — Upper parts from l)etween eyes posteriorly to base of tail cin- namon rufous, gradually fading on sides to ochraceous huffy on belly ; orbital ring black and reaching anteriorly to whiskers; middle of face fro;n end of nose to between centers of eyes bufty, in marked contrast to rufous of top of head. Cranial cliaraclers. — Skull similar to that of 3/. marina, but interparietal l)roader and shorter. Measnrenients. — Type specimen (not full grown) : total length, 274 ; tail, 162; hind foot, 20. An adult male from Chicharras, Clnai)as : total length, ;].■)(); tail, 186; hind foot, 24. Vol. XI, p. 45 March 16. 1897 PROCEEDINGS °^'r«'' /^V>^os BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON PHENACOMYS PREBLEI, A NEW VOLE FROM THE MOUNTAINS OF COLORADO. BY C. HART MERRLAM. During the past few 3^ecars the field parties of the Biological Surve}' have collected numerous specimens of Phenacomys in the mountains of Idaho, Montana, and Oregon. All of these si)eci- mens belong to the species described by me in 1891 under the name P. orophihis (N. Am. Fauna, No. 5, p. 66, August, 1891), the type of which came from the Salmon River Mountains, in Idaho. In August, 1895, one of my assistants, Mr. Edward A. Preble, trapped a new species on the side of 'Twin' or 'Lilies' Peak, near Longs Peak, Colorado, at an altitude of about 2,700 meters (approximately 9,000 feet). " The locality was perfectly dry and had been covered by a forest, most of which liad fallen." The species may be described as follows : Phenacomys preblei sp. nov. Ti/pf from Longs Peak, Colorado. No. 74513, (^ adult, U. S. National Museum, Biological Survey collection. Collected August 12, 1895, by Ed- ward A. Preble. Original No. 647. General characters. — Size rather small ; color very pale and decidedly ochraceous. Color. — Upper parts clay color, suffuseital ridges more strongly developed ; jugal decidedly narrower and hardly, if at all, naortised into maxillary arm of zygoma ; end of pterygoids swollen where they articulate with audital bullse. Meaanrenient^ (type specimen). —Total length, 1.30; tail vertebrae, 30; hind foot, 17. 9— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 ' (45) Vol. XI, pp. 47-51 March 16, 1897 PROCEEDINGS y^^^.^ BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTQT^^j ^'"^ -^-•^ NOTES ON THE LYNXES OF EASTERN NORTH AMERICA, WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF TWO NEW SPECIES. BY OUTRAM BANGS. The genus Lynx, constituting a well marked group of cats with many species in both North America and Eurasia, was divided by Gray, in 1867,* into two subgenera. Lynx and Cervaria. The division was made on wholly inadequate external characters, but the great differences, both cranial and external, which are now known to exist, fully warrant the recognition of Graj^'s two groups. Mr. F. W. True, in 1887,t pointed out for the first time, I believe, the more important cranial characters that separate the members of the subgenera L^ynx and Cervaria. Some Euro- l)ean authorities, however, lump together as mere races the very different species of these two groups and will not even recognize the genus Lynx itself as more than subgenerically distinct from Fells. American mammalogists, on the other hand, agree in considering Lynx quite worthy of full generic distinction. Genus LYNX Rai3nesqiie. o_Q -\_-[ 2-2 1-1 Dental formula i '— ^, c -— r, j^m — ^, m —- = 28. Legs and arms long and powerful ; body short ; whole build dog-like ; tail very short ; pelage full ; a ruff of long hairs around throat ; ear with decided pencil of long *P. Z. S., 1867, p. 267. (The genus was called Lynclms by Gray.) fProc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 1887, p. 8. 10— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 189T (47) 48 Baiif/-^ — Nof/s on I J/ n. rex of I'j isle I'll North Anicrirn. hairs ; skull short and round ; audital bulhe small, flat and hroad ; nasals, taken together, cone shai)ed (the nasals of Felis, taken together, are broadly truncate posteriorly) ; no distinct lobe on inner side of smaller upper premolar. Subgenus LYNX Rafinesque. Feet and hands very large, the pads small ; tail very short ; pelage long and loose ; ear with long pencil of hairs (even in the very young kittens) ; skull broad ; rostrum wide ; audital bulla? very small and fiat ; palatal exposure of presphenoid broadly flask shaped (Fig. 1) ; anterior Fig. I.— Po.stpalatal region of L\nx. Fig. 2.— Po.stpalatal region of Ceivaria. condyloid foramen not conffaetH with foramen lacerum posterius ; maxilla separated from nasals by the meeting (or nearly meeting) of the descend- ing arm of frontal and ascending arm of premaxilla ; canine teeth slender ; lower molar tooth very large. Subgenus CERVARIA Gray. Feet and hands small (in JJoridamts) to medium (in rufiis) the pads large ; pelage full l)ut close ; tail medium (longer than in Lynx) ; ear with a shoi't pencil of hairs; skull narrow ; rostrum narrow and ' ni{)ped in ' from sides ; audital bulhe deep and long ; palatal exposure of prespiienoid strap shaped or slightly triangular (Y\g. 2) ; anterior condyloid foramen co)ifii(nd with foramen lacerum 2)osterius ; maxilla touching na.sals for some distance (much as in genus Felin) ; canine teeth strong ; lower molar tooth small. In North America the subgenus Li/iix contains the northern species and the suligenus Cemiyia the southei'n species. The same is probably true of the Eurasian members of the genus Lynx, although I have been unable to find a description of the skull of any of th6 more southern species. Mr. True examined some skulls of the Swedish Lynx and found that it belongs in the restricted subgenus Lynx. The sul)genus Lynx is represented in eastern North America by two forms : 1. Lynx canadensis (Geoff.) occu])ying the whole of Boreal North America from Maine and northern New York to Alaska, but now very rare and apparently becoming extirpated in the east. Notes on Lijn.ns of Eaderti North America. 49 2. Li/ii.rxabsolanuH sp. nov., an island form, contined to Newfoundland. The subgenus Cermria is represented in eastern North America by three forms : 1. Lijnx raffas ?v(/».s- (Guldenstadt) ranging over the whole central re- gion from about northern Georgia north to the coast of Maine. 2. Li/nx rufns floridamis (Raf.) occupying the whole of Florida, and extending west along the Gulf coast to Louisiana and north on the At- lantic coast certainly to southern Georgia. L. foridauns is so strongly marked a form that I think it will prove a distinct species when speci- mens are procured at points where it meets the range of rufus. It is large, but lightly built, with very small feet and hands, and darker than rufus, from which it ditiers in color pattern also, being much spotted and having black waved streaks on the back. The skull (pi. i, fig. 4) presents the extreme of slenderness and ' nipping in ' of the rostrum. ;5. Lynx gigas (sp. nov.) confined to the Province of Nova Scotia, where it is apparently insulated. It is a much larger and more powerful animal than L. rufus, of a brighter and deeper color, with a larger skull, flatter audital bullee and much heavier dentition. Descriptions of New Species. Lynx subsolanus sp nov. (PL II, Fig. 2.) Type from Codroy, Newfoundland. cJ' old adult, No. 1190, collection of E. A. and O. Bangs. Collected by Ernest Doane June 13, 1894. General characters. — Size and proportions as in L. canadensis, from which it differs in much darker and richer color. Color. — Type (in summer pelage) : Under fur on sides cinnamon rufous throughout, on back black basally and hazel terminally; long hairs I much longer than those of under fur) of three kinds: (1) wholly black ; (2) wholly dull hazel, and (.'5) banded with hazel, yellowish gray, and black ; predominating color of whole uppei- ]>arts black and hazel irregu- larity varied ; face dull yellowish gray, upper surface of ear black, with a lai-ge triangular spot of dark gray, pencil black ; legs and arms dull yellowish hazel, faintly spotted with darker; tail very short, dull hazel above, dirty white below, black at tip ; belly wood brown with irregular spots of black, the long hairs dirty white. Kitten about one-third grown (No. 5754 from Bay St. George, New- foundland). Whole upper parts (including legs and arms) yellowish cinnamon, somewhat spotted and 'lined' with blackish; ears with long pencil, as in tlie adult ; tail cinnamon with black tip ; under parts vary- ing from soiled white to wood brown and faintly spotted with black. Cranial characters. — The skull of L. subsolanus (pi. i, fig. 2) is similar in all its characters to that of L. canadensis. 50 Baii(/fi — Notes oil Li/n.rc.s of Ea-^fcni Xoiih. Antcrica. Size of an old adult (J" skull from Bay St. George, Newfoundland.* (No. 3798, collei'tion of E. A. and 0. Bangs) : basilar length, 112.2; occipi- tonasal length, 125.4; last upi)er molar to foramen magnum, 70.H; zygo- matic breadth, 95 ; mastoid breadth, 58.2 ; l)readtli across roots of canines, 37.6; greatest length of .single half of mandible, 93.2. Size.— Type (cj^ old adult): total length, 919; tail vertebrie, 109; hind foot, 219; ear from notch, 80. Lynx gigas sp. nov. (PI. II, Fig. 1.) I'ype from fifteen miles back of Bear River, Nova Scotia. (J^ old adult, No. 4951, collection of E. A. and 0. Bangs. Taken by a trapper Decem- ber 11, 1895 (measured, skinned, and sexed by O. Bangs). General did racters. — Very stout and powerfully built ; size very large ; colors rich with much black on upper parts ; triangular spot of gray on ear very small ; skull large and strong; audital bullse broader and flatter than in L. ruffas ; dentition, especially canine teeth, very much heavier than in L. niffus. Type (in winter pelage) : Under fur cinnamon rufous, paling off on sides and becoming more intense on back and on inner sides of flanks; long hairs, cinnamon and black, the black irregularly mixed in spots and streaks which are most conspicuous along middle of back ; ears with short pencil of Ijlark hairs ; upper surface of ear black, with small triangular spot of dark gray ; tail above dull cinnauKJU, somewhat mixed with black, below white, tip black; under parts dull white, spotted with black, a pectoral collar of cinnamon ; under surfaces of feet and hands black. Cranial cliaraders. — Skull (pi. i, fig. 1) very large and massive ; audital bulhe broad and fiat; basioccipital wide ; distance across roots of canine teeth great ; mandible very heavy. Size of the type skull (cJ* old adult) : basilar length, 117.2; occipitonasal length, 132.2; last upper molar to foramen magnum, 72. (> ; zygomatic breadth, 98.4 ; mastoid Ijreadth, 60 ; Ijreadth across roots of canines, 39.2 ; greatest length of mandil)le, 92. A skull of Li/iix riiffiis rajfas from East Hartford, C(jnnecticut f (rf* old adult), measures: basilar length. 111; occipitonasal length, 124.8; last upper molar to foramen magnum, 70.2; zygomatic breadth, 94; mastoid breadth, 55.8; breadth across roots of canines, 34.4; greatest length of single half of mandible, 86.2. Size. — The type (^ old adult) : total length, 1001 ; tail vertebrae, 177 ; hind foot, 200. *The skull of the type is somewhat injured by a rifle bullet which passed through it lengthwise, t No. 1405, collection of Charles F. Batchelder, Cambridge, Mass. PROC. BIOL. SOC. WASH., XI, 1897 PL. II ^ 1 •4 ■5^ ro EXPLANATION OF PLATE II. Figures about one-fourth life size. (Drawn by Dr. J. C. McConnell.) Fig. 1. Lijnx [Crrntrla) gigas Bangs, ^J' old adult (type), Bear River, Nova Scotia. (No. 4951, Bangs collection.) Fig. 2. Lipi.r {Li/ri.r) s^uhwlanus Bangs, (^ old adult, Bay St. George, New- foundland. (No. 3798, Bangs collection.) Fig. 3. Lynx {Cermria) ruffus rufus (Giild.), J^ old adult. East Hartford, Connecticut. (No. 1405, collection of Chas. F. Batchelder.) Fig. 4. Lgnx {Cermria) rxffns forldwms [Raf.), cf old adult. Oak Lodge, east peninsula, opposite Micco, Florida. (No. 3504, Bangs col- lection.) (51) Vol. XI, pp. 53-55 March 16, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON^-' '^ DESCRIPTION OF A NEW RED FOX FROM NOVA SCOTIA. BY OUTEAM BANGS. For some years I have known of the existence in Nova Scotia * of a large red fox, nuieh larger and of a deeper color tlian the small yellowish red Vulpes pennsylvanica typica (Bodd.) of the Central States. I have had some difficnlty in getting specimens of this fox, but now have a series of five skins and six skulls from Digb}', Bear River, and Annapolis, Nova Scotia. Unfortunately my specimens are mostly females or young. ■ I have no skin and only one skull of a ver}^ old male. The old males are often of great size. My friend, H. A. P. Smith, Esq., of Digby, who has killed very many, has several times taken them weighing close to twenty pounds. The Nova Scotia fox presents all the color i)hases known as 'cur,' 'cross,' 'silver gray,' and 'black' foxes. One of my specimens is a fine ' cross.' The new fox in its normal red pel- age is a very beautiful animal, and the fur is well known to dealers, who pay much higher prices for it than for the fur of the southern red fox. The new form may be known as : Vulpes pennsylvanica vafra snbsp. nov. Ti/pe from Digby, Nova Scotia, No. 116, female, old adult. Collection of E. A. and O. Bangs. Collected November ?>, 1893, by O. Bangs. General characters. — Size considerably larger than Vulpes pennsylvanica *This large form probably ranges throughout Boreal Eastern North America generally. 11— Biol. ,S'oc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1S'J7 (53) 54 Bangs — A New Bed Fox from Nova Scotia. ti/plca. General color of upper j)arts bright ferruginous instead of tawny ochraceous, as in V. pennsylvanica typica. Color (the type in normal red [)hase). — Whole upper parts deep, bright ferruginous, somewhat mixed with yellow-tipped haii's on face and rump, this color extending around sides and almost meeting on belly ; abdomen, inner sides of flanks, and upper lip white ; throat, chin, and central line along belly grayish white; tail ferruginous with a conspicuous white l>encil, many of the hairs black tipped ; upper surface of ears black, edged ail round with yellowish ferruginous and dirty white inside; hand and forearm black, gradually shading into ferruginous at elbow; foot black, slightly mixed with ferruginous, the black extending up flank in a narrow line. Cranial cliuracterH. — Skull larger than that uf 1'. jniiusylraaica typica from the Central and New England States ; rostrum broader ; distance across roots of canines much greater; dentition much heavier. Size of an old adult 9 skull (the type) : basilar length (basion to front of premaxillary), 133; occipitonasal length, 133.2; zygomatic breadth, 75.8; mastoid breadth, 46; greatest breadth of rostrum, 24; greatest length of single half of mandible, 106.8. Size of an old adult (j^ skull (No. 2001, Bangs collection, topotype): basilar length, 134.2; occipitonasal length, 135.2: zygomatic breadth, 79.4; mastoid ]>readtb, 47; greatest breadth of rostrum, 25.8; greatest length of single half of mandible, 110.4. Two skulls of T". peniwjlvanica typica of e.vactly corresponding ages measure as follows : 9 '^Id adult, from Hampton, Connecticut, No. 4286, Bangs collection : basilar length, 120; occipitonasal length, 122.6; zygomatic breadth, 71.6; mastoid breadth, 44 ; greatest breadth of rostrinn, 21 ; greatest length of single half of mandible, 96.8. cJ* old adult, from Waltham, Massachusetts, No. 115, Bangs collection : basilar length, 123.4; occipitonasal length, 123.6; zygomatic breadtli, 71.8; mastoid breadth, 44; greatest breadth of rostrum, 21.8; greatest length of single half of mandible (estimated, ti}) imperfect), 100. Size. — Female, old adult (the type) : total length, 1077 ; tail vertebne, 401 ; hind f(Jot, 166. Mail, young adult, from Annapolis, Nova Scotia (No. 1991, Bangs collection): total length, 1087; tail vertebne, 403; hind foot, 173. Two sjiecimens of V. pciinsyliKdiica typica of corresY>ouding iv^es (9 old adult from Hampton, Connecticut, No. 4286, Bangs collection, and (^ young adult from Pittsfleld, New Hampshire, No. 650, Bangs col- lection) measure respectively : total length, 945 ; tail vertebr;ie, 340 ; hind foot, 143; and total length, 1028; tail vertebr;e, 375; hind foot, 157. Ectnarks. — As some European writers still persist in considering the American red fox a mere variety of the old world Vul}fes vulpes, it may be well to point out a few of the characters by which these wholly dis- tinct animals can always be distinguished. The European red fox (T'. ntlpe.^) has more white on the upper lip and less black on the legs and arms tlian the American ( T'. pennsylvanica). The skulls of the two can always be told apart. T'. ndpes has a heavy^ massive skull, with deep interorbital constriction, narrow frontals, and a very wide palate. T'. pennsylvanica has a much lighter skull, which is A Neiv Bed Fox from Noca Scotia. 55 broader between tlie orbits tiiid narrower aci-oss the palate. There is also a very striking diflerence in the upper outline of the skulls when viewed in profile. This line is nearly straight in Vulpes vidpes, while in V. penn- sylrardca it dips decidedly in front of the root of the zygoma and rises between the orbits. I can find no name based on the large northern red fox. Desmarest, in 1820, called the ' cross fox ' Canis decussatus, and refers to Geofl^'roy Collection du INIuseuni.* It is given as an inhabitant of " L'Amerique Septentrionale." As all three races of our red fox occa- sionally show this color phase, the name cannot be said to apply to one more than another. J)esmarest's C. argenlahif^ is said to inhabit America and Asia. Canis argi'7itutas ' The silver fox ' dates (so far as 1 can ascertain) from Shaw's General Zoology, 1800-1826, and is based on Pennant, who says it in- habits the forests of Louisiana (in his day the whole lower Mississippi Valley). This name must therefore have been given to the ' silver gray ' phase of the Southern red fox T'. jwunsylraitica tijplca. Richardson in Fauna Boreali-Americana, 1829, gives three ' red foxes ' : Caiiix {Vulpes) fulvus (Desmarest). f Catiis fulnis var. /? decussatus (Geoflfroy, Coll. du Mus.). Canis fuU'us var. y argentalus (Desmarest). Richardson's Canis fidvus is not Vulpes pennsijlvanica h/pica, but the sub- species named Vulpes macrourus by Baird in 1852. Richardson assigns no different range to his var. argentatus, which must be assumed to be the ' silver gray ' phase of the same form*. He quotes a description of var. decussatus from Jose])h Sabine's Appendix to Franklin's Journey, 1823, p. 656. All Sabine says as to locality, under the head of this va- riety, is "The specimen received from Capt. Franklin and that from the Hudson Bay Company nearly correspond." The animal described might have been an example of any for-m in the ' cross ' phase and most prob- ably was the prairie fox, V. pennsylvanica viaeroura (Baird). While all our red foxes sometimes present the various different coloi- phases, still 'cross' and 'silver gray' foxes are more common northward. This corresponds with the general tendency among our mammals which are subject to melanism. It is now known that black woodchucks and black gray squirrels are more often met witli at the northern part of the range of these species, and the same will probably prove to be the case with many other species. * This reference I have been unable to verify, only one copy of the work being known to exist, and that in the Paris Museum. Under the head of Canis decussatus Geoff", in Nouveau Dictionnaire D'Histoire Naturelle, 18 1(), vol. 6, p. 518, appears the following, apparently written by Desma- rest : " Cette espece est du nord de I'ancien continent. Selon M. Cuvier elle ne diff"ere point de celle du renard conmiun." From this I infer that Geoff roy gave the name Canis decussatus to the European 'Cross Fox.' t Canis fidvus of Desmarest, 1820, is, of course, antedated by Canis vulpes var. (5 pennsylvanicus Boddtert, 1785, as sliown by Gray (P. Z. S., 1868 p. 518). Vol. XI, pp. 57-60 March 23, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON THE ITINERARY OF JOHN JEFFREY, AN EARLY BOTANICAL EXPLORER OF WESTERN NORTH AMERICA. BY FREDERICK V. COYILLE. Amonjj; the botanical explorers who have done important work in North America, John Jeffrey is one of the most obscure. It has been known that lie was a Scotchman, that a])0ut the year 1850 he was sent to our northwest coast by patrons of botanical science in Edinburgh, and that he made important collections; but it is not known* in what town or in what year he was born nor in what country or in what j^ear he died. One very rare pamphlet, issued in the year 1853, which contains descrij^tions of Plnus jeffreyi and a few other new species, and has been seen by few American botanists, indicates that he had visited the coastal region of Oregon and the mountains of northern Califor- nia. It has not been known that ten other pamphlets or circu- lars regarding his work are in existence, and that Jeffrey traveled from Hudson Bay to the Rocky Mountains of British America and the shores of the Pacific Ocean, and from tlie mouth of the Gila River, in Arizona, to the Eraser River, in British Columbia. Through the kindness of Professor Isaac B. Balfour, of Edin- burgh, and Professor C. S. Sargent, of the x\rnold Arboretum, a mass of documents, both manuscript and printed, relative to Jeffrey and his work has been placed in my hands for examina- tion, a courtesy which I have to acknowledge with grateful ap- preciation. From these i)apers the following sketch has been chietlv drawn : *According to Britten and Boulger, Biographical Index of British and Irish Botanists, 1893, p. 93. 12— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (57) 58 t'ovlUi — Joliii Jeffrey. Oil the 22d of November, 1849, was held at the Botanical Gar- dens in Edinburgh a meetini;; of "gentlemen interested in the promotion of the arboriculture and horticulture of Scotland." This meeting resulted in a decision to send to western North America a botanist, who should collect the seeds of trees, shrubs, and other plants suitable for horticultural |)urposes, in the re- gion traversed by David Douglas, " to complete his researches, and to extend them into those ])arts of the country not fully explored by him." It was decided to raise the necessary funds through subscribers, who should share in the specimens received from the collector. The subscriljers formed themselves into an organization, under the chairmanship of Professor J. H. Balfour, designated in their official proceedings as the " Oregon Botanical Association." The work of their collector was called usually the " Botanical Expe- dition to Oregon," sometimes the " Oregon Botanical Expedi- tion." Eleven quarto circulars of one to four pages each (in one case with five lithograph plates), issued to the members of the association by Andrew Murray, its secretary, have been ex- amined by the writer — doubtless a complete set — and from the miscellaneous dates, numbers, and localities given in them the itinerary of the collector has been compiled. November 20, 1850, Mr. Murray reported, on behalf of an ex- ecutive committee, that the services of Mr. John Jeffrey had been secured, and that with authentic credentials and the hearty cooperation of the Hudson's Bay Company he had sailed from Tjondcjn earl}'^ in June, 1850, for Hudson Bay. On April 7, 1851, Jeffrey wrote Professor Balfour from Jasper House, in the British Rocky Mountains, on the headwaters of the Athabasca River, stating that he had left York Factory, on Hudson Bay, August 20, 1850, and reached Cumberland House, on the Saskatchewan River, October 8, Avhere he remainerown and Mount Hooker, and coming to the Columbia River at the point where it bends ab- .Jo I III Jcfl'iri/. 59 ruptly iiround the northern end of the Selkirk Mountains, de- scended it to Fort Colville. on the Columhia a few miles above the moutli of Colville River, in the present state of Washington. He arrived at this place about INIa}^ 13, 1851. On July 9 JeftYey was at the junction of the Okanogan and Siniilkameen (spelled by him Semekemele) rivers, in Washing- ton, just south of the present British boundary, having reached that point doubtless by descending the Columbia river from Fort Colville to the mouth of the Okanogan and following the latter to its forks. Ke then ascended the Similkameen and its branch, the Tulameen, stopping at Campment des Femmes, near the mouth of Otter River, a northern tributary of the Tulameen, and proceeded across the country westward to Fraser River. He api)ears to have descended immediately to Vancouver Island, for the circulars mention certain plants collected there in July, 1851, and then to have returned to the Fraser. He went ui) this river at least as far as 50° 23' north latitude, collecting from August 11 to September 27 to an altitude of 6,000 and even 8,000 feet in the mountains east of the river. He made collec- tions also in the autumn on Mount Baker, in extreme north- western Washington, one entry being as late as October 2. The winter of 1851-'52 and the following spring, until at least April 24, JefFre}^ spent on Vancouver Island, probably at Vic- toria. In May, 1852, he was at Fort Nisqually, Washington, at the head of Puget Sound, and in the same month he went on southward to Fort Vancouver (site of the present town of Van- couver, Washington), on the Columbia River. Remaining here Ibr about two njonths, he next engaged in an expedition, from abt)ut August 1 to November 1, to the valleys of Uni])(|ua, Klamath, Trinity, and Rogue rivers, Siskiyou Mountains, Cas- cade Mountains, and Mount Shasta, all in southern Oregon and northern California. On December 4, 1852, he was on jNIount Jefferson, in the Cascade Mountains of Oregon, about latitude 44°. Jeffrey passed the winter of 1852-'53, like the preceding one, on the lower Columbia. In the ibllowing season, 1853, he re- i)eated in part his work of the preceding year, collecting in the Umpqua Valley and the Siskiyou Mountains on Clear Creek, Mount Shasta, Applegate River, Scott Mountain, and the Coast Range, on the Sierra Nevada in latitude 38°, in the Sacramento Valley, and the American fork of the Sacramento, and at San Francisco Bay. 60 CorUh—John Jeffrey. The [)lants of this season's collecting, 1853, from tlic localities nieutiouod above, were tlie last that Jeffrey sent to Edinljurgh, anil liis eni[)loynient by the association jn'actically ceased at this time, his- original contract being for three years' service. The following 'extract from a letter received by Andrew INIurray in Edinburgh from his brother, W. Murray, who was living at San Francisco, gives a hint of Jeffrey's probable movements : "San FRANCisro, 19 May, 1854- "^ P'yesterday received your letter enclosing one for Jeffrey. * * * "I went again to McKinlay, Garrioch & Co., and they have deciphered his address to be Fort Yuma, on the Gila River (just where it joins the Colorado), where he says he will probably be until the 1st of August, and directs his letters to be forwarded by Adams & Co.'s Express to the care of their agent at San Diego, Mr. F. Ames. " I accordingly put his letter in an envelope addressed in conformity with these instructions and took it to Adams & Co.'s Express. * * * "They, McKinlay, Garrioch & Co., say he is a hard working, enthu- siastic, very steady, and temperate man, and that just before starting for Sail Diego he was some three weeks arranging the proceeds of his excur- sions, and they doubt not that he despatched them. He had been for some weeks sick before that, which accounts for jiart of the long stay in San Francisco. * * * " I met the consul just now and he said he had received another letter for Jeffrey. I forwarded it along with yours. The consul says that he (Jeffrey) never called at the consulate ; that there had been quite a budget of letters and other things there for him, which have since been forwarded to him hy McKinlay, Garrioch & Co. at the same time as your previous letter. * * * "You will possihly tliink that I ought to have been able to tin d out Jeffrey while he was here, but at that time I neither knew that McKinlay, Garrioch &, Co. were acquainted with him, nor that Allan, Lowe it Co. were connected with tlie Hudson's Bay Co." Mr. John Uallender, who knew Jeifre}' at Fort Vancouver in 1852 and 1853, writing to Andrew Murray under date of Feb- ruar}' 1, 1854, gives a brief outline of Jeffrey's movements in those years, and says : " If this can be in any way of service to you I shall be most happy, as I feel very anxious respecting the fate of poor Jeffrey, knowing well that if he followed up the route hinted to me he had some dangers of no very trilling nature to contend with." No further information about Jeffrey appears to have reached Edinburgh, but to those who know tlie terrible chances taken by a man attempting a trip to Yuma in tlie fifties, alone, there is little doubt that he perished of thirst upon the Colorado Desert. Vol. XI, pp. 61-65 April 21, 1897 PROCEEDINGS /^^ OF THE /^i^ ' ^ BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTOliu L I B ^^ thp: technical name of the camas plant. BY FREDERICK Y. COYILLE. One of the principal native food plants of several Indian tribes on our Northwest coast and in the northern Rocky Moun- tains is the camas plant, a member of the family Liliaceae, bear- ing a raceme of blue flowers and having a starch}^ edible bulb. It commonly passes under the technical name Camassia esculenta, a name which, it now appears, cannot be maintained. In the year 1813 Ker, in the Botanical Magazine, plate 1574, figured and described a Scilla esculenta, the plants on which it Avas hased having been grown at Eraser's nursery, London, from stock imported into England by Thomas Nuttall. It is neces- sar\' at the outset to identify this plant of Ker's. From the description and the plate, no one would question that the original SciUa esculenta is the plant commonly called Camassia fraseri, but the supplementary statement made b}^ Ker on the strength of a communication from Pursh, that it serves '• as a principal article of food '" to " certain Indians in the neigh- borhood of the [upper] Missouri River" throws doubt on this identification, for this statement cannot apply to Camassia fraseri. A knowledge of the origin of the plant sent to England by Nutt- all would settle the matter, for the ranges of Camassia fraseri and C. esculenta are separated b}^ a wide stretch of territory, the arid Great Plains. Ker does not give the desired information, but fortunately Nuttall himself, in his Genera of North American Plants, published in 1818, says, page 219 : " In the spring of the year 1810 I discovered this plant near the confluence of Huron river [in the State of Ohio] and Lake Erie. I have since found 13— Biol. Soc. Wash , Voi.. XI, 1S!I7 (01) ()2 Coville — The Technical Name of t lie Camas Plant. it abundantly in alluvial situations a few miles from St. Louis, r.ouisiana [that is, St. Louis, JNIissouri], and more recently very plentiful on the lowest banks of the Ohio." From this it is clear that Nuttall did not get his specimens on the up])er Mis- souri in his journey of 1810 to a point near the ^Nlandan Indian villages of North Dakota, and indeed the camas plant does not extend so far east. The possibility that Nuttall had sent to England living bulbs brought l)ack from the Rocky Mountains by Lewis and Clark may be dismissed by the lack of any direct evidence to that effect, as well as by the facts that none of Lewis and Clark's plants are mentioned in Fraser's Catalogue, and that Pursh, who went over their specimens and from them described the camas plant, had not living specimens but only dried ones. The plants which Nuttall sent to Fraser i)robably came from the St. Louis, as opposed to either the Lake Erie or the lower Ohio localities, for Ji'raser's Catalogue contains several other plants labeled as coming from the vicinity of St. Louis; none from the other two places. This identification of Ker's Scilla esculenta as the equivalent of Camassia fraser i, the plant of the upi)er Mississippi Valley re- gion, not only is satisf;ictor3^ on geographic and descriptive grounds, but it agrees with the identifications of Torrey^ and Watson, t and with the doubts expressed by Ker,^ Hooker,§ and Lindle}'!! as to its identity with the northwestern plant. The name Scilln esculenta being, therefore, not available for the camas })lant, the name given it by Pursh in 1814, Phalangiam quamash, is the oldest. In the matter of generic names these plants have been well supplied. Scilla is now considered a distinct genus, and Pha- langium is a synonym of Anthericum. Various authors recog- nizing the camas i)lant as not congeneric with either of these have given it a new genus name, such as Sitocodium Salisb., Lemotris Raf., Bulbedulis Raf., and Camassia Lindl., but Dr. Britton has recentl}'' brought to light a name older than any of these, namely, Quamasia. This was published by Rafinesque in 1818 in the American Monthly Magazine, second volume, page *Pac. K. Rep. 4: 147. 1857. fProc. Am. Acad. 14: 241. 1879. JBot. Mao:. 38: i. 1574. 1813. ?^Bot. Mag. 54: /. 2774- 1827. II Bot. Reg. 18 : /. ]4S6. 1832. Tlie Technical Name of the Catiiaa Plant. 63 265. In tliis publication, which was a review of Piirsh s Flora, Rafinesque renamed Pursh's Phnlangmm quamash as Quamasia esculenta, thus giving to the camas plant its first name as a dis- tinct genus. The generic name C3''aiiotris of Rafinesque has given botanists some trouble from its citation as an equivalent of Camassia. It appears that Rafinesque twice published this generic nanie, ap- parently using it each time in a difi'erent sense. His first pub- lication of it was in 1818 (not 1811 as cited in the Index Kewen- sis), on page 356 of the third volume of the American Monthly INIagazine, where he described under the name Cyanotris scilloides a plant which has been referred sometimes to the northwestern, sometimes to the eastern Camassia. On geographic grounds, however, it cannot be the northwestern plant, and if it is the eastern plant Rafinesque's brief description is not altogether cor- rect, for the leaves are not oblong-lanceolate nor is the capsule trispermous. In the following 3^ear, on page 192 of the fourth volume of the same journal, Rafinesque again published the name Cyanotris, this time basing it upon Michaux's Helonias angustifoUa, a plant which is referred by recent authors to Zy- gadenns. The citation and synonymy of the genus Quamasia are as follows : Quamasia Tlaf. Quamcma Raf., Am. Month. Mag. 2: 265. February, 1818. Cyanotris Raf., Aai. Month. ^Nlag. 3: 350. September, 1818. Not Cy- anotris Raf. 1819. Lemotris Raf., Fl. Telluf. 2 : 20. 1836. Hnlbedulis Raf., Fl. Tellur. 2 : 26. 1836. Camassia Lindl., Bot. Reg. 18: /. US6. 1832. Sitocodium HaWsh., Gen. PI. Fragm. 27. 18()6. A rough synopsis of the species, with the principal biblio- graphical references, may be useful to students who desire to make a critical study of the group. * Periayitli more than. IS millimeters in lenqtli. t Perianth nearly regular, its parts commonly connicent above the ovary when withering, 5 to 9-nerved, usually 7-nerved. Quamasia leichtlinii (Baker). Chlorogalum leichtlinii Baker, Gard. Chron. new ser. 1: i'l'ii*.). 1874. Camassia esculenta leiddlinii Baker, Bot. j\Iag. 103 : t. G2S7 . 1877. Camassia leichtlinii Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 20: 376. 1885. 64 Coville — TJie Technical Name of t lie Camas Plant. A species with flowers from dark blue to white, the bulbs eaten by the aborigines. It apparentl}' ranges from the Cascade Mountains of Wash- ington and Oregon westward to the Pacific, northward to Vancouver Island, and southward along the coast to the vicinity of San Francisco. It was described from white-flowered specimens cultivated in Europe from material collected in British Columbia by John Jeffrey in 1851. tt I\')'i. 1818. Anthericum esculentum Spreng. Syst. Veg. 2 : S4. 1825. Camassia esculenta Liudl. Bot. Reg. 18: /. 14S0. 1832. Otmassia. (jaa mash Greene, Man. Bay Reg. Bot. '.]{'.'>. 1804. Flowers usually dark l)lue, varying occasionally to white. This is the original camas plant of Lewis and Clark, wlio brought from the head- waters of the Missouri, in western Montana, the specimens on which Pursh's description was l)ased. It extends westward at least to the Cas- cade Mountains of Washington and Oregon, and the Sierra Nevada of northern California, reaching southward into northern Nevada and Utah. It grows typically in so-called camas meadows, where the basaltic soil is very soft and wet in spring, but exceedingly hard and dry later in the season. The bulbs are still an important food among the Indians in many localities. ** Perianth less than IS millimeters in length. f Pedicels longer than the ttracfs ; anthers about 3 millimeters in length. The Technical Name of the Camas Plant. 65 Quaniasia howellii (Wats.). Camastiia howeUli. Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 25: 135. 1890. Perianth described as pale purjile, tlie capsules, about (i inillinieters in length, l)orne on pedicels three to four times as long. The species is known only from Grant's Pass, in southwestern Oreiion. 1;f Pedicels shorter tluia the bracts; cudhers about 2 millimeters or less i» IriKjtJi. Quaniasia esculenta (Ker). Phalangium escnlentiun Xutt. in Eraser's Cat. 181.3. Nomen nudum. Scilla esculenta Ker, Bot. IMag. 38 : t. 1754. 1813. Phalangium esculentum Nutt.; Ker, Bot. Mag. 38: /. 1574. 1813. As synonym. f Cyanotris scilloides Raf Am. Month. Mag. 3: Sofi. 1818. Lemotri/s hifacinthina Raf Fl. Tellur. 3: 51. 183(). Cama.'^siafra.seri Tow. Pac. R. Rep. 2 [pt. 4]: 176. 1855. Scilla fraseri Gray, Man. ed. 2. 469. 1856. Siiocodium esculentum Salisb. Gen. PI. Fragm. 27. 1866. Qua masia hyaci7ithina Britton in Britton c'c Brown, 111. FI. 1: 423. ./7V/. lOlS. 1896. ■*Sd^to angrw-^^a Engehn. & Gray, Bost. Journ. Nat. Hist. 5: 237. 1845. Camassiafra.'teri angus^ta Torr. t^ Gr. Pac. R. Rep. 2 [pt. 4] : 176. 1855. A plant with pale blue flowers, popularly known as the " wild hyacinth." It ranges almost throughout the Mississippi Valley, from western Penn- sylvania to Wisconsin, Kansas, and southwestward to central Texas. Tiie two synonyms last cited belong to a narrow-leaved small-flowered plant (leaves seldom exceeding 6 millimeters in width, and perianth about 6 millimeters in length, as opposed to 8 to 12 millimeters and 10 milli- meters I'espectively in the typical ])lant), originally collected by Lind- heimer at New Braunfels, in central Texas, and said to extend to Louisiana and ^lissouri. Though considered a variety of this species by most au- thors, it merits critical study in the field, as, if tlie difference in time of flowering cited by tlie describers prove constant, it is probablj^ a distinct species. Vol. XI, pp. 67-68 ' April 21, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THK BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON DESCRIPTION OF A NEW VOLE FROM OREGON. BY GERRIT S. MILLER, Jr. A small species of Microtus of tlie luiaas group, representetl by twelve specimens from tlie Willamette Valley, Oregon,* may l)e named and descriljed as follows : Microtus canicaudus ^p. iiov. Ti/pe from McCoy, Oregon. Adult J*, No. 75841, U. S. National Museum, Biological Survey collection. Collected December 1, 1895, by B. J. Breth- erton. Original No. 2119. General diameters. — Size and proportions a])Out as in Microtus nanus (Merriam), but color yellower and less grizzled, and tail usually nearly uniform grayisb above and below; skull broader tlian in M. nanus, witb rounder audital buUte and differently sbaped bony palate. Odor. — Head, back, and sides umber-bi'own tbickly sprinkled with blackish hairs, the ground color darker on head and paler on sides, where it shades rather abruptly into color of belly ; ventral surface grayish white, faintly marked with yellowish ; fur everywhere deep plumbeous at base, this color showing through irregularly on belly and throat; tail whitish gray, sliglitly paler below and darker at tip. The exact shade of brown varies, but it is always yellower than in M. nanus, and seldom shows any approach to the peculiar grizzled ap- pearance characteristic of the latter. The tail occasionally has a toler- ably well-defined dark dorsal stripe, but in the great majority of speci- mens (taken in March, April, October, November, and December) it is scarcely visible. *Two from Beaverton (Nos. 371 and 372, IMiller collection), and ten from McCoy (Nos. 75834-75842 and 75844, U. S. National Museum, Bio- logical Survey collection), the latter kindly placed at my disposal by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. U— Biol. Soc. Wash.. Voi,. XI, 1897 (67) <)i' from Crater Lake, south end of Cascade Range, Oregon. No. 7!»9i;], rj* ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey collection. Altitude 7000 feet [21. SO meters]. Collected August 15, 189(i, by C. Hart ^lerriam and Vernon Bailey. Original No. 576o. General characters. — Size rather large; tail long for an Erotouiijx; ears medium or rather short ; coloration rather pale; dorsal area relatively pale and not well delined. O)lor. — Sides of head and body, and head from nose to forehead, jtale gray or grayish ash ; dorsal area pale dull chestnut, varying to pale rusty ; under parts buffy white, the plumbeous under fur showing through ; 10— Biol. Soc. W.\.sh., Vol. XI, 1897 (71) 72 Merriam — Tivo New Red Backed Mice. tail bicolor, with sharp line of demarkation ; upper side dusky, under side white ; fore and hind feet white. Cranial rharartcrs. — Skull large, rostrum long, especially as seen from be- low ; braiucase large and strongly subqnadrate, flattened above ; zygomata strongly spreading, the anterior root standing out rather abruptly from rostrum ; audital ball;e large and strongly inflated ; incisive foramina very long; enamel loops of molar teeth not crowded ; those of last upper molar more irregular than usual. Re)narks. — Contrasted with Evotomys ohscurus from the west base of Mt. Mazaina, E. mazama may be distinguished by its much jialer coloration, longer tail, and by the dimness or absence of the dusky patch on the foreleg just above the ankle. The skull differs from that of ohscurus in the nuich greater length of the rostrum and incisive foramina. The crowns of the molar teeth are longer, and the loops less crowded. Measurements. — Type specimen, (^ adult: total length, 160; tail verte- braj, 54 ; hind foot, 19. Average of four adult c? from type locality : total length, 157; tail vertebrae, 52; hind foot, 18.75. Evotomys obscurus sp. nov. Type from Prospect, Upper Rogue River Valley, Oregon (at west base of Mount Mazama, altitude about 2600 feet or 800 meters). Tyjie No. 80413, (^ ^'^■1 ^^- ^- ^'^t. Mus., Biological Survey collection. Collected August 29, 1896, by Edward A. Preble. Original No. 1455. General characters. — Size rather large, tail medium; coloration dark; dorsal area dull and ill defined. Color. — Sides of head and body and head from nose to forehead dark gray or grayish bister ; dorsal area very dull umber brown, passing gi'adu- ally into color of side,s ; under parts buffy white, the plumbeous basal fur showing through; tail sharply bicolor, dusky alcove, whitish beneath; fore and hind feet soiled white; ankle and foreleg from elbow to wrist dusky. Cranial c}Mractii's.—^^\\\\ short, particularly the rostrum; braiucase subqnadrate and moderately flattened, but less flattened than in IC. ma- zama; zygomata I)owed well outward, tiie anterior base standing square out from rostrum; audital bulUe large; crowns of molar teeth short, the loops crowded ; incisive foramina short. Remarks. — Evotomys ohscurus is very much darker than E. mazama, and has a decidedly shorter tail. In general form tlie skull resembles that of E. maz(()na, but it is slightly smaller, the rostrum and incisive foramina are decidedly shorter, and the braiucase is less flattened. The crowns of the molar teeth are shorter, and the enamel loops much more crowded. Externally the animal resembles Evotomys ovciderdalis from the Puget Sound country. The skull, however, differs strikingly from that oi occi- de^itaUs, the latter being nairow and smootiily rounded like a small Peromyscus. Probably E. oWur/ f.s is more nearly related to E. californicus of the northwest coast region of California than to any other species. Measurements. — Type specimen: total length, 155; tail vertebrae, 47; hind foot, 17. Average of three specimens from type locality: total length, 148; tail vertebrae, 46; hind foot, 17. Vol. XI, pp. 73-75 ' April 21, 1897 PROCEEDINGS BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON ^ THE VOLES OF THE SUBGENUS CHILOTUS, WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF NEW SPECIES. BY C. HART MERRIAM. Heretofore only a single species of Baird's subgenus ChihtKS has been recognized — the 'Arvicola orcyonl^ of Bachnian, which inhabits tiie coast region of Oregon. Wliile making a Biological survey of the Crater Lake region, in the southern part of the Cascade Range in Oregon, last August, Mr. Vernon Bailey and I secured a new nienil^er of the group. It is apparently an alpine species and difi'ers strikingly from M. oregoni in much paler coloration and shorter tail. A third form, also having a short tail, but mucli darker than either oregoni or the Crater Lake species, Avas obtained by Mr. Streator at Agassiz, in British Columbia. The three forms constitute a very compact group (subgenus Chilotus Baird), differing from all the other Voles in a combination of characters which have been so recently sunmiarized by Mr. Gerrit S. Miller, Jr., in his admirable paper on The Genera of Voles and Lemmings^ that it is unneces- sary to repeat them here. The subgenus is restricted to the northwest coast I'egion, where it ranges from tlie northwestern corner of California (Crescent City) to southern British Colum- bia (Port Mood}^ and Agassiz). The extreme northern and southern limits of its range have not been determined. M. hairdi is clearly a mountain animal, confined to the Cascade Range, but the data at present available are not sufficient to admit of mapping tlie distinctive ranges of oregoni and serpens. * North Am. Fauna, No. 12, pp. 60-62, July, 1896. 17— Biol. Sue. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (73) 74 Merrknv — Volfs of the Subgeiius ('Iilloftis. The three species here recoonized agree ahuost exactl_y in size, the only difference being that the tail of oregoiii is about 10 nnlli- meters longer than that of either of the others. In color oregoni holds an intermediate position, bairdi being the palest and serpens the darkest of the three. Following are descriptions of the known species : Microtus oregoni (Bachman. ) Arricola oregoni Bachmafi, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci., Philu., VIII, pt. 1, 60- 61, 1839. 7)/pe locaUtij. — .Astoria, Oregon. General characters. — Size rather small ; pelage short and coarse with a decided ' pepper and salt' appearance ; tail longer and ears more promi- nent than in the other members of the snbgenus. Color. — Upper parts brownish bister; under pai'ts cbirk, more or less washed with butfy ; tail blackisli above, paler below. Cranial cJiaracters. — Compared with the otlier known members of the subgenus {bairdi and serpeiis) the braincase is narrower, less flattened, and less subquadrate, the interparietal larger and more squarely I'ectangular, the zygomata more strongly bowed outward, the frontal more distinctly grooved intei'orbitallj', and the ascending arms of the premaxillfe longer. Measurements. — An adult (j^ from type locality: total length, 140; tail vertebi'se, 42; hind foot, 17. Microtus bairdi sp. nov. 7)lj>i' from Glacier Peak, Crater Lake, Oregon (altitude al)out 7800 feet, or 2350 meters). No. 79906, V ad., U. S. Nat. Mas., Biological Survey collection. Collected August 24, 1896, by C. Hart Merriam and Vernon Bailey. Original No. 5813. General characters. — Size small, a little smaller than .1/. oregoni; ears and tail rather short; coloration pale. Color. — Upper parts uniform rather i)ale grayish bister, witli a faint reddish brown cast, and glossy ; under parts whitish, the plumbeous basal fur showing through; tail bicolor ; dark above, whitish beneath; feet soiled whitish ; no.se dusky. Cra)ii<(l diameters. — Skull lather small and flat; braincase subquadrate (broad in type specimen) ; zygomata bowed well outward ; rostrum short ; audital bullas large and well rounded; incisive foramina short, not reach- ing nearly to incisors. Compared with ^f. oregoni the rostrum as seen from above is nuich shorter. The dental characters are those of the subgenus Chilotns. lieinarks. — This interesting new Vole may be distinguished at a glance from ^f. oregoni by its shorter ears and tail and very much paler color. I have named it in honor of Professor Kaird, who first recognized and named the subgenus. Voles of the Subgenus Chilotus. /o Mmsurcments. — Type specimen (9 adult): total length, 131 ; tail verte- brae, o3; hind foot, 17.5. A young adult rf from type locality: total length, 130; tail vertebra?, 32; hind foot, 17. Microtus serpens sp. nov. Ti/pe from Agassiz, British Columbia. No. 76303, (J' ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey collection. Collected December 2, 1895, bj' Clark P. Streator. Original No. 5068. General characters.— SiraWar to M. oregoni, but tail much shorter ; color darker; pelage mnch softer and longer (10 mm. or more on back in win- ter specimens) ; ears buried in the long fur. Color. — Upper parts very dark l)rown, becoming almost duskj' on pos- terior half of back, and everywhere profusely mixed with black-tipi)ed hairs ; under parts dark plumbeous, the belly washed with ashy or butfy : tail dusky above, pale below, and faintly edged and tipped with wdiitisli when seen from above (due to the projection of the whitish hairs of tlie under side). Cranial cJiaracter.^. — .Skull similar to that of ^[. oregoni, but slightly larger; interorbital region less 'pinched in;' interparietal tapering off more gradually on each side ; teetli larger ; crowns of molar series longer. Measurenieiits. — Type specimen: total length, 130; tail vertebra), 31 : hind foot, 18. .\verage of seven specimens from type locality : total length, 130; tail vertebrae, 32; hind foot, 17.5. Vol. XI, pp. 77-87 April 21, 1897 PROCEEDINGS x^r BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON SYNOPSLS OF THE VOLES OF THE GENUS PHENACOMYS. BY GERRIT S. MILLER, Jr. With the possible exception of some bones and teeth found in a cave in southern Hungary and described by Nehring in 1883, no specimens of voles of the genus Phenacomys were brought to notice until about eight years ago. In October, 1889, Dr. C. Hart Merriam first defined the genus and described four si>ecimens, two from Labrador, one from Quebec, and one from Britisli (Co- lumbia, each of which he made the type of a new species. In 1890 Mr. F. W. True described a fifth species from Oregon. A year later Dr. Merriam discovered still another in Idaho. In 1894 Dr. J. A. Allen described a seventh form supposed to be from the Black Hills of South Dakota. During the following year Mr. S. N. Rhoads named an eighth from British Columbia. Finally, Dr. Merriam has recently described a ninth species from Colorado. In addition to these descriptions of new species, several minor references to the genus have been published. Of these the most important is that by Nehring, in which tlie re- mains from the cave in southern Hungary, already referred to, are determined as those of Phenacomy.s.^^ As might be inferred from this summary, the material by which the genus is represented in collections has greatly increased since the first s[)ecimens were described. Now there are not far from * Full references to all these papers are given in the bibliography at the end of this article. 18— Biol. Soc. Wash, Vol. XI, 1897 (77) 78 ^filler — Synopsis of the Voles of the Genus Phenacomys. one huiulred well-prepared skins available for examination.* This material shows that, of the nine described forms, the fol- lowing six are valid : Name. Ti/jh' loculily. P. intermedins Merriani KtiuiloopK, Britisli Columbia. P. orophilus Merriam Salmon River Mountains, Idaho. P. pirhlei Merriam Longs Peak, Colorado. P. latiimiiiiix ^lerriam Fort Chimo, Ungava, Labrador. P. unS. National Museum (9 adult, i->0. 31256J- Geographic distribution. — Hudsonian zone and parts of Canadian zone. Synopsis of the Voles of the Geivis Phenacomys. 81 in the mountains of Alberta, British Columbia, and the western United States south to southern AVyomino:, central Idaho, and south central Oregon. General diameters. — Size small ; fur dense and woolly; general color light gray, somewhat tinged with yellowish; feet nearly white; inter- orbital i-egion of skull narrow and smooth ; ascending branches of pre- maxillre narrow. Color. — Back grizzled grayish brown, with a yellowish tinge, which is most distinct in springand summer specimens, the fur everywhere thickly sprinkled with blackish hairs, which, however, do not form a distinct dark dorsal area ; face with very few blackish hairs, but not yellower than back ; belly dirty white; feet silver\' whitish ; tail sharply bicolor, pure white below, mixed brown and white above ; under fur dark plumbeous, this color showing through irregularly on belly and throat. The young are clearer gray than the adults, but otherwise similar. Skull. — The skull of Plu'iiacomi/s orophilns is of medium size, that of the type measuring 23.1 mm. in basilar lengtii and 14.2 mm. in zygomatic breadth. The interorljital constriction is narrow, and the frontal ridges, even in very old skulls, are too slightly developed to form a frontal sulcus ; ascending branches of premaxillaries narrow and scarcely expanded posteriorly ; jugal broadly expanded and mortised into zygomatic process of maxillary. Teeth. — The enamel pattern shows no distinctive characters as com- pared with the species of the ungava group. The anterior loop of the front lower molar is unusually variable in form, but in the majority of specimens is similar to that of P. latinianii.s. Mea.^arement.'<. — Type specimen: total length, 14(3; tail vertebrse. 38 ; hind foot, 19; average of eight adults from Bear Tooth Mountains, Mon- tana: total length, 146.5; tail vertebme, 31.8; hind foot, 17.7; average of ten adults from St. Marys Lake, ^Montana: total length, 141.7; tail verte- brae, 34.5; hind foot, 17.7; average of three adults from type locality of P. oramontis: total length, 144.6; tail vertebrae, 37.5; hind foot, 19.3. Specimens examined. — Total number, 56. Wj/omivg : Near Laramie, 1 (type of P. fraei) ; Tower Falls, Yellowstone Park, 1. Montana: Bear Tooth IMountains, 23; Big Snowy Mountains, 1; Mid- vale, 1 ; St. Marys Lake, 12; Summit, 1. Idaho: Salmon River Mountains, 4 ; Sawtooth City, 2. Oregon: Blue Alountains (10 miles north of Harney), 1 ; Crater Lake, 2 ; Diamond Lake, 1 ; ^Nlount Hood, 1. British Columbia: Mount Baker Range, 4 (topotypes of P. orophilus). Alberta: Ninety miles north of Jasper House, 1. General remarks. — Phenacomys oropJiilus is distinguishable from all other species except P. intermedins by its combination of short tail, gray face, and pale color. From P. interrnedius it differs in cranial and dental characters. The range of this species is not continuous, but is interrupted wherever the mountains are not high enough to be capped by a Hudsonian area of 82 Miller — Syno'psis of the Voles of the Genus Phenacomys. sufficient extent. A8 might be expected, nieniVjevs of the various colonies differ from eacli other. Tliese differences are, however, too sliglit to be worthy of recognition ])y name. The most northerly specimen that I have seen, a female collected at Fishing Lake, Alberta, on September 17, 1896 (No. 81477, U. S. National Museum, Biological Survey collection), has the fur much less thick and woolly than in typical orophilus. The feet are brownish as in P. iiitermediui^, but in all other characters it agrees per- fectly with oropliilns. S{)ecimens from St. Marys Lake, Montana, aver- age a trifle smaller than tliose from the type localitj'. Since Phenacomi/s oroj)Iiiliis was first described it has received tw'o ad- ditional names. The first of these, P. trnel Allen, was based on the dis- torted skin and fragmentarj^ skull of a young animal supposed to have been taken in the Black Hills of South Dakota, a region so isolated that if inhabited by the genus itwould be expected to furnish a species differ- ent from those occurring farther west. The type specimen is, however, exactly like immature oropliilas in color and in enamel pattern. In size it agrees perfectly except that the tail, in its present condition fa few. of the proximal vertebrae re'moved, the rest dried in tlie skin), is about 7 millimeters shorter than in fresh specimens of the same age. No weight can be attached to this one difference in the absence of all others. Further- more, it is practically certain that the type was not collected in the Black Hills of South Dakota, but in the Black Hills of Wyoming, now known as the Laramie ^lountains. It was taken on August 10, 1857, by Dr. Hammond, a memljer of the expedition commanded by Lieut. F. T. Bryan. I have not been able to find any account of the Bryan expedi- tion of 1857 further than the statement, on page 91 of the eleventh volume of the Pacific Railroad Reports, that "the wagon-road expedition under Lieutenant Bryan this year [1857] was confined to routes which he had previously mapped and explored." The mai> of Bryan's routes shows that he never entered the region now known as the Black Hills, but that his course followed up the Platte River and Lodge Pole Creek through the Laramie ISIountains. It is therefore almost beyond doul)t that the type of Pheiiacomi/.'i fnwi was collected in ADiany County or Laramie County, Wyoming, a few miles northeast of the present town of Laramie. This region is almost continuous with the mountains included in the known range of ofo})liilvM. Flienncoinys ommontis Rhoads was based on a speci- men from the Mf)unt Baker range in British Columbia, ju.*t north of the United States boundary. Four topotypes in my collection are indistin- guishable from P. orophilus. Phenacomys preblei Merriam. , Phenacotnyx preblei, Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, X, p. 45, March 16, 1897. Type locality. — Longs Peak, Colorado. Type in U. S. National ^Museum (^ adult. No. 7451o), lUological Survey collection. Geographic didribution. — Phenacomys preblei is at present known from the type locality only. Synopsis of the Voles of the Genus Phenacomys. 83 General characters. — ^Imi like P. oropJiUus, but color much more ochra- ceous and ascending branches of premaxillfe more expanded terminally. Color. — Dovf^nl surfoce clay color suffused with ochraceous, the back thickly sprinkled with black-tipped hairs; feet dirty white ; belly yellow- ish white, the plumbeous under fur showing through irregularly; tail in- distinctly bicolor, brownish above, whitish below. Skull.— The skull is similar to that of P. orophiliu^, but tlie interorbital ridges are slightly more developed (though not enough to form a median sulcus), the terminal portion of the ascending branch of tlie premaxilla is broader and the jugal is scarcely mortised into the zygomatic arm of the maxillary. Teeth.— 'Sot appreciably different from those of P. orophUus. Specimens examined.— One, the type. General remarks.— Phenacomys preblei is closely related to P. orophihis, from which it differs in yellower color and some slight cranial characters. In one of the latter it approaches P. intermedius. Phenacomys latimanus Merriam. Phenacomys latimanus Merriam, North American Fauna No. 2, p. 34, October 30, 1889. 2)/pe loc(dity. — Fort Chimo, Ungava, Laljrador. Geographic distrihnli(m. — Arctic and Hudsonian zones from northwest- ern Labrador to the north shore of Lake Superior. Limits of range not known. General characters. — Size small ; skull never developing sharply defined interorbital ridges, even in extreme old age ; muzzle and face conspicu- ously yellower than rest of head. C'o?or.— Dorsal surface pale yellowish cinnamon-brown, clearer and more tinged with reddish on muzzle and face ; region from e5'es to base of tail strongly shaded with blackish hairs; feet and whole ventral sur- face whitish gray, the throat and belly somewhat darkened by the l)lumbeoas bases of the hairs; no distinct line of demarkation on sides, but color of belly shading abruptly into that of back ; tail sharply bicolor, dark brown above, whitish below ; ears concolor with surrounding parts, but region immediately behind ear generally paler. Skull. — The skulls of adult specimens vary in basal length from 20 to 22 mm., and in zygomatic breadth from 13 to 1-1 mm. ; rostrum moderate (nasals contained about three and one-half times in occipito-nasal length) rather more lightly built than in P. ungara, and with profile usually more deflected from dorsal outline of frontals ; interorbital region faintly con- cave, never distinctly sulcate. Teeth. — The enamel pattern of this species calls for no special remark. The anterior loop of the front lower molar is usually cut on the inner side by a deep reentrant angle, which is so much deeper than that on the outer side as to destroy the bilateral symmetry of the loop. This char- acter occurs in other species, notably P. orophilus, but it appears to be more constant in P. latimanus than any other. 84 Miller — Synopsis of the Voles of the Genus Phenacomys. Measurenu'iitii. — Type spet'irnen " (from alcoholic before skinning) : total length, 11(5; tail vertebrtw, 28; hind foot, 18" (Merriam) ; seven adults from Peninsula Harbor, Ontario (north shore of Lake Superior), average: total length, 134; tail vertebra-, 29. i) ; hind foot, 18.1; maximum: total length, 1.50; tail vertebne, 38; hind foot, 19. General remarks. — Phenacomys latimunus is recognizable as a member of the imgara group l)y its distinctly fulvous face. From P. loir/ava it differs in its smaller size and smooth interorbital region. Phenacomys ungava Merriam.* Phenncomys oelatus Merriam, North American Fauna, No. 2, p. 33, October 30, 1889. Godbout, Province of Quebec, Canada (based on old skull, with subquadrate interparietal). Plienacomys inu/ara. Merriam, North American Fauna, No. 2, p. 35, Octo- ber 30, 1889. Fort Chimo, Ungava, Labrador (based on young adult skull, with transversely lengthened interparietal). Type locality. — Fort Chimo, Ungava, Labrador. Type in Merriam col- lection {(f adult, No. if If). Geographic didribution. — Labrador and eastern Quebec. Not known from any point south of the lower edge of the Hudsonian zone. General characters. — Size large ; skull of adult with higli interorbital ridges limiting a deep frontal sulcus; muzzle and face conspicuously yellower than rest of head. Color. — Essentially as in P. latimunus; young darker and more plumbe- ous, at first without the cinnamon of the adult; tail of young specimens nearly uniform dusky, only slightly paler below. Skull. — The skulls of adult specimens vary in basilar length from 22 to 25 nun. and in zygomatic breadth from 14 to 16 mm. Rostrum rather more heavily built than in /-*. latimanus and with profile usually less deflected from dorsal outline of frontals ; interorbital region with two strongly developed ridges, between which lies a conspicuous trough which increases in depth and narrowness in old age Teeth. — Except for their larger size, the teeth of P. luigavct, do not differ in anv constant character from those of P. laiinunms. The anterior loop of the front lower molar is, however, less frequently cut by a deep re- entrant angle on the inner side. Measurements. — Type of P. ungava " (from alcoholic specimen before *I am aware that in the original paper on the genus the specific name ungava is printed two pages beyond the name celatax. To assume, how- ever, that of alternative names the one which stands first in a book has by virtue of mere position precedence over others is as unreasonable as to assume that the first species mentioned under a composite genus should, other things being equal, necessarily become the type. As priority dates from publication, and publication is distribution, it is impossible for one name to have priority over another issued with it; hence to displace the name ungava as here used it will be necessary to show that the animal has an older name, that is, one published prior to October 30, 1889. Sj/nopsis of fJic Vnh'R of fjir Onnis Phrnaconn/ii. 85 ^Uinniiii:; : total leiiL^tli, ].">S ; tail vertebras, 31 ; hind foot, 1!) " (Merriain). Type of /'. rv7((/((.s " (from alcoliolic specimen before slcinning) : total length abont loO ; tail vertebra^ 32; hind foot, 17.5" (Merriam). In adnlt male from Godbout, Quebec (topotype of cdattifi), in alcohol : total length, 137; tail vertebra'. 32; hind foot, 18. Ten adults from Hamilton Inlet, Labrador: average, total length, 151 ; tail vertebne, 37; hind foot, 20; maximum, total length, 160; tail vertebne, 44; hind foot, 21. Sped menu examined. — Total number, 19. Labrador: Fort Chimo, Ungava, 1 (type); Hamilton Inlet. \(\\ Gros- water Bay, 2 (skulls). Quebec: Godbout 4 (including type of cuiutua). General remarks. — Phenucomt/s luigaoa, is distinguished from P. lalliuaiiKs, the only other known species with yellowisli face, by its larger size and strongly ridged interorbital region. The specimens from Hamilton Inlet average considerably larger than the type of P. nugaca or the two adults from Godbout, (Quebec, but as they agree in all other characters it seems unwise to separate them on the basis of the material now at hand. This series shows individual variation sufficient to cover the supposed differ- ences between P. ungava and P. celatus. Phenacomys longicaudus True. Phenacomys longicaudus True, Proc. U. S. National Museum, XIII, p. 303, November 15, li'JO. Tgpe locality. — jMarshfield, Coos County, Oregon. Type in U. S. National Museum (young adult No. i^sli)- Geographic distribution. — The species is at present known from two speci- mens onh', the type and one from Meadows, Lane County, Oregon. It probably ranges throughout the densely forested coast district of Oregon- General cliaracters. — Size large; tail about 40 percent of total length; color rusty brown or drab. Color. — Type (taken in August, 1890); head, back, and sides rusty brown, slightly duller along middle of back, the fur everywhere dark plumbeous at base and sprinkled with long blackish hairs, which, how- ever, are not noticeable except on close examination ; ventral surface rusty white, the plumbeous bases of the hairs showing through irregularly; tail unicolor, dark brown both above and below ; feet dusky. The Lane County specimen (9 No. Jiofi; ^^'- ^^ National Museum, P>iological Sur- vey collection), taken on April 13, 1891, is wholly unlike the type in color. Head, back, and sides pale yellowish drab, the fur light bluish plumbe- ous at base and sprinkled with inconspicuous dark hairs ; belly grayish white, the bluish bases of the hairs showing tlirougii irregularly ; tail in- distinctly bicplor, light slaty gray above and at tip, whitish mixed with gray below ; feet silvery white. Skull. — The skull of the type is in fragments, and that of the Lane County specimen cannot now be found, hence the cranial characters of PJienacomyx longicaudus are at present unknown. 10 — Hioi,. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 86 Miller — Synopsis of the Voles of the Genvs Phenacomys. Teeth. — The teetli of Plienacnmi/s longicaudus differ from those of the other species in the reduction in width of the inner triangles of the upper molars. This tendency is especially marked in the posterior inner tri- angles of the first and second teeth. In these tlie anterior face of the prism is nearly parallel with the anterior side of the second external re- entrant angle. The anterior transverse loop of the posterior upper molar is narrower tlian in other members of the genus and the tei-minal loop of the same tooth is considerably shortened. In the lower jaw the enamel pattern shows no characters beyond a general tendency to narrowness of all loops and triangles. Measuremctits.— Type specimen "(from skin): total length, 148; tail vertebra', 58; hind foot, 20.2" (True). Lane County si)ecimen : total length, 165; tail vertebrae, 63; hind foot, 20.8 (from fresh specimen )jy the collector, A. Todd). General, reniarks. — I'henaromiis longieaiidni< differs so strikingly in propor- tions and color from all other inembers of the genus that it canncjt be compared with any. Its appearance is unique among the voles, though faintly suggested by some of the Asiatic species of A/ticola. BiBMOGKAPHY OF TlIK GkNCS PhEXACOMYS. 1889. Merriam, C. Hcirt. — Description of a New Genus {Phenacomys) and Four New Species of .lr/7'co///*a'. times as wide as high. L. ^Margins of meri of ambulatory legs subparallel for their distal half roberti^ Milne Edwards = americana* Pocock ^ bromeUarum* Rathbun. 'Not represented in America. ■■'Challenger Report, Zool. XVII, 270. pi. xxi, f. 3, ISSCi, Bahia. ^ Notes Leyden Mus., XIV, 249, pi. X, f 4, 1892, Surinam. * This species has not been sutficiently characterized and is described below. *Type examined by the writer, t Not seen by the writer. I Synojjsis of the American Sesarmse. 91 L'. Margins of iiieri of ambulator)^ legs converging from the middle towards the carpal joints. M. Front deeply concave ; protogastric lol)es strongly projecting. (iiKjK.std- .Smith. M'. Front slightly concave ; protogastric lobes slighth* projecting. (Dtgiisiipes Dana = amencami * Sanssure. D'. Protogastric or supra-frontal lobes smooth or nearly so. E. Front less than 4 times as wide as high. rlcordl* 3Iilue Edwards = guerini* Milne Edwards = min- iata* S-Aussure := cDtgusllpes Stimpson (in part,* at least) ^ angusiipes Smith* = stimpsonii Miers,* 1881, not 1S8G, = clnerea Heilprin,* 1888, ^ clnerea Ives,* 1891. E'. Front more than 4 times as wide as high. haiiseni Rathbun, new sjiecies. Sesarma (Holometopus) miersii Rathbun, new name. Sesarmn ongustipes f Miers, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1881, 70, Rat Island, ]\lonte Video. Ses(n-iaa ■^(impsaitii Miers, Challenger Rept, Zool., XVII, 270, 1880; not .S'. stimpsonii Miers, 1881. Carapace broader than long, of equal width anterioily and posteriorly, surface more convex than in .S'. cjnerea, regions deeply marked. Carapace, as in .S. roherti, punctate, the punctje crowded in places and tending to coalesce ; anterior portion rougli with tubercles. Except for its width, the carapace has great resemblance to that of S. roberii. Front less than four times as wide as high. Superior lobes less promi- nent than in S. roberii. The middle sinus of the lower margin when viewed from above is much shallower and less rounding than in that species. Viewed from in front the lower margin forms an almost un- broken convex line. The side margins of the front diverge below as in >S'. riconU. The lateral margins of the third abdominal segment of the male are arcuate, the abdomen being widest posterior to the distal end of that seg- ment. The terminal segment is as wide as it is long. The appendages terminate in an oblique sinuous margin fringed with hair. The chelipeds resemble pretty closeh' those of S. roberii. The meri of the ambulatory legs are shorter than in that species, being less than 2h times as long as wide in the first, third, and fourth pairs, and a little more than 2h times the width in the second pair. Propodi of first and second pairs hairy above and below : those of the third and fourth pairs hairy only on the distal portion. Di)iiensions.—rJ, Abaco, Bahamas, U. S. Nat. Mus., Xo. 11372 : Length, 19.3 mm.; width, anteriorand posterior, 21.1 ; superior frontal width, 11 ; inferior, 11.6; depth of front, 3; length of merus of third ambulator}' leg, 15.3 ; width of same, 0.3. In some specimens the posterior width is *Type examined by the writer. 92 BafJtbun — Synopsis of fJie American Sesarmas. greater than tlie anterior; the widtli (if the ambulatory legs is also vari- able, but as a rule the nieri are shorter than in S. robeiil. UlMrllmtlon. — -Abaco and 8an Salvador, Bahamas; Swan Island, Carib- bean Sea (U. S. Nat. Mus. )• Destero, Brazil (Paris Mus.). Rio de Janeiro ; Rat Island, Monte Video, type locality (Brit. Mus.) Sesarma (Holometopiis) hanseni Rathl)un, new species. Carapace much broader than long, broader anteriorly than posterioi'ly. Regions well marked ; mesogastric verj' wide behind, and with a curved sulcus parallel to its posterior margin. Surface smooth and punctate and without granulations. Superior margin of front uneven, the inner lobes sloping backward from the middle. Front more than 4 times as wide as high ; margin ])rojecting, thin, arcuate in a front view, slightly sinuous in a dorsal view. Terminalsegment of abdomen broader than long. Appen- dages narrow and with slender curved tips. Merus and carpus of chelipeds with outer surface covered with broken rugose lines ; margins denticulate. Hand deep, covered with depressed tubercles ; superior margin with a thin denticulate crest. Fingers irregu- larly toothed; the largest tooth of the dactylus is midway of its length, and fits between the two largest teeth of the pollex. The meri of the ambulatory legs are less than 22 times their width. Dlnicnsious. — cj' : Length, 13.5 mm.; exorbital width, 16.6; posterior width, 15.5; superior frontal width, 9.5; dei)th of front, 2; length of merus of fourth ambulatory leg, 8; width, 3.7. Type locality. — West Indies, one cT (Copenhagen Mus.). Dedicated to Dr. H. F. Hansen. Vol. XI, pp. 93-99 April 26, 1897 PROCEEDINGS ^^ OF THE / \ BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON^"^ "■ J L I B R A "^ nj- SYNOPSIS OF THE AMERICAN SPECIES OF PALICL PHILIPPIC (= CYMOPOLIAf ROUX), WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF SIX NEW SPECIES. t BY MARY J. RATHBUN. 'I'he following summary is based on a stucLy of the s})ecimens collected In' the steamers ' Bache,' ' Blake,' § and 'Albatross,' and is preliminary to a complete report on the gen us. The genus Palicus is remarkable not only as the sole repre- sentative of a family, but as exhibiting two forms in the male of at least one species (P. alternatus). Synopsis of American Species. A. Length of second ambulatory leg less than twice the width of the carapace. B. Crests on the second and third abdominal segments, and on the fifth sternal segment not forming conspicuous laminiform expan- sions visible in a dorsal view. C. IMeri of ambulatory legs with strongly dentate anterior crest. Lateral margin of carapace with 4 teeth besides the orbital. cristatipes A. Milne Edwards. *I have not seen the following paper l)y Philippi, "Palicus granulatus, ein neues Genus der riickenfiissigen Krabben." 3, 293; by the '.Albatross' at stations 2403 and 2641. P. angustus is known only from off Santa Cruz, 117 fathoms, station 32, ' Blake.' P. dcprc.ssKs was taken by the 'Blake' off Santa Cruz, Dominica, and Barbados, in from 56 to 138 fathoms, at stations 132, 192 (type locality), 272, 292, and 293. Palicus bahamensis Rathbun, new species. This species, although po.ssessing abdominal and sternal laminte, as in sica, dt'prcssns, and angustus, resembles in the characters of the carapace dentatus and its allies. Carapace very rough, witli coarse granulation. Front divided by a wide and deep V-shaped notch ; each lobe thus formed is faintly emarginate. Two superior orbital lobes triangular and obtuse. American Species of Palicus. 99 Lateral teeth two, subeqiial in leii>;tli, ai-ute, and directed outward and only slightly forward. Median suborbital lobe truncate. Lobe at angle of buccal cavity very large and produced far beyond the inner lobe of the inferior orl)ital margin. Crest above posterior margin sinuous, broken into seven irregular scallops. Crests on the first two abdominal segments of the J^ trilobate and sub- parallel in a dorsal view, that of the first the wider. Third segment with a lobe on each side of the middle, jiartially visible in a dorsal view. Crest on the fifth sternal segment or that between the bases of the third ambu- latory legs about half as wide as the second abdominal segment ; its pos- terior margin is siiuious. Chelipeds unequal in the male; the right one rather small; manus bicristate above, outer surface granulate, lower margin convex. Pollex slightly deflexed ; its length not equal to the width of the manus. Merus of first amlnilatory terminating in a large blunt tooth ; meri of the second and third ai'ined on tlie anterior margin with 4 or 5 curving, spiniform teeth ; terminal tooth large, subacute ; posterior margin spinulous ; upper surface with squamose granules. Lobes on the anterior margin of the carpal joints small bat distinct. Dactyli slender, posterior margin concave. Dhncnslons. — ^ : Length, 4.8 mui.; width, 5.5; length of second ambu- latory (approximate), 11.6 ; merus of same, 3.2 ; carpus, 2 ; propodus, 2.6 ; dactylus, 2.8. Type. — A single male was taken by the 'Albatross' at station 2051, lat. 24° 2' N., long. 77° 12' 45^' W., 97 fathoms, east of Andros Island, Ba- liamas, in Tongue of Ocean. U. S. Xat. Mus., No. 11.394. Vol. XI. pp. 101-102 April 26, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON \. TWO NEW MOLES FROM CALIFORNIA AND OREGON. BY C. HART MERRIAM. Among the abundant signs of Pocket Gophers (Thomomys) ob- served about our camp on the rim of Crater Lake, Oregon, in August, 1896, were a few ridges which my assistant, Mr. Vernon Bailey, felt convinced, were the work of Moles. Assiduous trap- ping for a number of days, however, failed to bring to light any of these animals until finally, on August 18. a trap which on the previous day had caught a Pocket Gopher was found to contain the long-sought Mole. This animal, on comparison with speci- mens of Scaponus californicus from the Fort Klamath plain, at the south base of Crater Lake Mt.. seems to be a distinct species. It is decidedly larger, and differs further in the characters men- tioned below ; but its affinities are with californicus and not with the large S. ton-nsendi, its immediate neighbor on the west. The species is here named Scapanus nlpiims, n,nd is of special interest as being, so far as known, the only strictl}' mountain Mole in America. It will probably be found to range northward in the Cascade Mountains, and possibly southward in the Sierra Ne- vada. The t3"pe specimen was captured in the Hudsonian zone, at an altitude of about 7000 feet [= 2130 meters]. Another apparently new species was secured by m}^ assistant, ]Mr. Clark P. Streator, but in a widely different region — the desert region east of the mountains, in the extreme northeastern corner of California. I have named it Scnpanus truei in honor of Mr. F. \\\ True, in recognition of his recenth' published ' Revision of the American Moles.'' 22— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI. 1897 (101) 102 Merriam — Two New Moles from Califomia and Oregon. The new forms ma}^ be known from the following descriptions : Scapanus alpinus sp. nov. Tijpe from Crater Lake, INIt. Mazama, Oregon. Altitude about 2130 meters [7000 ft. J. No. 709r>7, (f ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected Aug. IS, 1896, by Vernon Bailey. Original No. 5784. General characters. — Similar to Scajyanus calif amicus, but larger, with longer and heavier skull. Color. — Everywhere uniform grayish plimibeous, much as in californi- cus, but without the brownish tinge ; widely different from the blackish of S. townsendi. Cranial and dental characters. — Skull similar to that of californicus, but much longer ; molar teeth larger ; last ( (ith) unicuspidate tooth, both upper and lower, peg-like, lacking the posterior l)lade or cusp of calij'ornicjis.* Measurements. — Type specimen, measured in flesh: total length, 188; tail vertebrae, 38; hind foot, 24. 5. f Skull: greatest length, 37; basal length, 32; palatal length, 16.75; greatest zygomatic breadth, 13.5; mas- toid breadth, 17. Scapanus truei sp. nov. Type from Lake City, Modoc Co., Calif., No. 79290, ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected June 15, 1896, by Clark P. Streator. Original No. 5289. General cliuntcters. — .Similar to »S'. californicus, but paler and more plum- beous in color, and with a distinct inner cusp on last upper premolar. Color. — Everywhere almost clear plumbeous (No. 14, 'olive-gray,' of Ridgway's Nomenclature of Colors), with a faint darker wash on upper parts. Cranial and dental characters. — Skull similar to that of »S'. calif ornicns, but slightly smaller, with narrower palate and decidedly narrower and more slender rostrum. Last upper premolar with a strongly developed, trench- ant inner cus[), not present in californicus. Measuremnits. — Type specimen (sex unknown) measured in flesh : total length, 170; tail vertebne, 34; hind foot, 21. Skull: greatest length, 34.5; basal length, 29 ; palatal length, 15 ; zygomatic breadth, 13 ; mastoid breadth, 16.25. * This may be the result of wear, as the specimen is old. fTwo specimens of S. californicus from Ft. Klamath have the tail 33 and the hind foot 20.5. I Vol. XI, pp. 103-104 April 26, 1897 PROCEEDINGS BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON THREE NEW JUMPING MICE (ZAPUS) FROM THE NORTHWEST. BY C. HART MERRIAM. There seem to be two well marked groups of s])ecies among the American Jerboas or Jumping Mice — the small Zapus hud- sonius and its immediate allies from the region east of the Rocky Mountains, but including the new form here described under the name tenellus, and the large princeps and trinotntus and their allies from the mountains of the west and the northwest coast. Three new forms are here described — one from Kamloops, in the interior of British Columbia, and two from southwestern Oregon. Of the latter, one inhabits the Cascade Range about Crater Lake, the other the Rogue River Valley. ■'»' Zapus tenellus sp. nov. Ti/pc from Kamloops, British Co]uml>ia. No. ()6932, 9 ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected August 25, 1894, by Clark P. Streator. Original No. 4196. General characters. — Size small ; ears rather large ; coloration dark ; liind feet very slender. Similar to Z. Jiiahonius, but less yellow and very much darker and tail longer. Color. — Dorsal area not sharply defined, grizzled with yellowish ; sides olive-yellowish, heavily lined with black hairs ; no.se. ears, and inner side of legs to heel dusky; tail sharply bicolor: dusky above and at tip all round, whitish below ; fore and hind feet soiled whitish. Cranial characters. — Skull similar in size and characters to Z. hudsonius. Meamrements. — Type specimen : total length, 21(3 ; tail vertebne, 134 ; hind foot, 31. Average of four specimens from type locality : total length, 208; tail vertebrse, 128.5; hind foot, 31. 23— Bior.. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (103) 104 Mrrriani — Three Neiv JnmjtliH/ 3[lce {Zaj)iix). Zapiis pacificus sp. nov. Ti/pe from Prospect, Rogue River Vallej', Oregon. No. 80445, c? yg- ad. U. S. Nat. MuH., Biological Survey Coll. Collected August 29, 1896, by Edward A. Preble. Original No. 1454. General characters. — Size rather small ; dorsal area strongly suffused with yellowish. Colfir. — Dorsal area not strongly defined, but so strongly saturated witli yellow that the yellow predominates over the black ; sides buffy yellow, moderately lined with black hairs ; inner side of legs only sliglitly dark- ened; tail sharply bicolor : grayish above, white beneath ; fore and hind feet soiled white. Cranial, characters. — Contrasted with Zapus montanns the skull of Z. pacificus is smaller ; the rostrum and nasals shorter ; audital bullre smaller ; basioccipital 6/'oac?er between bullpe ; interpterygoid fossa shorter ; upper molar series more divaricating anteriorly. Measnrenients. — Type specimen: total length, 225; tail vertebrae, 141; hind foot, 31. Remarks. — x\ slightly younger specimen obtained by Mr. Preble at the type locality has the dorsal area even less distinct, the entire ujiper parts being ochraceous yellow. A still younger specimen in my private collec- tion (No. 3708) from Point Reyes, California, has the upper parts almost uniform deep ochraceous yellow with only the faintest trace of the dorsal area. Zapus trinotatus montanus subsp. nov. Tiipefvoxw Crater Lake, Oregon. No. 79863, ? ad., TJ. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected x\ugust 19, 1896, by Edward A. Preble. Original No. 1388. General rliaracters. — Size rather large; similar to Z. tri)iotatus, but some- what smaller and duller (sides less ' orange '), with shorter ears and feet, and differing slightly in cranial characters. Co/o;-.— Dorsal area sharply defined, grizzled dusky and yellowish ; sides ochraceous, conspicuously lined with black hairs; inner side of legs to heel dusky; tail sharply bicolor: gray above, white beneath; fore and hind feet soiled white. F^elly in young adults washed with yellow. Cranial characters. — Skull similar to that of Z. trinotatus, but somewhat smaller ; palate narrower ; incisive foramina narrower posteriorly ; angu- Jar process of mandible less strongly developed. JSIcasureineiits. — Type specimen: total length, 231; tail vertebrae, 137; hind foot, 31. Average of eight from type locality: total length, 230; tail vertebra?, 135.5; hind foot, 31. Vol. XI, f?p. 105-107 May 13, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OK THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON DESCRIPTION OF A NEW SPECIES OF SPH.EROMA.* BY HARRIET RICHARDSON. Mr. E. Ben Carter has sent to the U. S. National iMuseum a large number of individuals of an undescribed species o? Sph aroma, found l)oring the piers on St. Johns River, at Palatka, Florida. Sections of the wood received at the same time had been reduced, during a period of eight years, from a diameter of 16 inches to one of 72 inches. The whole surftice of the wood was bored with holes averaging in size about 5 mm. in diameter and in an end section arranged in concentric rings between the rings of annual growth, showing the little animal's preference for the soft pine. Very strong mandibles, projecting beyond the labrum in a most conspicuous manner, provide a perfect equipment for this de- structive work. Spence Bate describes a species of Sphxroma from the Indian Peninsula with similar habits, with which the present species is compared. Sphaeioma destructor sp. nov. Head twice as broad as long, luivinp; a small median projection lateral and posteriorly situated. The first pair of an- tennae, witli a flagellum containing eight articles, reach the posterior margin of the head ; the second pair of antennpe extend to the post-lateral angle of the first thoracic segment ; its flagellum is twelve jointed. The first and fourth thoracic segments are of equal length and are one and a half times longer than the other thoracic segments. The epimeral parts are dis- tinct from the segments, are quite broad, and termi- nate laterally in acute angles, which point downward. The seventh thoracic segment bears four tul)ercles situated in a transverse line. Eves Fig. 3. — Sphesroma destructor. Dorsal view. X 3. * Published with the permission of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. 24— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 18ii7 (105) lOG RieJiardson — Description of a New Species of Sphferoma. The alidonion is composed of two distinct segments, on the first of wliich, tiie post-nlxlomen, there are two tubercles, one on either side of tiie median line. Suture lines at the sides of this ''*^kN-v^_^ segment indicate three coalesced segments. The ter- ^^ minal segment is triangularl}' shaped and rounded Fig. \.— Mandibular jjosteriorly with an upcurved margin, which extends g -. , . ^ around the terminal half of the segment. The whole surface of the abdomen is thickly tuberculated with low but dis- tinct tubercles, each one surmounted with a small tuft of stiff hairs or bristles. On the anterior part four large tubercles are situated in a trans- verse line, the two center ones being somewhat closer to each other than to the lateral ones. The uropoda extend beyond the extremity of the abdo- men, the outer branch being the longer. Both are pointed and sinnlar in shape. The outer edge of the exopodite is provided with four teeth, while that of the endopodite is smooth. The legs of this species are in three series, according to structure, the first three pairs being alike, the fourth and fifth similar, and the sixth and seventh similar. The legs of the first series are long and slender (fig. 5, «), with the second joint or basis nearly cylindrical in shape. The iscliium is nearly as long as the basis, and this joint, as well as the merus, is furnished with long straight hairs. The carpus and propodus are likewise long and slender. The legs of the second series, the fourth and fifth pairs, are stout and short, being sim- ilar in general form, though ditt'ering some- what in relative proportions. The basis is about half the length of the entire leg, while the joints following the ischium are very short. In the third seiies the legs are nearly as long as those of the first series, but differ in size and shape. They are stouter and not cylindrical. The whole surfjxce of the body is punctate, and has minute transverse rugie between the points of de^jression. In color it is a dark brown, shaded on the edges with a lighter bi'own. %)c.— U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 19857. In the Ann. of Nat. Hist.* Spence Bate describes a new species of Splurroma, iSplixroma v((stutor, which was procured '' from a piece of wood which had formed part of a railway l)ridge over one of the backwaters of the West Coast of the Indian I'eninsula." The wood is described as being " honeycombed with cylindrical holes, in manj^ of which the Fig. 5.—Lfgs. X lo. a. Ireadth, i;>.5 ; mastoid breadth, 11; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5.5. Jieiuark.s. — The above description is based on IS specimens from Wrangel, taken from September 1 to 12. The series includes specimens of every size, from quarter-grown young to old adults, and shows very uniform coloration, except the usual brightening with age and variation in color of belly. Four specimens in worn summer pelage have the dorsal area brighter chestnut and the sides decidedly more yellowish than in the rest of the series. All of the specimens from Loring have the bellies strongly washed with buffy-ochraceous, while more than lirilf of those from Wrangel have whitish bellies. In no way does E. wrangeli show a close relationship to any otlier Ameri- can species. In size and relative proportions it comes closest to E. daivsoni, from which it differs widely in coloration and more widely in cranial characters. With the long-tailed species south and east of its range there is no need of comparison. Specimens examined. — Total number, 35, from two islands on the coast oi Alaska: Wrangel, 18; Loring, 17. The American Voles of the Genus Evotomys. 1^1 Evotomys dawsoni ■Merriain. Ei'otomijs dawsoni Merriam, American Naturalist, XXII. 649, Jul\', 1888. Ti/pelocdlHi/. — Finlaj'son River (a iiorthern source of Liard River, NWT., lat. 61° 30' N., long. 129° 30' W., altitude 3000 feet [915 meters |). Geographic di.slribution. — From Finlayson River and Fort Liard west to Yakutat and .luneau, and north along the coast to Prince William Sound. General characters. — Robust, with large body and shoi't tail ; tail rareh' twice as long as hind foot, well haired, but not bristly as in ratlins ; ears prominent and well haired ; colors bright. Color. — Dorsal stripe sharply defined, reaching from just back of eyes to base of tail, bright ferruginous with few dark hairs; sides, face, and rump bufty-ochraceous ; belly thinly washed witli })ale l)uff; tail dis. tinctlv bicolor, clear bufiy-ocliraceous below, a mixture of rufous and blackish hairs above; feet thinly clothed with buff y and dusky hairs; ears covered on inner surface of projecting tips with short, rufous hairs ; an indistinct yellowish postauricular spot ; eyes encircled by faint yel- lowish rings ; tufts of rufous hairs fall back from in front and till openings of ears; a small white throat patch marks 10 out of 29 specimens ; spot covering side glands inconspicuous. Cra)il((l cJiaracters. — Skull large and thick-walled, relatively short, wide, and angular, with the smallest and flattest audital bullae of any Ameri- can species; nasals terminating on a line with ascending arm of pre- maxilhe, pointed in immature, rounded in adult skulls, never truncate; pterygoids strong and prominent, the ends siiowing in lateral profile above the small, flattened bullae ; basioccipital unusually wide between bullie; i)alatines short, rectangular, with lateral bridges incomplete ex- cei)t in skulls of old individuals ; posterior margin of palate with a central notch, deepest in immature specimens ; incisors large, with dark orange enamel ; molar series long and narrow. Measareini'iits. — Average of 8 adults from Yakutat (4 ^ and 4 ? ) : total length, 144; tail vertebrie, 33; hind foot, 20. Skull, No. 73560, adult J^, basal length, 22.5; nasals, 7.5; zygomatic breadth, 14 ; mastoid breadth, 12.2 ; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5. Reiuarl-s. — The type was collected June 23, 1887, by Dr. George M. Dawson, Director of the Geological and Natural History Survey of Canada. Through the kindness of Dr. Dawson it is now before me for comparison with a large series of skins and skulls from Yakutat and Juneau, Alaska. It is gratifying to find that the type agrees in every par- ticular with this series of specimens, and that the name Ecotomys dairsoni stands for this large and handsome species. The type was not fully adult, and unfortunately was mounted from a half relaxed skin, so that the size is greatly reduced. The tail vertel)r;e were not removed, and the tail has dried short, but the hind foot and ear give reliable measuiements for comparison. The skull is badly broken, but the teeth give good characters for comparison. The openly communicating loops and the length of the molar series as a whole maybe perfectly matched in slightly immature skulls from Yakutat. 28— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 122 Bailnj — The American. Voles of tJte Genus Evoiomys. Theconibiniition of laro;e size and short tail, notched palate and small andital Imllje, while distinctly separating the sj)ecies from all others south of its range in America, brings it in closer relationship with E. rutlhis. From rulilu», however, it differs in longer, slenderer, less hairy tail, slenderer feet, duller color, with less rufous on ears, and the following important cranial characters: skull less massive; rostrum longer and slenderer; audihU buli;e smaller; pterj'goids more prominent; nasals sharp tipped or I'ounded posteriorly instead of truncate ; molar series much narrower and slenderer. In external characters it slightly resem- bles E. rufccanus* of northern Europe, but differs widely from that species in cranial characters. Specimens examined. — Total number 38, from 5 localities. NortJnvesi Territory: Finlayson Kiver, 1, the type. British Colnmbia: Fort Liard, 2. Alaska: Yakutat, 29; Juneau, 3; Prince William Sound, 3. Evotomys gapperi (Vigors). Arricola gapperi Vigors, Zool. Jour., vol. V, p. 204, pi. ix, 1S30. Erolami/s fuscodorsalis Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. VI, p. 103, 1894. Type locality. — Vicinity of Lake Simcoe, Ontario, Canada. Geographic distribution. — From Massachusetts, New Jerse}^ and Penn- sylvania northward and from the Atlantic coast westward to the Rocky Mountains in Canada. General clairacters. — SnniW, slender, and bright colored, with slender feet and a medium length tail. Of the American species it most nearly resem- bles E. glareolus of Europe.f Color. — Winter pelage : dorsal stripe from just back of eyes to base of tail, bright chestnut, with numerous black hairs and a slight frosted tinge from subterminal white portion of j)art of the rufous-ti})ped hairs ; sides bright buify-ochraceous ; belly washed with i)ale l)utf; feet silvery gray; tail bicolor, grayish butt to the tij) below, brownish above, with upper part of pencil black. In high pelage a rufous stripe extends through e}'e *Erotomys riifocanus (Sundevall) of northern Europe is remarkable for its large molars and almost microtine form of skull. It is the most divergent form of the genus known, with dorsal stripe yellowish rufous; sides, face, and rump clear gray ; tail short ; hind feet large. Measurenieni of a dry skin from Lapland (No. f|ff, (J^, Merriam collec- tion): total length, 138; tail vertebne, 33; hind foot, '20. Skull: basal length, 25; nasals, 7.6; zygomatic breadth, b5 ; mastoid breadth, 12.2; alveolar length of ui^per molar series, ().7. f Erotom>/s ga]>j>eri differs from E. glarerdus of Oxfordshire, England, in better defined dorsal stripe and less extensive rufous on ears and face, slightly lighter coloration, and relatively shorter tail. I fail to discover tangible cranial differences. The American Voles of fhc Gcmis Evotomys. 123 to blai'k spot at liase of imistaclie. Smnmcr pelage : darker all over, with more dnsk}' on feet and tail. Youiig : when half grown, similar to adults, but with thinner surface colors, tlirouirh which the slaty under fur shows. Crduhd clKtracters. — Skull small and slender, not ridged or angular, ex- cept in very old individuals; audital bullae small, full, and rounded, less angular, elongated, and appressed than in carolinensis ; palate straight edged, or rarely with a slight central projection ; molar row slender. Measurement.^. — Average of 4 adults assumed to be typical from Locust Grove, N. Y., measured by Di-. C. Hart Merriam : total length., Ul ; tail vertebrcie, 37 ; hind foot, 18.1. Average of 10 adults from Elizabelhtown, N. Y., measured by Gerrit S. Miller, Jr.: total length, 141; tail verte- bra?, 39; hind foot, 18.3. Average of 10 adults from Peterboro, N. Y. : 145; 40; 18.3. Skull from Emsdale, Ontario, Canada, old J*, No. 75896: basal length, 21.6; nasals, 6.5; zygomatic breadth, 13.3 ; mastoid breadth, 11.2; length of upper molar series, 5. Bemarh. — Erofomys gapperi, with the possible exception of E. nitihi.i, occupies the largest area of any species in America, and, as might be ex- pected, presents considerable variation in the extremes of its range. Some of the peripheral forms have become sufficiently marked to l)e worthy of recognition by name, while others are barely distinguishable from the central form. A decrease in size takes place in the prairie coiuitry of JMinnesota and the Dakotas ; an increase beyond the normal in the north- ern Rocky Mountains. North and east of the type locality another in- crease is noticeable, especially in the feet. Specimens from Godbout, Quebec, are larger even than ochraceous, though in color they appear to be darker instead of lighter than gapperi ; ])ut they have been preserved in wood alcohol, which has doubtless changed the color. Another peculiarity of the nortlieastern animal as it enters the Hud- son ian zone is a tendency to dichromatism. Dr. .Alien first made known the al>normal phase from Trousers Lake, New Brunswick, but supposing it characterized a new s])ecies gave it the name fu.scodrjrsulis.* Normal, and what were considered typical, gapperi were secured at the same place and at the same time as the others. During the past summer Mr. Gerrit S. jNIiller, Jr., collected series of specimens in both the gray and the red pelages at Nepigon and Peninsula on the extreme north shore of Lake Superior, which he has kindly placed at my disposal. In a critical com- parison of measurements, skulls, and external characters of the two forms I find no difference other than color, and am compelled to agree with the previous conclusions of Mr. Miller f that tlie gray animal represents only a color phase. The gray form is characterized by the entire absence of a rufous dorsal stripe, in place of which there is usual! v a sooty or black stripe ; by clear gray sides and light gray wash of tielly, and in very dark specimens by clear Ijlack upper surface of tail. *Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. VI, 103, 1894. t Notes on the Mammals of Ontario, by Gerrit S. Miller, Jr. Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 28, p. 16, April, 1897. 12-4: Bdihij — Tlir Arnrricnri Volff^ of tltc (Icnus Evnfoiny^. Specimens examined : Massachusetts : Wilmington, 5. Penvsj/lvania : Renovo, 5. New Hanipsliire: Ossipee, 17. Neir York: Lake George, 13; Locnst Grove, 5. Mhinesota: Two Harbors, 18; Tower, 5. Ontario: Emsdale, 1; Peninsnia, 5; Nepigon, 4. Qnehec: Godbout, 10. Manitoba: Rat Portage, 1. Assiniboia: Indian Head, 5. Saskaichevxin : Wingard, 7; Carlton, 1. Alberta: Soutb Edmonton, 25; St. Albert, 2; Muskeg Creek (lat. 51°, long. 110°), 11 ; fifteen miles west of Henry House, 1, ini. ; fifteen miles sontb of Henry House, 1 ; Canmore, 1 ; Banff", 4. British Columbia: Field, 1, im. Evotomys gapperi ochraceus Miller. Erotonn/s r/apperi ochracevs Miller, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. XXVI, p. l;):-!, ]Mareh 24, 1894. Type localiti/. — Mount Washington, New Hampshire (Alpine Garden, at 5400 feet altitude). Geographic distribution.— The White Mountains of New Hampshire and (probably eastward to) Nova Scotia. General characters. — Sinular to E. gapperi, but slightly larger and much duller and paler ; fur long and lax ; skull as in gapperi. Color. — Type specimen: dorsal area faintly outlined, pale dull rusty rufous, with no black hairs ; sides bufty clay color ; belly plumbeous, lightly washed with dirty whitish ; feet gray ; tail bicolor, bufty below, brownish above ; upper i)art of pencil Ijlackish ; ears w'ell haired, upper edges pale fulvous. Crani(d characters. — Skull of type not appreciably difterent from that of typical gapperi. Measurements. — Type, measured in flesh by Gerrit S. Miller, Jr. : total length, 148; tail vertebrte, 39.6; hind foot, 19. Sknll of type : basal length, 22 ; nasals, 6.7; zygomatic breadth, 13; mastoid breadth, 11.3; upper molar series, 5. General rem((rks. — This subspecies difters from typical gapperi in paler, duller coloration — the opposite extreme from the dark, rich carolinensis which inhabits the toiis of the mountains of North Carolina. Specimens from Ossipee, N. H., are evidently intermediate between aapperi and ochraceus. In size they even exceed ocliraceus, and in color they are slightly paler than true gapperi. Specimens from Digljy and James River, Nova Scotia, kindly placed at my dis])OS'il by Mr. Outram Bangs, are plainly referable to ochraceus, though with a slightly darker, brighter dorsal stripe than the type.^ • The AmericcDi Volc^ of fhe (icnii)^ Erofovv/i^. 125 Evotomys gappeii ihoadsi Stone. Evotomys gapperii rhoadsii Stone, Am. Nat., vol. XXYII, p. 5-4, Jan., 1893. Ti/pe localiti/. — Mays Landing, New Jer.sey. General characters.— i^imWav to tyitical (jappi ri but with .«lightly darker dorsal stripe, less bufty sides, sli.ylitly shorter tail, and larger hind foot. The body nieasurements, as well as the skulls, show the animal to be identical in size with gapperi, the difference in dimensions appearing only in length of tail and foot. Color. — Dorsal area, extending from l)etween ej^esto base of tail, plain chestnut; sides buffy gray ; T)elly washed with buff or whitish ; tail, feet, and ears as in gapperi. Measurements. — Average of 3 young adults from type locality, measured in the flesh by J. Alden Loring: total length, 139.3; tail vertebrae, 36; hind foot, 20. SknU (adult J^, No. 70()79) : basal length, 21.5 ; nasals, 7; zygomatic breadth, 13.5 ; mastoid breadth, 11.3; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5.2. General remarks. — Three adult topotypes collected by .J. Alden Loring at Mays Landing, New Jersey, February 29 and March 1, agree in part with the original description of the subspecies. The slight shortness of the tail compared with that of typical gapperi is entirely within the range of individual variation and discrepancies in methods of taking measni'e- ments. If a more extensive series of specimens should prove the color and foot characters inconstant, the subspecies will have to be given up. With the material in hand I prefer to retain it, though other more marked forms remain unnamed. The nearest localities to Mays Land- ing, N. J., from whicli I have examined specimens of Erotomi/s are Wil- mington, Mass., and near Renovo, Penn. These specimens are fairly typical gapperi with no tendency toward rhoadsi, and INIr. Rhoads has recorded gapperi from northern New Jersey and from INIonroe and Pike counties, in northeastern Pennsylvania. Evotomys gapperi loringi,* subsp. nov. Tgpe from Portland, North Dakota, No. 75795, c? ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected Nov. 22, 1895, by J. Alden Loring. Collector's number, 3438. Geographic distrihution. — Timbered valleys along edge of plains in Min- nesota and eastern North and South Dakota. General characters. — Smallest Erotomys known in America, with bright coloration and narrow, slender skull. Color.— Full winter pelage : dorsal stripe sharply defined, extending from anterior base of ears back between ears to rump, pale reddish hazel, scarcely darkened with black hairs and frosted from the presence of a white subtermiual zone. In some specimens with themaxinunii of white the back is fairly hoary, in others the chestnut predominates and con- ceals the white zone. Face, sides, and rump, bright grayish ash, more * Named for the collector of the type series, ]Mr. J. Alden Loring. 12() Balk')/ — TJie American Voles of tlie Genus Eimtoniys. or less washed with huffy ; helly jiure wliite or rarely creamy white ; ears pale chestnut ; feet i)ure white; tail sharjyly hicolor, whitish helnw, hlackish hrown ahove ; pencil hiack ahove, a few white hairs below. Adult males with large whitish or liglit grayish si)ots over the side glands. iSummer pdagc: dorsal stripe dark, rich chestnut; sides and face pale bister, more or less suffused with yellowish ; belly thinly washed with white or whitish ; feet'dusky; tail darker and less sharply bicolor ; ears brownish ; side spots in old males sooty gray. Young slightly darker than adults. Cranial characters. — Skull, compared with that of gapperi, smaller and relatively narrower and slenderer; even in old age not ridged or angular ; audital bullae less rounded and inflated than in gapperi; posterior edge of jxxlate straight or slightly projecting on median line. 3rt'asureinciits. — Average of 18 adults from type locality, measured in the flesh by J. Alden Loring: total length, 123; tail vertebrte, 31.5; hind foot, 17.9 ; tail, 25.5 per cent, of total length. Skull of type : basal length, 21.5; nasals, 6 8 ; zygomatic breadth, 12.8 ; mastoid breadth, 10.9 ; length of upper molar series, 5. General remarks. — There is no climatic or topographic barrier to prevent Evotomi/s from ranging continuously from the type locality of gapperi to all of the points from which loringi is known. Good series of specimens from a chain of intermediate localities show direct connection, and prove that the form to which the name loringi is applied has developed as it reached out on the dryer, more open region along the edge of the prairies. The extremes of the form come from the farthest outlying localities. Specimens fi'om the north shore of Lake Superior and thence westerly as far as Tower, Minnesota, are fairly typical gapperi. Those from Hinckley and Bridgman, near the middle of the State, are nearer loringi, while Minneapolis and Elk River specimens are almost typical. Specimens from Browns Vallej^ Minnesota, Fort SLsseton, South Dakota, and Port- land, North Dakota, are typical. Two from Pembina, North Dakota, are douljtful, and one from Carberry, Manitoba, is clearly intermediate. Specimens e.ra)ni ncl. —Totnl numl)er, .56, from 10 localities (24 in the Morriam collection, .■]2 in the Biological Survey collection) : North Dakota: Portland, 18; PemJjina, 2. Sontli Dakota: Fort Sisseton, 2; Travere, 2. }fin.nesota: Browns Valley, 5; Elk River, 5; Minneapolis, 7; Hinck- ley, 10; Bridgman, 4. Manitoba: Carberry, 1. Evotomys gapperi galei ]Merriam' Eeotomi/s galei Merriam, North American Fauna, No. 4, p. 23, pi. ii, figure 3, bctober 8, 1890. Tgpe locnlitg. — Ward,* Boulder County, Colorado. Altitude 9500 feet (2900 meters). *The type locality was given in the original description as Gold Hill. It has since been learned that the type specimen came from Ward, about 6 miles above Gold Hill. The American Vole.s of the Genus Evotomys. 127 Geoffraphic d;s(ril>i(l!(m.—Boveii\ zone of mountains of Colorado and northward along eastern ranges of Rocky Mountains to northern INIon- tana. Gciicntl cJtamctn-x. — ^hwWiw io E. giij) per I, with slightly longer tail and lighter coloration, skull developing prominent superciliary ridges with age. Color. — Winter pelage: dorsal stripe sharply defined, reddish chestnut, with a few black hairs ; sides and face butfy gray ; belly and feet whitish or yellowish gray; tail bicolor, whitish below, blackish or bufiy gray above, except the black upper part of pencil ; ears faintly tinged with color of back. In spring and earl}- summer ])elage the dorsal stripe dai-kens to warm hazel and the sides to rich l>ufly gray. Full mnrniier pelage: dorsal stripe chestnut, slightly darkened with black hairs; sides and face clearer gray than in winter; feet gray. Young, in August: darker than the adults, with ears strongly tipped with chestnut ; feet dusky and tail not sharply bicolor ; spots covering side glands in old males whitish or gray. Cranial characters. — Skull of adult narrower than that of gapperi, sharply concave interorbitally, with prominent superciliary ridges ; zygomatic arches not abruptly spreading ; audital bulhe small and globose; palate straight-edged or rarely with a sliglit central projection. Measurements. — Average of G adults from Longs Peak, measured in the flesh by Edward A. Preble: total length, 145; tail vertebra, 43.6; hind foot, 18.2; tail, 30 per cent, of total length. One adult (^ topotype. No. 7407(5: 146; 40; 18. Skull of adult topotype, No. 74076: l)asal length, 22.2; nasals, 6.5; zj^gomatic breadth, 13 ; mastoid breadth, 11 ; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5. General remarks. — Apparently galei branches off from gapperi along the east base of the Canadian Rockies and extends southward in a frequently interrupted line, following the eastern ranges of the Rocky IMountains to Colorado. Specimens from St. Marys Lake, Summit, and Java, in north- western Montana, except for slightly smaller size, are identical with galei. Specimens from Silverton and Crystal Lake, Colorado, are not typical, but the difference is not uniform and may be in part due to age and sea- son. A badly mutilated skin in the National INIuseum from the Uinta IMountains, Wyoming, ought on geographic grounds to belong to this species. Four not fully adult specimens from the Bighorn Mountains, AVyoming, agree better with galei than with any other species. A good series from the Big Snowy ^Mountains, Montana, does not agree with gapperi, galei, or saturaius, but, as the degree of difierence is too slight to warrant a new name, they are referred to galei. Specimens examined. — Total numl)er, 81, from 12 localities : Colorado: Ward, S; Gold Hill, 2; Longs Peak, 6; Silverton, 8; Crys- tal Lake, 1. Wyoming: Bighorn Mountains, 4. Montana : St. Marys Lake, 15 ; Java, 2 ; Summit, 4 ; Big Snowy Moun- tains, 25; Red Lodge, 2; Beartooth Mountains, 4. 128 Bailey — The American Vole i^ of the Genus Evotowy^. Evotomys gapperi satuiatus Rlioads. Erotnini/!^ gapjieri ffdittralitx* Rhoads, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., p. 284, October, 1804. Ty2}e locuUti/. — Nelson, B. C, on the Ivootenay River, 30 miles north of the Washington line. G('(igiaj)]ilc distrihiilion. — Tiie Blue ^Mountains of Oregon, mountains of northern Idaho, and northward into British Columbia to Cariboo Lake. General characters. — Larger and longer tailed than is', gapperi, with larger ears and stouter hind feet; spot covering side glands conspicuous in all of the 11 adult males. Color. — Dorsal stripe bright and rather light reddish chestnut, closely matching that of E. gapperi in specimens from Emsdale, Ontario, and western New York, except that it begins farther behind the eyes; sides, face, and lower rumj) dark gray, with less ochraceous wash than in gap- peri; belly washed with almost pure white. tSixteen out of the twenty- four specimens from Nelson have a pure white throat patch extending from lower lip nearly to breast. Eai's large, ijrotruding well out of fur, slightly rufous-ti])ped ; feet gray; tail indi.stinctiy bicolor, light gray below, dark gi'ay above. Cranial characlers. — Skull, compared with that oi gapperi, larger, wider, and more angular ; pterygoids longer and slenderer ; audital bulUe slightly larger; prema.\ill;e projecting slightly back of truncate posterior end of tile nasals; ])alatine bones U-shaped, with straight posterior margin; front of u})per incisors pale lemon yellow. Measurements. — Average of 15 adults measured in the flesh by collector: total length, 149; tail vertel)r;e, 45; hind foot, 18.2. Skullof an average sized adult. No. (j(j()0(j : basal length, 22.;] ; nasals, (5.5 ; zygomatic breadth, 13.5 ; mastoid breadth, n.2 ; aveolar length of upper molar series, 5. General remarks. — Mr. 8. N. Rhoads described this sul)species from a single specimen caught August 17, 1802, near the town of Nelson. The animal inhabits a large area of country, and, since the original descrip- tion gives none of the important characters that distinguish it from neighboring si)ecies, the above description has been drawn up from a series of 24 good specimens collected by J. Alden Loring, August 20-28, at Silver King mine, six miles south of Nelson. I have not seen the type of saturatus, but assume the present series to be typical. The species is distinguished from E. mazama by a darker dorsal area, shorter tail, more arched skull, straight posterior edge of palate, slen- derer, less prominent pterygoids, smaller audital bulUe, and paler in- cisors. In external characters it resembles E. idahoensis, from which it differs in the l)road, angular skull, narrower interpterygoid fossa, and in minor details. With tlie dai'k-coloi'ed E. occidentalis it needs no com- parison. * The name saturatus, in suggesting a dark-colored animal, is mislead- ing. The species is scarcely darker than gapperi and much lighter colored than obscurus, californicus, occidentalis, wrangeli, dawsoni, or carolitiensis. The American Voles of the Genus Evotomys. 129 Specimens examined. — Total miinber, 71, from 14 localities. Britlsli Columbia: Nelson, 24; Sicamous, 1; Glacier, 1. Washington : Colville, 1. Idaho: Mission, 1; KingstDn, 1 ; Mullan, 6; Craig Mountains, 4. Montana: Thompson Pass, 5; Prospect Creek, 3. Oregon: Blue Mountains (10 miles north of Harney), 8 ; Strawberry Butte, 3 ; Elgin, 8 ; Kamela, 5. Evotomys brevicaudus Merriam. Ecotonii/s gapperi hrevicandns ^Merriam, North American Fauna, No. 5, p. 119, pi. iii, figs. 7 and 8, July 30, 1891. Tj/pe local it [/.— Caster, Black Hills, South Dakota. Exact locality, 3 miles north of the town ; altitude about 6000 feet [1830 meters]. Geographic distribution. — Boreal cap of Black Hills in South Dakota. General cJiaracters. — As large as E. gapperi, with rather larger hind foot and much shorter tail ; coloration in summer pelage paler. Larger than E. loringi, with relatively shorter tail. Color.— Summer pelage: Similar to loringi, but paler, with black hairs more conspicuous; sides ash graj% strongly suffused with bufly ; belly creamy white ; side spots dusky gray. In the type and topotype the tail, feet, and ears are discolored by corrosive sublimate. Cranial characters. — Skull similar to that of gapperi in large size and broad brain case ; zygomatic arches low and Haring out, so that the inner instead of the outer side shows in a top view ; audital bulke as large as in gapperi, but less rounded ; pterygoids wide, flat, and close together ; molars large ; incisors slender and pale yellow, palate approximately straight-edged. Measurements. — Type specimen measured in flesh by Vernon Bailey : total length, 125 ; tail vertebrte, 31 ; hind foot, 19. A topotype (No. 4506) measures 130; 32; 19. S/cull of type: basal length, 21.2; nasals, 6.6; zygomatic breadth, 12.5 ; mastoid breadth, 11.3 ; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5.4. Skull of more fully adult topotype : basal length, 21.8 ; nasals, 7; zygomatic breadth, 12.8; mastoid width, 11 ; alveolar length of molar series, 5.3. General remarks. — The two original specimens, collected July 18 and 21, 1888, sliow only the perfect summer pelage. The skulls show that the animals were not fully adult, though probably full grown. Though based on so scanty material, the characters distinguishing the species are fairly pronounced. Its range is isolated, and widely separated from that of any other members of the genus by open prairie country and a wide belt of the Transition zone. There seems to be no valid reason for considering it a subspecies. It is even diflicult to decide to which form it is most nearly related. Specimens examined. — Total number, 3, from two localities in the Black Hills. South Dakota: Custer, 2; Deadwood, 1. 29— HioL. Sue. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 130 Bailey — Tlic American Voles of the Genus Emtomys. Evotomys caiolinensis Meiriam. Erolomt/s cdrolinen.'iiii Merriam, Am. Jour. Sci., vol. XXXVI, p. 4()0, Dec, 1SS8. Type localltij. — Roan Mountain, North Carolina; altitude 6000 feet [1830 meters] . Geograpldc distrihution. — Boreal parts of Alleghany Mountains of North Carolina, Tennessee, and West Virginia. Gt'iwral cliararters. — Size large; hind foot, 20 mm. or more ; tail long ; color dark and rich ; molars larger than in any other American species.* Color. — Fall, summer pelnge : back dark chestnut, blending gi'adnally with bistre of sides, face, and rump ; darkened everywhere above with numerous black hairs ; belly varying from white to buffy-oehraceous, the under fur showing through ; fur covering side glands of male forming an iuconspicuoLis spot sligiitly darker than surrounding fur; ears dusky; feet grayish brown ; tail indistinctly bicolor, gray below, blackish above, and all round at tip. Winter pelage (February, March, and April speci- mens) : paler aud brighter; back brighter ferruginous, belly averaging whiter ; sides buffy-ochraceous instead of bistre ; ears slightly rufous tipped. Young darlver than adults. Cranial characters. ^SknW, compared with that of E. gapperl, larger, wider, and more angular, with audital bulUe relatively smaller, flatter, and more elongated; basioccipital wider between bullae; molars larger and especially wider and heavier ; enamel surface of upper incisors darker yellow. Measurements. — Average of 4 adults (2 (^ and 2 9) fi'om type locality, measured in flesh by Dr. C. Hart IMerriam : total length, 149 ; tail verte- bne,44; hind foot, 20.2. .S'Avt/; (a fully adult $, No. 7;]I15): basal length, 23.5; nasals, 7.5; zygomatic breadth, 14.4; mastoid breadth, 12; alve- olar lengtii of upper molar series, 6. General rrmarks. —Evotomgs carulinensi.'i is readily distiuguished from all other eastern forms by its larger size and darker coloration. Specimens in the same pelage should be used for comparison, as the lightest phase of winter pelage in caroluie)isis matches the darkest summer phase of gapperL Specimens examined. — Total number, 87, from 3 localities. North. Carolina: Roan Mountain, 47; Highlands, 2. West Virginia : Travellere Repose, Pocahontas County, 38. Evotomys ungava sp. nov. Tgpe from Fort Chimo, Ungava. No. |rjL cT ^^^-^ Merriam Coll. Col- lected by L. M. Turner, May 12, 1883. Original number, 317. General characters. — Size about as in gapperi ; tail and feet slender ; ears very small, not projecting beyond fur; colors dull; tail bicolor; skull slender; rostrum not decurved. *Only e.Kceeded in size by the molars of E. rufocaaus of Europe. The American Voles of tJic Genus Evotomys. 131 Color [type specimen skinned ont of alcohol]. — Dorsal area not sharply defined, dull brownisli chestnut ; sides and face buffy gray, finely lined with ))lackisli hairs; belly dark i)lunibeoup, heavily washed with buffy; ears tipped with color of back ; feet dusky gray ; tail indistinctly bicolor, soiled l)uffy below, brownish above ; sides of nose whitish ; a small white spot under lower lip. Cranial chnmck'n . — Skull, compared with tliat of gapprri, long and slender; brain case narrower; zygomata less spreading ; rostrum longer and straighter ; audital bullae longer, flatter, and less rounded ; hoth upper and lower incisox's slenderer ; lateral bridges of palate incomplete ; molars as in gapperi, except the first upi^er, in which the edges of the first and second inner salient loops meet and coalesce, inclosing a dentine core. Measurements. — Type specimen, measured from alcohol by Dr. C. Hart Merriam : total length, 1.34; tail vertebrae, o9 ; hind foot, 19. Skull: basal length, 22.8 ; nasals, 7 ; zygomatic breadth, 13.5 ; mastoid breadth, 1 1 ; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5. General remarks.— The type and only specimen was skinned and made up from alcohol, and doubtless the colors have changed somewhat ; but the small ears, slender feet and tail, and distinctive cranial characters mark the species as entirely distinct from any other known form. In geographic position it comes nearest to E. pruteus Bangs, of Hamilton Inlet, Lal)rador, but in characters differs more widely from that species than from the more distant gapperi. In a letter to Dr. ^leri-iam, ^Ir. Turner rejiorted the species as abun- dant at Fort Chimo. Evotomys idahoensis Merriam. Evotomi/s idahoensis ^lerriam, North American Fauna Xo. 5, p. 66, July ;J0,' 1891. Tgpe localili/. — Sawtooth or Alturus Lake, east foot of Sawtooth iNIouu- tains, Idaho. Geographic range.— Monntiuns of south central Idaho, between Snake River and the Salmon. General characters. — Size medium, larger than gapperi; conspicuously different in color from any known species, the sides being clear gray ; taillonger than in gapperi or galei ; ears not tipped with rufous; skull narrow and smoothly rounded. Color. — Dorsal stripe well defined, extending from in front of ears to rump, pale liazel, somewhat darkened with black-tipped hairs; face, sides, and rump clear ash gray ; belly washed with white or whitish ; ears sooty gray without rufous tips ; feet gray ; tail bicolor, gray below, blackish above. Side glands scarcely visible in the specimens at hand. Cranial characters. — Skull long, narrow, and smooth, convex inter- orbitally ; zygomatic arches very oblique ; rostrum long ; posterior margin of palate straight ; pterygoids long and slender, longer, straighter, and 132 Bailrij — TJir American Vole.s of the (knus Evotomys. farther apart than in E. saturahts; aiidital bullfe long and laterally ap- pressed ; basioct'ipital wide l>etween IniUaj ; incisors pale ^vellow. Measurements. — Type, measured in flesh by Dr. C. Hart Merriani : total length, 153; tail vertebrae, 48; hind foot, 20. Avei-age of 4 adults from type locality measured by A. H. Howell : 148 ; 44 ; 20.2. Shdl of type : basal length, 2o.5 ; nasals, 8; zygomatic breadth, 13.3; mastoid breadth, 11.6; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5.4. Remarks. — Three specimens from the Salmon River Mts. differ slightly from the type, but the difference may be individual. Specimens of E. sntiirafus from the Craig Mts., Idaho, and of E. gaJei from the Bear- tootli Mts., Montana, though geographically near, show no close afhnity with E. idahoensis. Specimens examined. — Total number, 15, from the two following localities : Idaho: Sawtooth or Alturas Lake, 12; Salmon River Mts., 3. Evotomys mazama Merriam. Evotomys mazama Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., vol. XI, p. 71, April 21," 1897. Type locality. — Crater Lake, Mt. Mazama, Oregon ; altitude, 7000 feet [2130 meters]. Geographic distribution. — Crest of the Cascade Mountains in Oregon. General characters. — Large, long tailed, and bright colored; ears not rufous; skull broad and angular; side glands conspicuous in all of the adult males. Color. — Dorsal stripe extending from in front of ears to base of tail, cin- namon rufous or hazel, shading gradually into huffy gray of sides and face ; belly washed with bufiy white ; oval spot covering side glands slaty gray, more or less frosted with white-tipped hairs ; feet grayish white ; tail sharply bieolor, whitish below, l)lackish above. Cranial characters. — Skull angular, with unusually flat top, long, straight rostrum, and abruptly spreading zygomata ; audita! bulUe large ; pterygoids prominent, wide, and inflated at tlic tips; palatines rounded anteriorly, with a median posterior projection ; enamel surface of incisors orange. Measurements. — Average of 4 adult males from type locality measured by Dr. C. Hart Merriam: total length, 157; tail vertebra;, 52; hind foot, 18.7. Skull of type: basal length, 23.3; nasals, 7.2; zygomatic breadth, 14.2; mastoid breadth, 12.4 ; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5. Bemarks. — Erotomys mazama differs from E. saturatus in slightly larger size and longer tail ; in yellower, less sharply outlined ^dorsal stripe ; no tendency to white thi'oat patch ; in more angular skull with larger audital bulhe and pterygoids ; in orange instead of pale yellowish enamel of upper incisors, and most conspicuously in form of palatine bones. Fiom the dark colored coast species it differs conspicuously in color, but with E. obscurus it needs careful comparison. Specimens examined. — Total number, 19, from 2 localities: Oregon: Crater Lake, 16; Mount Hood, 3. The American Voles of the Genus Evotomys. 133 Evotomys obscurus Merriani. Erofomi/.'^ obsicnrus Merriam, Proc. Bi(jl. Soc. Wash., vol. XI, p. 72, April 21,' 1897. Ttfpe local it;/. — Prospect, Upper Rogue River Valley, Oregon. Geograpliic dktrihution. — West slope of the southern Cascade Range and northern Sierra Nevada in southern Oregon and northern California. (leru'i-aJ chardctirs.— \ rather large, grayish species, with small gray ears and indistinct markings ; side glands inconspicuous, but easily discovered on blowing apart the fur. The characters given are mainly those distin- guishing the species from E. viazama. Color. — Upper parts olive graj-, with an ill defined dorsal area of cin- namon rufous, obscured b\' black hairs ; lower part of sides and face clear gray ; belly washed with dull buff; ears dusky, not rufous tipped ; feet dusky gray ; tail distinctly bicolor in specimens from the type localit)', more sharply bicolor in specimens from Carberry Ranch, California. Cranial characters. — Skull less angular and abruptly sjireading than that of E. )nazama and with a more arched dorsal line; rostrum short, de- curved, with lower outline well arched; incisive foramina short and wide; palatines and audital bulhe as in E. mazama. Mramrements. — Type .specimen, measured in the flesh by E. A. Preble: total length, 155; tail vertebne, 47; hind foot, 17. Skull of type: basal length (basion to gnathion), 21.8; zygomatic breadth, 13.3; mastoid breadth, 11.5; alveolar length of molar series, 4.5. Remarks. — ^The series of specimens includes both young and adult indi- viduals collected in May, August, September, and December, but appar- ently none in full winter pelage. In both geograi)hic position and specific characters this species lies between E. mazama of the summit of the Cas- cades and E. californicus of the coast region. On the side of Mount Mazama it almost or quite meets the range of ^. viazama, with which none of the specimens show evidence of intergradation. Specimens from Carberry Ranch show a slight approach toward californicus, and future collections may prove ohsctirus to be a lighter-colored, interior form of that species. Specimens exami}ied. — Total numljer, 10, from 5 localities: Oregon : Prospect, 4 ; west side of Crater Lake, 1 ; Grand Pass, 1 ; Siskiyou, 1. California: Carberry Ranch (near INIontgomery Creek), Shasta County, 3. Evotomys californicus Merriam. Evotomys californicus Merriam, North American Fauna No. 4, p. 26, pi. ii, fig. 2, Oct. 8, 1890. Type locality. — Eureka, Humboldt Co., California. Geograpliic distribution.— Coast strip of Oregon and northern California. General characters. — Oneof the largest, darkest, and longest-tailed species in North America. Dorsal area ill defined ; ears small, and in May and 134 Bnilci/ — TJie Americdii Volcx of the Getnis Evofomys. June specimens almost naked, not rufous ; lateral glands well defined in half of the specimens examined, conspicuous in the type and two other old males. Color. — Upper parts dark bister or sepia, becoming dusky on rump and dull, dark chestnut on back ; dorsal area indistinct and shading gradually into color of sides; oval patches of dense fur covering side glands {plum- beous in slight contrast to surrounding fur; belly pale bntfy or soiled whitish, darkened by the plumbeous under fur; tail sharply ))icolor, blackish above and at tip all round, whitish beneath; feet whitish or but slightly dusky ; ears dusky, with no rufous or light-colored hairs. Cranial and dental cJiararters. — Skull thick and heavy, with short, stout decurved rostrum ; audital buUfe and pterygoids both relatively and act- ually larger than in any other species ; palatines usually triangular in outline instead of U-shaped, as in other species, and with a triple or single pointed posterior {projection ; zygomatic arches bent well down and not abruptly spreading ; molars wide and heavy ; enamel folds crowded lon- gitudinally and irregular; posterior upper molar short, with terminal looi) very small or, in 4 specimens out of 6, absent. Mea.mrcm.enfs.— Type, measured in flesh by T. S. Palmer: total length, 161; tail vertebne, 50; hind foot, 21. An adult rP from Yaquina Bay, Oregon, measured by B. J. Bretherton : total length, 163 ; tail vertebras, 55 ; hind foot, 20. Skull: basal length, 22.8 ; nasals, 7.5 ; zygomatic breadth) 14; mastoid width, 12.8 ; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5.3. General remarls. — In geographic position tins species lies nearest to E. ot.sc«j'?(.s on the east and to E. occklentalls on the north, and with these species only does it need comparison. The darker color, larger size, and longer tail distinguish it at a glance froui E. obscurus without reference to the numerous cranial differences. Specimens from localities away from the coast ( W'illetts and Sherwoods, near the center of Mendocino County, California) are somewhat smaller and lighter colored than the type, which suggests that the species may grade into E. obscurus, though at present no intermediate specimens are available. E. californicus is readily distin- guished from its northern neighbor, E. occideutalis, by light feet and belly, bicolor tail, larger size, and blacker coloration, in contradistinction to the sooty feet and belly, concolor tail, snuUler size, and more rufous back of occidentali.'i. S2^ecimens examined. — Total number, i), from the 5 following localities: California: Eureka, 1 ; Willetts, Mendocino County, 3 ; Sherwoods, 3. Oregon: Yaquina Bay, 1; Oregon City, 1. Evotomys occidentalis Merriam. Evotomiis occidentalis INIerriam, North American Fauna, No. 4, p. 25, pi. ii, fig.' 1, Oct. 8, 1890. Evotom>/s 2»ji/gin:eus Rhoads is the young of E. occidt'iilulis. Specliiieit.'i exiimhwd. — Total uuinl)ei", 10, from 5 loeaHties. Wanhingloii: Aberdeen, 6; Teniuo, 10; Steihicoom, 2; head of Cas- cade River, 1 ini. British Columbia: Port Moody, 1. Evotomys nivaiius * sp. nov. Tijpe from Olympic Mountains, Washington, at altitude of 4000 feet [1220 meters], on N W. slope of Mt. EUinor. No. t)6203, 9 ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected July 9, 189-t, by C. P. Streator. Collector's number, 4025. Geographic distribution. — Mt. EUinor and probably other high peaks in the Olympic Mountains. General characters. — Size and [iroportions about as in E. occidentaUs, but color lighter and brighter, with skull more angular. Fur long and lax ; ears small and scantily liaired ; tail and feet slender, well covered with short hair. Color. — Dorsal stripe well defined, extending from anterior base of ears to base of tail, dull light chestnut; sides dark gray with little buffy suf- fusion ; belly thinly washed with soiled whitish, darkened by plumbeous under fur ; postauricular spots whitish ; ears dusky ; tail distinctly bicolor, soiled whitish below, dusky above ; feet dirty white. Cranial cJiaracters. — Skull short, wide, angular, and flat; zygomatic process of maxilla projecting at right angles to axis of skull ; zygomatic process of squamosal spreading ; frontals deeply concave postorbitally ; lateral ridges of frontals and parietals prominent ; audital bullre as large as in ^. occidentaUs; pterygoids slender; palatines short, anterior edge truncate or rounded, posterior edge straight; tooth pattern different in each of the three specimens; incisors yellow like those of E. occidentaUs. Measurements. — Average of I! adult females froiu type locality, measured in the flesh by C. P. Streator: total length, 150; tail vertebrae, 50; hind foot, 18. Skull oi type: basal length, 21 ; zygomatic breadth, 13; nasals, 0.5 ; mastoid breadth, 11.5 ; alveolar length of upper molar series, 5. Remarks. — The specimens from the type locality were caught on July 9, at the edge of an alpine lake, at aljout 4000 feet altitude. At that date Mr. Streator roports about one-third of the lake covered with ice and snow from the previous winter, while deep snow drifts lay on most of the neighboring slope. Ice formed over the water almost every night during his stay, from Juh^ 8 to 11. The snow banks do not entirely leave Mt. EUinor during the summer. At this altitude the timber is smaller and more scattered and the undergrowth less dense than lower down. The species shows no close relationship with any other, except occi- dentaUs. The types of these two are widely different, but specimens from *The name nivarius seems appropriate to this alpine species, found in close proximity to snow banks that never melt. The American Voles of the Genus Evotomys. 137 the vicinity of Lake Cushman, at tlie east base of the Olympic Moun- tains, show either that the two species meet there or that intergrades occur. A more complete series of specimens is needed to prove inter- gradation, and until such a series is obtained E. Jiivarivs may stand as a full sjiecies. Specimens examined. — Total number, 6, from three localities. Washingfon : Mt. Ellinor, o ; Lake Cushman, 2; Skokomish Eiver (10 miles above Lake Cushman), 1. [The account of the following species is contributed by Outram Bangs. J " Evotomys proteus sp. nov. " 7)/pe from Hamilton Inlet, Labrador. Xo. 4081, 9 old adult, coll. of E. A. and O. Bangs. Collected Aug. 27, 1895, by C. H. Goldthwaite. " General characters. — Size largest of the northeastern forms; ear and hind foot large ; colors very variable ; usual coloring of adults yellowish or grayish, with a darker (often sooty) dorsal stripe. Red-backed indi- viduals are in a small minority, and even these have the face gray ; feet and tail more liairy than in gapperi or ochraceus; skull large and angular, with deep interorbital constriction, behind which the brain case expands more sc[uarely than in either gapperi or ochraceus, with more strongly marked spur-like process of squamosal. " Color. — The color of this mouse varies enormously. The type (repre- senting the color phase that seems to be most usual) : sides, flanks, cheeks, and face smoke gray, somewhat shaded with yellowish and drab, dark- ening on back into a broad dorsal stripe of sepia, and paling off on under parts to light smoke gray ; feet and hands dull gray ; tail indistinctly bicolor, dusky above, dull gray below, liairy. No. 4088 has the whole upper parts, back, and sides dull yellowish, the dorsal stripe slightly darker. No. 4054 has the sides darker yellowish brown and the dorsal stripe bright chestnut, while No. 4139 is slaty all over, slightly paler below, and darker dorsallj'. Every degree of intermediate coloration can be found between these exti'emes. " Cranial characters. — The skull is larger than that of either gapperi or ocliraceus, the brain case more angular, the interorbital constriction deeper, and the forward spur-like process of squamosal much more stronglj'^ marked. The dentition does not appear to differ materially from that of either gapperi or ochraceus. " Measurements (taken in the flesh by collector). — The type, 9 old adult : total length, 171 ; tail vertebne, 53 ; hind foot, 21 ; ear from notch, 17. Average of the 20 largest adult specimens : total length, 161.8 ; tail verte- brae, 48.83; hind foot, 20.47; ear from notch, 17-75." •30— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vul. .Xr, 1S;)7 EXPLANATION OF PLATE IIL Fig. 1. Ei'otomys rutllus (FaDiis). ad., S}'d Varanser, Fiumark, Norway, No. 6555, Merriam Coll. 1, top of skull; la, palate region. 2. Eootomys dawsoni Merriam. cf ad., Yakutat, Alaska, No. 735G6, U. S. Nat. Mas., Biological Survey Coll. 2, top of skull; 2a, palate region. 3. Eootomys loruigi subsp. nov. (^ ad. (type), Portland, Traill Co., N. Dakota, No. 757!)5, U. 8. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. 3, top of skull. 4. Evotnmi/s nirarius sp. nov. $ ad. (type), Mt. Ellinor, Olympic Mts., Washington, No. 66203, U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. 4, top of skull. 5. Evotomys urangeli sp. nov. 5. $ ad. (type), Wrangel Island, Alaska, No. 74724, U. 8. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. {oa, same locality ; No. 74730.) 5, top of skull ; •5«, palate region. 6. Evotomys mazama Men-iam. 6. (^ ad. (type). Crater Lake, Oi-egon, No. 79913, U. 8. Nat. Mu.s., Biological Survey Coll. (6a (J^, same locality ; No. 79915.) 6, top of skull ; 6«, palate region. (138) PROC. BIOL. SOC. WASH., XI. 1897 PL. Ill ^^^£:^^f^ < s a: < W K — < b; > o - 1- < c - Vol. XI, p. 139 May 13, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE / \^'*^ BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON DESCRIPTION OF A NEW BAT FROM MARGARITA ISLAND, VENEZUELA. BY GERRIT S. MILLER, Jk. Throuuli the kindness of ]\h-. F. W. True, curator of nianiinals in the U. S. National Museum, I have heen permitted to exam- ine the bats collected b}' Lieut. A\'irt Robinson on Margarita Island, Venezuela, in July, 1895. Among them is a specimen of Rhogehsa which differs considerably from an}^ of the Mexican species of the genus, and without doul)t represents an unde- scribed insular form. It may stand as : Rhogeessa minutilla sp. nov. Vespfnujn parruhts Robinson, Proc. U. S. National Museum, XVIII, p. 051', 1890. Ti/pe from INIargarita Island, Venezuela. No. ()3216, (J* ad., U. S. National Museum. Collected July 8, 1895, by Lieut. Wiit Rol)inson. Collector's number, 463. General characters. — Most like MJiogeissa turnida H. Allen, but much smaller. Color. — Fur everywhere liyjlit yellowish brown to base, the hairs on the back tipped with chestnut ; ears and meniljranes in dr}- specimen dark brown. Skull and teeth. — The skull of Rhogeessa minutilla is smaller than that of R. inmuhi, and apparently has a narrower brain case ; but as it is injured, the cranial characters cannot be detei'mined with certainty. Teeth essen- tiall}' as in R. tumkla. Measurements. — Total length, about 05; tail vertebree, 25; tibia, 11; foot, 5; forearm, 25; thumb, 3.6; longest finger, 51; ear from meatus, 11.8; width of ear, 8; tragus, 6.4 ; greatest length of skull, 11.8; upper tooth row, 5; lower tooth row, 5.6; mandible, 9. 31— Kioi,. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (139) Vol. XI. p. tn May 13, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON DESCRIPTION OF A NEW VOLE FROM KASHMIR. BY GERRIT S. IMILLER, Jr. Mr. Oklfield Thomas, of the British Museum, has recently sent me for determination a vole collected by Dr. J. E. T. Aitchison, F. R. S., at Gulmerg, Kashmir. The specimen proves to be a Mia-otm of the subgenus Hi/peracriv.s.^ It differs from Microtus fertilis (True),t t^ie only otber known member of the subgenus, in several important characters, and evidently represents a new species, which may stand as : Microtus aitchisoni J sp. nov. Tjjpe from Gulmerg, Kashmir, altitude 9000 feet. Adult rj" (in alcohol), British ^luseum collection (not i-egistered). Collected by Dr. J. E. T. Aitchison. General characters. — General appearance much as in Microtus feri'dw (True), but size considerabl}' larger and color apparently yellower. Color. — Color on l)ack bister slightly darkened with blackish and fad- ing rapidly on sides into light yellowish wood brown of belly ; tail olj- scurely bicolor, dark brown above, light yellowish l)rown below ; feet dusky ; whiskers scant and short, tiie longest reaching about to ears, mixed brown and silvery gray. Skull. — The skull of the type is reduced to fragments, but these indicate that it was considerably larger than that of M. fertilis. Teeth. — The teeth oi Microtus aitchisoni are uniformly much larger than in M. fertilis, but the enamel pattern is essentially as in tlie latter. | Measurements.— Total length, 135; tail vertebrae, 33; hind foot, 19; front foot, 13; ear from meatus, 12; ear from crown, 7.4 (from specimen in alcohol) ; maxillary tooth row, 7 ; mandibular tooth row, 6.8. * See North American Fauna No. 12, p. 54. fProc. U. S. National Museum, NVII, p. 10, 1894. tAt Mr. Thomas' request, this vole is named after the collector of the type specimen. I For figure of enamel pattern of Microtus fertilis, see North American Fauna No. 12, p. 55. 32— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XT, 1897 (HI) Vol. XI, p. 143 May 13, 1897 PROCEEDINGS BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON DESCRIPTION OF A NEW MUSKRAT FROM THE GREAT DISMAL S^yAMP, VIRGINIA. BY Du. C. HART MERRIAM. Anions; the new mammals obtained at Lake Drummond, in tlie heart of the great Dismal Swamp, is a curious Muskrat. It is by far the handsomest of the three forms thus far recognized in the genus, and differs from them all in color and in the large size of the teeth. Fiber macrodon sp. nov. Tijpe from Lake Drummond, Dismal Swamp, Va. No. 75940, $ ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected Oct. 9, 1895, by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original No. 1788. General characters. — Similar to Fiber zebethicus, l)ut color very much darker; incisor and molar teeth very much larger. Color. — Entire upper parts, abdomen, and S{)ot on chin blackish brown, darkest and richest on back ; throat, sides of face, anterior part of breast (to plane of fore legs), and inguinal region soiled whitish or very i)ale drab, more or less tinged with pale fulvous; long hairs of sides and belly tipped with ]Yd\e dull fulvous. Cranial a)ul dental cliuracters. —Hknll similar to that of F. zebethicus, but braincase more elongated posteriorly ; squamosal root of zygoma more sloping (not standing out so squarely); incisors heavier (upper ones meas- uring 7.5 nnn. across cutting edges); molars much larger and heavier, the upper series measuring about 16 mm. on crowns. BemarJcs.— The large teeth and remarkable color of the Lake Drum- mond Muskrat suffice to distinguish it at a glance. Whether or not there is a seasonal color cliange cannot l)e determined from the material at hand. Measurements. — Type specimen: total length, 567; tail vertebrae, 244 ; hind foot, 80. 'A'i — Biol. So<;. Wash., Vi XI, 1S'J7 (143) Vol. XI, pp. 145-146 June 9, 1897 PROCEEDINGS / BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON \'>. DESCRIPTIONS OF A NEW EAGLE FROM ALASKA AND A NEW SQUIRREL FROM LOWER CALIFORNIA. BY C. H. TOWNSENl). The following very distinct forms are among tlie collections contributed by the writer to the U. S. National Museum between 1889 and 1895 : Haliaetus leucocephalus alascanus new subspecies. Suhspecific characters. — Differing from H. leucocephalus in size, being con- siderably larger. Habitat. — Alaska. Type. — (5^ (U. S. Nat. Mus. Xo. 151,567). Unalaska, Aleutian Islands, May 22, 1895. C. H. Tovvnsend. Dimensions of Type. — Wing, 23.75; tail, 11.50; tarsus, 4 ; culmen, 2.60 ; depth of bill, 1.50; hind claw, 1.50. Coniparatire Measureinent.'<. Locality. Florida Florida and Lou- isiana Aleutian Islands Averages. 4 ad. (j^s. 3 " $s. 4 " d^s. 2 " $s. Bill. Wing. Tail. Tarsus. Length. Depth. 21.12 10.43 3.40 2.43 1.27 22.75 23.81 24.62 11.31 11.56 12.00 3.42 4.18 3.75 2.45 2.50 2.62 1.32 1.40 1.50 o 1.50 1.60 1.62 1.75 In forty si>eciniens examined from localities between Florida and Alaska there is a regular increase in size northward. Eagles from north- 34— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (145) 146 Townsend — A New Eagle and a New Squirrel. ern States are larj^er tluiu tliose from Florida and Louisiana. In addi- tion to the other differences in size, the bill of the Alaskan bird is wider, while the edging to the feathers, especially on the wing coverts, is both lighter and broader. The egg of the northern bird is distinctly larger, the average of sixteen specimens being 7;!. 5 x 57.5 mm., while that of forty-five Florida specimens is 69 x 53.5 mm. Sciurus hudsonius mearnsi new subspecies. Sclurus hudsonius califomicus Allen. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., III., 1890, pp. 165-167. This form is characterized by extreme pallor of coloration and by hav- ing middle dorsal region tinged pale j'ellowish instead of reddish, as in specimens from central and northern California. A general hoariness pervades the entire upper surface ; under surface pure white, without traces of annulation ; under fur light plumbeous throughout. These speci- mens have a broad black lateral stripe. The ears are conspicuously tufted with long black hairs, while the top of the head is pale grayish instead of blackish, as in specimens from more northerly localities. Tail with lateral hairs very broadly tipped with white ; median area of under side whitish gray, of upper side yellowish gray; terminal third black, fringed with white. Fore and hind feet yellowish white. One specimen (No. 18267, U. S. Nat. Mus.) has acquired the post-breeding pelage on the fore but not on the hind feet, the new hair being buff-yellow instead of soiled white. Specimens from the interior region of northern California are much darker, with distinctly more reddish upper tinge and less hoari- ness, while the under fur is decidedly darker plumbeous. Specimens of S. hudsonius mogoUonensis and S. hridsonius fremond have a more general reddish suffusion of the upper parts, and in winter much dusky vermicu- lation of the under surfaces, while the feet are nearly black and the ear tufts less pronounced. i8. hudsonitis mogoUonensis is considerably larger, the hind foot measuring 54 mm. in mogoUonaisis against 51 mm. in mearnsi; the skull 51 x 28.7 against 48.8 x 27.6. Ti/pe No. yff!i, U. S. Nat. Mus., from San Pedro Martir Mountains, Lower California (altitude about 7,000 feet). Collected in May, 1889, by C. H. Townsend. Named for Dr. Edgar A. Mearns, U. S. A., Naturalist of the Mexican Boundary Commission of 1892-'94. Vol. XI, pp. 147-148 June 9, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON LEPIJS BAILEYI, A NEW COTTONTAIL RABBIT FROM WYOMING. BY C. HART MERRIAM. In the summer and early autumn of 1893 my assistant, Mr. Vernon Bailey, and I made a biological reconnaissance of the middle part of the State of W^^oming, which we traversed from west to east. On entering the Wind River Basin a short distance south of the town of Lander, the first mammal to attract my attention was a large, pale Cottontail with ears even longer than those of the Arizona .Jack Cottontail (Lepus arizonse Allen). The species was new to me, but I became well acquainted with it during the remainder of the season, for throughout our course in the Wind River and Bighorn Basins one or more were seen every day, and not having been disturbed by man they were very tame, often permitting us to i)ass within 20 feet (7 meters) with- out taking alarm. When started they usually ran only a short distance and squatted behind a sage brush or greasewood bush, or ill the Inu-row of a prairie dog or badger, with their long ears laid back on the neck. By rushing suddenly toward them sev- eral were driven into these burrows. They were most active at dusk, when their large white tails could be seen flashing in va- rious directions. When at rest the tails are lowered and appar- ently narrowed, so that the gra}'' of the upper surface conceals the white, but the instant the animal starts the tail is raised and bent up on the rump. When partly erected it seems to curve to the left, but when fully up and pressed against the rump it was found to curve to the right (convexity to the left) in seven cases out of eight. In all of these respects it resembles the tail of the 35— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 18'J7 (147) 148 Merriam — J New Cottontail Rabbit from Wyoming. white-tailed ground siiuirrel of the southern deserts Amviosper- mo'philus leacurus). The new Cottontail, which I take pleasure in naming Lepus baileiji, after my com[)anion, Mr. Vernon Bailey, is a northern rei)resentative of the arizonas series, with which it agrees in the large size of the ears and audital biillfB. It inhabits the Upper Sonoran and Transition Zones and ranges completely across the lower parts of the Owl Creek Mts., which mountains separate the Wind River Basin from the Bighorn Basin. On the north the species follow^ the Bighorn Basin into Montana, and on the east it was last killed l)y us on Crazy Woman Creek, a tributary of Powder River in northeastern Wyoming. Southeast of Powder River it wan afterward obtained at Douglas by Mr. J. Alden Loring. In the Wind River Basin we found it in company with the short-eared Cottontail {Lejnisnuitalli), though the latter seemed to V)e closely confined to the willow thickets along the streams, while the long-eared species Avas found everywhere over the sage and sarcobatus plains and on the open deserts. Lepus baileyi sp. nov. Wyoming Cottontail. Type from Spring Creek, east side Bighorn Basin, Wj^oming. No. 56016, $ ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biol. Snrvey Coll. Collected Sept. 17, 1893, by C. Hart Merriam and Vernon Bailey. Original No. 4372. General characters. — Size large ; coloration pale ; ears and tail very long. Similar in general ajipearance to L. nuttalU, but i)aler, with much longer ears and tail. Color. — Upper parts pale pinkish buff, sparingly lined with black hairs ; nuchal jiatch pale fulvous; rump narrowly grayish, lined with black hairs; ears like back, but terminal fourth bordered by black ; outer sides of fore and hind legs pale fulvous; fore and hind feet white or whitish, with basal fur on outer side of feet more or less suffused with i)ale ful- vous; pectoral collar (broad and fall) and tuft on each side of inguinal region pale buffy fulvous ; under parts white ; tail white, e.xcept a grayish band on dorsal surface. Cranial characters. — Skull similar to that of L. arizome, but larger and heavier, with decidedly larger teeth. Contrasted with L. nidtalli of the same region, the skull as a whole is larger; the auditab bullaj very much larger ; the ])ostorbital processes larger, broader, and more produced ante- riorly. Measuranents. —Tyi^e specimen: total length, 418; tail vertebrce, 50; hind foot, 100 ; ear from base, 1)4. Average of 8 si)ecimens from the Wind River and Bighorn Basins: total length, 404; tail vertebrae, 55; hind foot, 96. Vol. XI, pp. 149-151 June 9, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THR BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON I - ■ v^-— V- THE AFRICAN SWIMMINCx CRABS OF THE GENUS CALLINEGTES?^ BY MARY J. RATH BUN. This paper is supplementary to the one on 'The Genus OiUi- necies,'' ^ since the publication of which tlie writer has examined the types of a number of species of doubtful position and has been able to correct the s3monymy. ;|; It becomes necessary to change the name of two species, larvatus to margiiiatii,s, tumidus to exasperaUis, and advisable to consider the subsj^tecies, tumidus gladiator, a species. One new species is added, (J. latimanus. Callinectes marginatus (A. Mihie Edwards). Neptnnuf: margimtfiif! A. JNIilne Edwards, Arch. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, X, 318, pi. XXX, fig. 2, 1861. Ga]>oii. Types examined (.'!,/'»'. $ ). Calluu'cles larvatus OrdwAy, Boston Journ. Nat. Hist., VII, 573, 18().']. Key West, Tortngas, Bahamas, Haiti. Callinectes larmlas A. Milne Edwards, Crnst. Reg. Mex., 225, 1879 (variety of ('. . cit., 229, 1879 (variety of C. dia- caiiflius). Cape Verde Islands. Types examine< ^• In the abdomen of the male (fig. 7) the third or compound segment is shorter than in C. toxotes; the penultimate seg- ment is broader at its i)roximal end and much constricted at one-third the distance from the pi-oximal end. Sides of manus. .'Vbdo- . . i • i i men of male terminal segment Sill uoiis. Appendages reaching beyond X ^. the ti]) of the abdomen. In the female the sixth segment is onh' slightly longer than the fifth. Meri of chelipeds three-spined on inner mai'gin. Propodus of larger chelii)ed (fig. 8) with the lower margin very convex below the basal half of the pollex. The fingers are there- fore more gaping, the pollex being no wider Fig.s.—C. laiimanus. Larger than in C. toxotes. "'^"^^- ^ ^^- Dimensions. — (^, No. 19877: Length to median sinus of front, 51 mm. ; to tips of frontal teeth, 52.5; width, 115; length of lateral spine, 11.8; of preceding tooth, 4.5. Tijpe locality . — hugos, Bight of Benin, Guinea ; Sir A. Molony, collector. A fine series of this species is preserved in the British JVIuseum (No. 91. 4. 1). One specimen, a male, has been presented to the TT. S. National ^luseum (No. l!i877). Fig. y.—C. lati- Vol. XI, pp. 153-167 June 9, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE /0' BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON. A REVISION OF THE NOMENCLATURE OF THE BRACHYURA* BY MARY J. RATHBUN. In reviewing the history of the genera of Brachyura f it is evi- dent that many names in current use violate accepted rules of nomenclature. In the following pages especial attention has been paid to generic names, with incidental notes on the names of s})ecies. The Code of the American Ornithologists' Union has been observed in making changes. Many of the problems which have arisen are, however, not covered by the provisions of the code, and recourse to the opinions of individuals has been deemed advisable. The writer is under obligation especially to Dr. Walter Faxon and Dr. Theodore Gill not only for advice, but for much practical assistance. Others whose opinions have been consulted on various doubtful points are Drs. J. A. Allen, W. H. Dall, C. Hart Merriam, T. S. Palmer, C. W. Richmond, L. Stejneger, C. W. Stiles, Profs. A. E. Verrill and S. I. Smith, and Messrs. J. E. Benedict, G. S. Miller, Jr., and R. Ridgway. It is but proper to add that no one but the writer is responsible for errors which may appear. For convenience, the names which it is thought necessary to change are discussed under ten different headings. 1. Names diverted from their original meaning. — Canon XXII of the Code of the American Ornithologists' Union says : " In no * Published by permission of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institu- tion. fThe term Brachyura is here used as limited by Miers, 1886, with the addition of the Raninidaj, Alcock, 1896. 37— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (153) 154 Ratlihim — Revision of Nomenclature of the Brachyura. case should the name [of the genus] be transferred to a group containing none of the species originally included in the genus." The following names have been tluis transferred: Uca, Lttpa, Leptrypodin, Clnrodius, Stenncionop-^, and Naxia of Leach, Halimus and FlatyoiiicliKS of Latreille, and Stenorijnchus Lamarck. Uca was established by Leacli in Brewster's Edinburgh Ency- clopaedia, volume VII, 1814,* for the Cancel- uca or v.ka Shaw, 1802, which he proposed to call Uca una. This is a fiddler crab and not the Cancer Vca [;u;a] of Linnasus, 1767, and the Uca una of the Marcgrave de Liebstad. 1G4S. Latreille in 1817 (Nouv- Diet. Hist. Nat., XII, 517), rightly considering it a case of mis- taken identity, attempted to improve matters by calling Leach's Uca, Gelasimus, and giving the genus Uca to the Linntean spe- cies ; but this proceeding is not sanctioned by the rules of today. Before Leach's Uca was abandoned its existence was recognized by Say in 1817. Uci Latreille may l)e known as Ucides, nov., and its type species as Ucides cordatus (Lianasus, 1763) =Uca una Marcgrave, 1648, which can no longer " be mentioned as a rare instance of one that has been allowed to possess the names by which it was figured and described centuries ago." (Stebbing, Hist. Crust., p. 84.) In 1814, Edin. Encyc, VII, 390, Leach placed Cancer pelagicus Linnseus, 1758, in the genus Liipa, and in the same year, in the * There has been some doubt as to the date of Leach's article, ' Crus- taceology.' All the volumes of the Edinburgh Encycloi)a?dia bear the date 1830 on the title i)age. Desmarest and other writers give the dates 1813-1814 for Leach's article. Dr. Stebbing, who has taken pains to col- lect evidence on the subject, informs nie that volume VII of the Edin- Inirgh Encyclopsedia gives no dates subsequent to 1814, the history of Denuiiirk being curried down to .lanuary of that year. (See also Chal- Icngcr Amphipoda, vol. I, p. 85, and quotation of Leach on page 155 of this article.) It has been suggested that the original article appeared in 1813 and the Appendix in 1814. I believe, however, that the first two pages of the article were published in 1813 and the remainder, including the Appendix, in 1814. In the Edinl;)urgh edition of vol. VII, but not in the Philadelphia reprint, the signatures of the lirst half are marked " vol. VII, part I," and of the second half " vol. VII, part II." Part IT begins on page 385, or the third page of Leach's article, and the inference is that Part I apjieared in 1813 and Part II in 1814. All descri]>tions of genera and species appear in Part II of the volume, and in this part of the original article appear many references to the Appendi.K and Index, indicating that the Appendix, although written later than the body of the article, was not l^ublished later. 'Revision of the Nomenclature of the BracJiyura. 155 Zoological Miscellany, I, 123, pi. liv, described the new species Lupa forcei)s. That the former should take precedence is proved by the following, which appears in Leach's article 'Annulosa ' in the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Supplement, vol. 1, 1816 : " This genus was instituted by Dr. Leach in the Edinburgh Encyclo- ])tudia,and has since been given with amended characters in the Zoological Miscellany and in the eleventh volume of the Trans- actions of the Linnean Society." Lupa is a synonym of Portunus as restricted by Latreille, 1810 (see page 160). Those who do not admit his restriction must use the name Lupa in place of Neip- tunus de Haan, 1833. Lupella, nov., is proposed for Lupa forceips Leach, or the genus Lupa of de Haan, 1833. Portunus as used by Leach, 1814, and by succeeding writers may be called Liocar- cinus, a name proposed by Stimpson, 1871, for a perhaps unnec- essary division of that genus. Leptopodia was established by Leach, Edinburgh Encyclopae- dia, Appendix, 431, 1814, for two species, Maia phalangium (Pen- nant, 1777) Leach [= Cancer rostraius Linnaeus, 1761 = Inachus longirostris Fabricius (sp. 1775), t^^pe examined = Macropodia longirostris Leach, 1814 {teste Leach, 1815) ] and Leptopodia tenui- rostris Leach, 1814 (Appendix), which are congeneric, and the first of which is the type of Macropodia, Edin. Encyc, 395, 1814. It should be observed that on page 395 the name Leptopodia appears in the synon^miy of Afaia jihalangium, thus : ' \_Maia'\ 8. Phalangium. C. pitahingiuia Pennant. Leptopodia phalangium, Leach's MSS. See ]ilate ccxxi, fig. 4, and Appendix.' This is followed l)y ' [Genus] XXV. Macropodia. Sp. 1. Longirostris Fabr. C. dodecos L. ? ' Tlie genus il/aa-ojKxivVt is then described. As noted above, the species phalaagium, and longirostris are iden- tical. The preference should be given to the name of the genus regularly established rather than to one suggested l)ut not adopted. Leptopodia of the Appendix, although probably pub- lished simultaneously with Macropodia, was the result of subse- quent revision, and should not, I think, take precedence. Lep- topodia is therefore a s3monym of Macropodia. The si)ecies sagit- taria, Fabricius, 1793, which has been considered the type of LepAopodia, was not placed in the genus until 1815, Zool. Misc., II, 15, and Trans. Linn. Soc. London, XI, 331, where Leach retains Macropodia for phalangium and tenuirostris and recharac- terizes Leptopodia. See also Mai. Podoph. Brit., explan. of pi. 150 Rathbun — Revision oj Noinenclature of the Brachyura. xxiii, 1815 * For LejUopodia Leach, 1815, not 1814, Sienorynchus may l:)e used. (See page 158.) Clorodius WHS a manuscript name of Leach, first published, but not adopted,t by Desmarest, 1828, with the name of the type, ' Cancer dentatas Fabr.,' corrected in 1825 to ' Cancer 11-dentatas Fabr.' The first citation was an undoubted typographical error, as there is no such species as C. dentatus Fabricius. The genus was briefly defined by Desmarest as having fingers with spoon- shaped tips, a character which he includes in his diagnosis of Cancer 11-dentatus, but which unfortunately that species does not possess, a circumstance which, it seems to me, does not invali- date the genus. Clorodius aj^pears with its original signification in de Haan's ' Fauna Japonica,' 1833. In 1830, Riippell added to the genus a species, C. niger (Forska3l, 1775), having little in com- mon with the type. In 1834, Milne Edwards recharacterized the * As the plates of Leach's ' JMalacostrara Podophthahiia Britanniai' are not dated and were not issued in numerical order, it is impossible to de- termine the sequence of publication in a bound coi>y of the volume. The following table, showing the plates and the date of each number, was kindly furnished me by Mr. Stebl^ing, who obtained them from Mr. Ber- nard Quaritcli, the publisher of the concluding parts : Number. Plates. Date. 1 8, 14, 22 Jan. 1, 1815. II 4, 15, 40 Mar. 1, " III 17, 28 A, 28 B May 1, " IV 19,29,41 July 1, " V 23, :J0 Sept.l, " VI 1, 2, 26 Nov. 1, " VII 24,38 Jan. 1, 181(5. Vlll 3, 12, 13 Mar. 1, " IX 42, 7, 43 I\Iay 1, " X 6, 31, 32 July 1, " XI 9, 11, 33 Sept. 1, " XII 21A, 21B, 5 Nov. 1, " XIII 18, 20 Jan. 1, 1817. XIV 16,25,44 Apr. 1, " XV 22 B, 37 A, 37 B 'July 1, " XVI 22 C, 38, 39 Dec. 1, " XVII 9 B, 10 Mar. 1, 1820. XVIII I )9A, 24A,27, 34| ^^^. XIX j \35, 37C, 45 t I believe that if an author defines and pu])lishes a name it becomes available over a later name whether he adopts it or not. 'Revision of the Nomenclature of the Brachyn.ra. 157 genus, making C. nlger the t3'i)e, and this meaning has clung to it to the })resent day. In restoring Clorodius to its original status, it becomes a synonym of Atelecydus Leach, 1814. Chlorodiella, nov., is proposed for Chlorodias Milne Edwards. Stenocionops Leach, MS., while not adopted by Desmarest, 1823, was said to include Mala taurus Lamarck, 1818, which is s3aion3^- mouswith Ca.ncer cornudo Herbst, 1804,* and C. f ur cat as OYixier, 1791. Later, in 1825, the generic name was transferred by La- treille to the species cervicornis Herbst, 1803, which has ever since been regarded as the type. In its rightful meaning, Stenocionops takes the place of Perlcera Latreille, Encyc. Meth., X, 699, 1825. S. cervicornis may be known as Ophthalmias (nov.) cervicornis. Naxia, a manuscript name of Dr. Leach, was first defined and published, but not adopted, b}^ Latreille, Encyc. Meth., Entom., X, 140, 1825, and one species assigned to it, Pisa aiirita, nov. Naxia of INIilne Edwards, 1834, has a different definition and con- tains only the species serpulifera Guerin ; it should be consid- ered a s3a"ionym of Naxioides A. Milne Edwards, 1865. Halimus was ver}^ briefly described by Latreille in Cuvier's Regne Animal, ed. 2, IV, 60, 1829. No type was specified, but a single species, H. aries Latreille, is figured in Guerin's Icono- graphie. As this w'as the only species previous to 1834, it must * Perhaps no single copy of Herbst's ' Naturgeschichte der Krabben und Krebse ' contains all the title pages of the different parts, and hence qno- tations from this work are full of inaccuracies. The following table, gives the date of issue, number of plates, signatures, and pages of each Heft : Volume. Heft. Date. Plates. Signatures. Pages. I 1 1782 I A-L 1-86 I 2-5 1783 II-l X M-Z 87-182 I 6 1785 X-XIII Aa-Cc 183-206 I 7 1788 XIV-XVII Dd-Gg 207-238 I 8 1790 XYIII-XXI Hh-Mm 239-274 II 1 1791 XXII-XXV A-F 1-48 II 2 1792 XXVI-XXIX G-K 49-78 IE 3 1793 XXX-XXXIII L-N 79-98 II . 4 1793 XXXIV-XXXVI O-T 99-146 ir 5 1794 XXXVII-XL U-X 147-162 II 6 et seq. 1796 XLI-XLVI Y-Ff 163-226 III 1 1799 XLVII-L A -I 1-66 III 2 1801 LI-LI V A-F 1-46 III *> 1803 LV-LVIII A-G 1-54 III 4 1804 LIX-LXII A-G 1-49 158 Rathbnii — Revlsioii of Nomenclature of the Brachyiira. be considered the type. Halimus, Milne Edwards, 1834, con- tained two species, aries and auritm. The latter was already the type of Naxia Leach in Latreille, 1825, and the former the type of Halimus Latreille, 1829. Auritus, on the contrary, has up to this time been held the type of Halimus, aries having been put in Hyastcnus White, 1847, which genus now becomes a synonym of Halimus. Halimus, it should be noted, was proposed by La- treille, in 1825, for '' deux especes de la collection du Jardin du Roi, et dont I'une paroit etre tres-voisine du Cancer superciocisus '[superciliosus'] de Linne." As this is not sufficient to define the genus, the name must be considered as a nomen nudum, at least until its description in 1829. Platynnichus Latreille, Nouv. Diet. Hist. Nat., XXVIl, 4, 1818, was offered as a substitute for Portu mnus, ihe orthography of the latter name being considered too near that of Portunus; conse- quently Platyonichus must have tlie same type as Portmnnus, viz., P. latipes (Pennant, 1777). If Portumnus be restored, as it has been by many writers, Platyonichus becomes a synonym of it, and cannot be used for the s})ecies ocellatus, as this species was not known to Platyonichus until 1825 (Latreille, in Encyc. Meth., Entom., X, 151). Xaiva, of JNIacLeay, 1838, is available for ocel- latus and its allies, the earlier Anisopus de Haan, 1833, being pre- occupied by Meigen (Illig. Mag., II, 1803) for Diptera. Slenoryachus Lamarck, 1818, was a name given to two species, S. phalangium and S. seticornis Latreille. The former was already a member of Macropodia, 1814. The second species is therefore the type of Stenoryachus. It is said to be ecjuivalent to Cancer seticornis Herbst, 1788, which is congeneric, if not conspecific, with Cancer Sagittarius FaV)ricius, 1793. Stenorynchus has always been considered synonymous with Macropodia. 2. The name of a composite genus tenable for one or more of its species which do not belong in older genera. — -Platypodia is a name given by Bell, Trans. Zool. Soc. London, 1, 336, 1835, to that group of species included by Milne Edwards, 1834, under Cancer. This last genus as defined by Milne Edwards contained none of the Linnsean species of Cancer, and therefore the propriety of Bell's action would not be questioned, except for the fact that previous to the publication of Milne Edwards's Cancer, four of the species contained tlierein had been assigned by de Haan, 1833, to Ater- r/aii-s'and three other species to Actmi. Milne Edwards does not specif}^ the type of Cancer, but in illustration of the genus figures 'Revision of the Nomenclature of the Brachyura. 159 Cancel- Umbatus. Later, 1839, Randall adopts the name Platy- podia, coupling it with the same specific name, granulosus Riip- pell, 1830 = limhatus Milne Edwards, 1834. Subsequently all the species of Bell's Platypodia Avere assigned to other genera, viz., Medtras Dana, 1851, Eaxanthus Dana, 1851, Hypoadus'-^ Heller, 1861, and Lopkadrea A. Milne Edwards, 1865, this last genus con- taining the species Cancer Umbatus Milne Edwards. The ques- tion now arises, should Platypodia be considered a synonym of Atergatis and Actsea, or should it be retained for the species Ihn- batusf In reviewing the genera of Brachyura, I find that in all similar cases the name of the composite genus has not been treated as a s^aionym, e. g., Goniopsis de Haan, 1833, contained three species, two of which were alread}^ in the genus Grapstis, yet the name Goniopsis has been used without question for the third species. As a contrary decision would involve many need- less changes. Platypodia is retained in place of Lophactsea. 3. The name of a composite genus, when made up ivholly of older genera, tenable for a component part requiring a name. — I propose to restore the name Phalangipus Latreille, 1825, for Egeria Leach, 1815 = Leptnpus Lamarck, 1818 = Stenopus Leach in Latreille, Encyc. Meth., Entom., X, 700, 1825, all preoccupied. (Egeria Roissy, an XIII [1804- '5], IMollusca; Leptopus Lati'eille, Gen. Crust. Insect., IV, Addenda, 383, 1809, Hemijjtera; Stenopus La- treille in Desmarest, Dict.Sci. Nat., XXVIII, 321, 1823, Macrura.) As originally defined, Encyc. Meth., Entom., X, 699, 1825, Pha- langipns included Libinia + Doclea + Egeria, all genera of Leach, 1815. The name was never used subsequently. A precedent for its restoration now in a restricted sense is to be found in Maja, a genus formed by Lamarck, Sj's. Anim. sans Vert., 154, 1801, for Iiiachus -f- Parthenope, both of Fabricius, 1798, and first restricted by Leach, 1814, to the species Cancer squinado Herbst, 1785, which was a component part of the Fabrician genus InaeJius under the name /. cornutus (not C. cornutus Linnaeus, 1758). Maja or Maia in its Leachian sense has been in use without question down to * It may be claimed that as Hi/poadus was a preoccupied name (see page 164) it was not a genus in the proper sense, and that therefore the species of Pluliipodia {Cancer sculplns Mihie Edwards) which was referred to Hypoccelus, would by the process of elimination be the type of Platy- podia. On the other hand, C. sculplns was an abnormal species of Cancer jNIilne Edwards {= Pkttypodia Bell), and therefore could not legitimately become its tj'pe. IGO Iiathbuii — JRevision of Nomenclature of tlic Brachyura. the present day, and (brms the typical genus of the Maiinse, Maiidfe, and Maioidea. 8houkl Phalangipus be ruled out, Maja also must fall. It is of interest that Maia was used by Brisson, 17B0, for a genus of birds, accepted l)y many ornithologists. 4. Specification of type. — In 1810, Latreille, in his ' Considera- tions Generales sur I'ordre naturel des animaux composant les classes des Crustaces, des Arachnides, et des Insectes,' gives a supplementary list with the following heading, ' Table des Genres avec I'indication de I'esj^ece qui leur sert de type.' At the time of the publication of Dr. Herrick's monograph, ' The American Lobster,' I believed that the species designated by Latreille should be regarded as types of their genera, and I am not yet persuaded to reverse that decision. It has been argued " that ^ Astacus fluviatilis Fab.' is given not as the type, but merely as a type, an example, a specimen of the genus, the handiest one for a Parisian reader to recognize." The French word 'type,' how- ever, is defined as ' type ' or ' standard,' not as ' example ' or ' illus- tration,' and although Astacusjiuviatilis may have been the species most familiar to the Parisian reader, the same cannot be said of Portmms p)elagicus or Dromia rumphii, East Indian species, chosen in preference to European. It has also been claimed thai fluvia- tilis is the type of Astacus because it was placed first among those enumerated by Fabricius ; but if this rule were applied to other Fabrician genera, we should have /orm'caia the tyjDe of Parthenope instead of Cryptopodia, vigil the type of Portunus instead of Podophtalinus., scahriuscula the type of Leiocosia instead of Pkilyra, while rauricatus would be an laachus instead of a Doclea. The present adoption of Latreille's specification aflects the type of only two genera among the Brachyura, Portunus and Leucosia Fabricius, 1798. The type of the former becomes pe/a- gicus, commonly attributed to Neptunus, de Haan, 1833, and of the latter, micleas, afterward made the type of Ilia by Leach, 1817. Leucosia of Leach ma}^ be known as Leucosides, nov. Latreille in 1810 makes the species pagurus the type of Cancer. In 1825, in his ' Families Naturelles,' he forms presumably for this species the genus Tourteau, in Gallic form, = Pagurus in Berthold's translation, 1827. This circumstance might be a weighty argu- ment against the recognition of the Latreillian species as types, were it not that Leach in the mean time had indisputably re- stricted the genus Cancer to C. pagurus, and that in the early Revision of the Nomenclature of the Brachi/ura. 161 days it was not deemed unpardonable to cliange the type of a genus. 5. Earlier names neglected. — A recent example of the abandon- ment of a valid name is the case of Holometopus Milne Edwards, 1853, which is a constituent of de Man's subgenus Episesarma of later date, 1895. Other names which have been laid aside with- out sufficient reason are as follows : Polamon Savigny, 1816, for Thelphusa Latreille, 1819. Potamon was restored by Ortmann, Zool. Jahrb., Syst., IX, Heft 3, 445, 1896. Its type species is Cancer potamios Olivier, an 12 [1803-1804] = Thelp)husa fluviatilis Latreille, 1819, not C. fluviatilis Herbst, 1785. Charyhdis de Haan, 1833, for Goniosoma A. Milne Edwards, 1860, on account of Charyhdea Peron and Lesueur, 1809. Goni- osoma was itself used by Perty, Delect. An. Art., 201-202, 1830- 1834, for a genus of Arachnida. Piiho Bell, 1835, for Olhonia Bell, 1836, without explanation. (Othonia, Johnston, Loudon's Mag. Nat. Hist., VIII, March, 1835, Vermes.) Gecarcoidea Milne Edwards, 1837, for Pelocarcinus Milne Ed- wards, 1853, on account of Gecarcinus Leach, 1814. Gecarcoidea Avas restored by Ortmann, Zool. Jahrb., Syst., VII, Heft 5, 1894. Xanthodlus Stimpson, 1859, if considered congeneric with Lep- todius A. Milne Edwards, 1863, as it is by some writers, should take precedence, and not l)e treated as a synonym or a subgenus of Lej)todius.^ Paulson, 1875, gives Cryptochlrus Heller as a sNnionym of Lithoscaptns A. ]\Iilne Edwards, but the former genus was de- scribed in 1861, the latter in 1862. ^/Ttops/.s Lamarck, 1801 (description insufficient?) is retained by Miers, 1879 and 1886, as a subgenus o? Pisa Leach, 1814 ; but if Arctopsis be used at all, which seems unwarranted, it must take precedence of Pisa. The type species of both is supposed to be the same ; its earliest indisputable name is biacideata (Montagu). Tetraodon, which Miers makes the type of the subgenus Pisa, was not put by Leach into Pisa until 1815. An example of the same name being applied by two autliors to the same new genus is that oi Aulai'.olambrus, a name attril)uted *Leptod'iUS is made a synonym of Xnnlho hy Ortmann, Zool. Jahrb., Syst., VII, Heft 3, 44;3, 1893. 38— £ioL. Soc Wash., Vol XI, 1897 1C)2 Rathlmn — Revision of Nomenclature of the Brachyiira. to A. Milne Edwards, 1878, but first used by Paulson, Investiga- tion of the Kinds of (!ra])s in tlie Red Sea, I, 9, 1875,* for Lambrus pisoides Adams am] Wliite, a mcnilier of Milne Edwards's genus Aulncolainhrii.s. C). Names based on figwes without description. — Dorynchus first appeared in tlie combination ' Dorynchus thoinsoni Norman,' a species which was figured in the text but not described in Wyville-Thomson's ' Depths of the Sea,' 1873 (fig. 34 on page 174). It is referred to thus: '"A i)retty little stalk-eyed form Dorynchus thomsoni^ Norman (fig. 34), small and delicate, and very distinct from all 'prcviondy described species of the genus, is very widely diffused." The italics are my own, and the words emphasized may indicate that the word Dorynchus was accident- ally used for Inachus, a genus containing a species dorynchus.\ Dorynchus thoinsoni was described and figured in a new genus by A. Milne Edwards, Crust. Reg. Mex., 349, pi. XXXI A, fig. 4, 1880, as Lispognailius furcilbttus. Later l Prof. Milne Edwards, after recognizing the identity of his species and D. thoinsoni, refers to it as ^ Lispognatkus (^Dorynchus') Thoinsoni.'' In 1886 Mr. Norman, in his 'Museum Normanianum. Crustacea,' enters the species as ^Lispognatiius thomsoni,^ although more recently (De- cember 21, 1895) he has assured me that he sees no reason why Dorynchus should be displaced. A different case is that of Planes, a manuscript name of Dr. Leach, published by Bowdich, 1825, the claims of which are set forth by Dr. Faxon in his report on ' The Stalk-Eyed Crustacea ' of the 'vMbatross,' p. 29, 1895. This name is based on plate fig- ures. In the text, p. 15, Bowdich sa3\s : "A small crab, fig. 3, a, and b, which I conceive to be a new species oi planes, was found in great numbers amongst the anatiferm. [Foot-note:] It was of a delicate, but bright, rose colour : from the symmetrical form of its test (notched so regularly as to increase the projection and distinctness of its chaperon) it may l)e called p. clypeatus.'" Mr. C. Davies Sherborn in his " Explanation of the Plan *This work is in Russian and was published at Kiew. The title is as follows: ' Izslyedovaniya Rakoobraznuikli Krasnavo Morj'a.' ■f Inacltiis dory)icJius Leach, 1814, should be known as TnachuK phalangmvi Fabricius, the Cancer plialangium of Fal)ricius, 1775, of which 1 have ex- amined the type, being different from C. j>]udangtina Pennant, 1777, a synonym of Macropodia roMi' Coccidae, teste Cockerell.) Hypocolpus^ for Hypocoelus Heller, 1861. (Hypoadus Esch- scboltz, Silbermann's Rev., IV, tab., 1836, Coleoptera, teste Gem- minger and Harold.) HapnlonotusX for Mnlacosomn de Man, 1879. {Mnlacosoma Hiibner, Verz., 192, 1816, Lepidoptera.) Dasygyms% for Nenrhynchus A. Milne Edwards, 1879. {Neo- rhynchus Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1869, 147, Aves.) Apiomithrax \\ for Phycodes A. Milne Edwards, 1869. (Phyeodes Guenee, Spec. gen. d. Lep., VT, 389, 1852, Lepidoptera.) Eriph'ules for Pseuderiphln A. Milne Edwards, 1880. {Pseude- ripJiia Reuss, Denksch. d. k. k. Akad. Wien, XVII, 54, 1859, fossil Brachyura.) Apias^ for Pyria Dana, 1851 ; pyrum^ a pear. {Pyrin Saint- Fargeau and Serville. Encyc. Meth., Entom., X, 494, 1825, Hymenoptera ; ttv^, a fire.) Leurocydas"^'-''^^ for Salacia Milne Edwards and Lucas, 1843. (Sa- lacia Lamouroux, Hist. Pol. Coral. Flex., 212, 1816.) Thcrsandrus'\'\ for Sisyphus Desbonne and Schrannn, 1867. (Sisyphus Latreille, Encyc. Meth., Entom., X, 438, 1825, Coleop- tera; SysipJius, 1818; Sisyphe, 1807.) Sphenomerides for Sphenoinerus Wood-JNIason, 1891. (Spheno- merus Candeze, Mon. Elat., II, 1859, Coleoi)tera.) * Tofirrayov, a drum or tympanum ; ;j.ip(>^, merus. •f'T-u, under; h'oX-o^, a hollow. X'A~a?yi'f, soft; vwro?, Ijack. § Aaffb?, hairy ; yuutv, hmb. ||\4'-;<*v, a pear; M'dhrax. Tf'/J'-joi', a pear; with the suffix t.u.<;. ** Aeupoi7o^am?ms Milne-Edwards, 1853, for Orthostoma Randall, 1839, t\'pe 0. dentata Randall, 1839 ^= Ddocarclnus midtidentntas von Martens, 1869. ( Orthostoma Ehrenberg, Symbolse Physicte, Anim. Evert., Decas Prima. 1831, Vermes.) Kaempferia suggested but not adoi)ted by Miers, 1886, for Ala- crocheira de Haan, 1839, ' preoccu})ied.' (Macrochira Meigen, 111. Mag., 1803, Diptera. Macrocheirus Schonherr, Gen. et Spec. Cur- cul., 1838, Coleoptera, concerning which he says ' Macrocheira Nov. Gen. et Spec. Dom. de Haan in Litteris.') The following may be used for names preoccupied though with different gender terminations : Rhodla Bell, 1835, for Herbdla'Uilne Edwards, 1834. (Hcrh- sthim Leach in Desmarest, Diet. Sci. Nat., XXVIII, 301, 1823, Macrura.) Grapsilhis MacLeay, 1838, for Trapezia Latreille, 1825. (Trape- zium Humphrey, Mus. Calonnianum, 1797, Mollusca.) HypopeltariumX Miers, 1886, for Peltarion Hombron and Jacquinot, 1852? {Peltarlum. G. Fischer de Waldheim, Bull. Soc. Imp. Nat. Moscou, XVII, part 1, 106, 1844, Coleoptera.) Eiiry pan open f^% A. Milne Edwards, 1880, for Panopeus Milne Edwards, 1834. (Panopea Menard, Ann. Mus., IX, 135, 1807, *Ortmann, Zool. Jahrb., Syst., YII, Heft .3, 443, 1893, unites Xanthodes with Xantho. t Since the publication of my 'Synopsis of the American Species of Palicus Philippi (= Cijmopolla Roux),' pp. 93 to 99 of these Proceedings, Professor Jeffrey Bell and Dr. Hilgendorf have kindly sent me copies of the original description of Palicus. Though brief, it agrees with Ci/mo- polia. Dr. Philippi was doubtless soon convinced of the identity of his genus with the earlier one, as the complete description and figure which he promised to publish in Wiegmann's Archiv never appeared. X Hypopeliarium was substituted by Miers, ISS'i, for Peltarion (name preoccupied) and has been in use ever since. § Admitting that Eurytium Stimpson, 1859, is a distinct genus. 1(5() JiatJibiiii — Jievlsirm of Nomeaclature of tJi.c BracJiyura. Mollusca.) Paaopeci is the name of one of the Nereids. Cancer Panoiw. Herbst, from which the name Panopeas was derived, doul)tless referred to the same character. EngonionotaSj^ nov., for Cosmonotas Adams and Wliite, 1847. {Cosmonota Dejean, Catal. Coh, 3d ed., 1833. I have seen only the reprint of the 3d ed., 1837.) Charybdella, nov., for C'ronius Stimpson, 1860. {Cronia H. and A. Adams, Gen.. I, 128, 1858, Mollusca.) Eaxanthopsis, nov., for Eaxaathus Dana, 1851 ^= Melissa Sir i\.h\, 1861. (Ewxanthe }liihnei\Yerz., "id, 1816, Lepidoptera, Melissa Smith, 1854, Cat. Brit. Mus., II. 279. Hymenoptera.) Raphnnotus,^ nov., for Fahia Dana, 1851. (Fa.hius Duncan, Foreign Butterflies, 167, 1837, teste Scudder.) Leucocarcinus,X nov., for Leucisca MacLeay, 1838. {Leaciscus Cuvier, Regne Animal, ed. 1, 194, 1817, Pisces.) Zalasius,% nov., for Trichiade Haan, 1841. (Tv'ic/mf.s'Fabricius, Sys. Entom., 40, 1775, Coleoptera.) Tiiose names which are spelled alike except for their termi- nation and have different meanings are not considered the same, e. isiiia, acknowledging the priority of Dana's genus. 10. Oiiglaal oiiho(jraj)hij to he preserved except in case of typo- graphical error. — According to Canon XL of the A. 0. U. Code, we should write Ethusa not ^thusa, ^thra not (JiJthra^ Eriocheir not Eriochirus, Podophtahmis not Podophthalmas, Zosiinu.s not Zozymus, Lophozozymus, Steaorynchus, Dorynchus, Loxorynchus, Pyromnia Stimpson, 1S71, not Apiomaia von Martens, 1873. Goneplax Leach, Edin. Encyc, VII, 1814, was spelled Goneplat on p. 393, Goneplax on p. 430. The first form may be consid- ered a typograi)hical error. Goneplax was so used by Leach in 1815; in 1816 written Gonoplax; since that time both Goneplax and Gonoplax b}^ different authors. *Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, 86. t Ann. Nat. Hist., (2) IX, 369. Vol. XI, pp. 169-171 June 9, 1897 PROCEEDINGS /^ BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON TWO NEW PLANTS FROM MOUNT MAZAMA, OREGON. BY FREDERICK V. COVILLE AND JOHN B. LEIBERG. Arenaria pumicola, sp. nov.* Plant formino; a rather loose tuft, commonly 6 to 12 cm. high, from a caudex with a deep tap-root and with naked ascending branches com- monly 1 to 2 mm. in thickness ; stem erect, smooth below, glandular-hairy above, with commonly 1 to 3 pairs of cauline leaves ; basal leaves numer- ous, about 0.5 to 0.7 mm. wide by 10 to 20 or even 30 mm. long, glabrous, glaucous, entire to remotely or sometimes even closely denticulate on the margin, abruptlj^ and rather bluntly acute at the apex, the cauline leaves similar but about twice as broad and seldom more than 10 or 12 mm. long; inflorescence at the first flowering compact, in age open, the branches of the cyme and often the midribs of the sepals glandular- hairy ; bracts ovate, acute to acuminate, scarious, glabrous ; sepals 2 to 3 or sometimes even 4 mm. long, ovate, with a sharply defined midrib and broad scarious margins, acute or through the expansion of the margins obtuse ; ]ietals about twice as long as the sepals, cuneate-oblanceolate, emarginate or erose at the usually truncate apex ; stamens about as long as the petals, the anthers connnonly purple; ovary globose; capsules at maturity probably nearly twice as long as the calyx ; mature seeds not seen. Type specimen in the United States National Herbarium, collected August 13, 1896, at Crater Lake, Oregon, at an altitude of 2180 meters, by Frederick V. Coville and John B. Leiberg, No. 349. This ])lant appears to be most closely related to Arenaria aculeata Wats., differing in the naked, ascending, subterranean caudex branches bearing the congested foliage in tufts at their *0n the ground of euphony the combination of letters kic, which in strict etymological practice would occur in this word, has been reduced to ic. 39-BioT,. Soc. Wash., Vot. XI, 1897 (109) 170 Covlllc. and Lciher;/ — Tico New Plants from Oregon. ends; the leaves not very stiff' and with only an aj)ru[>t, very short, and scarcely ])ungent liorny apex ; and the sepals with the green median portion rather narrow, usually abrut^ly de- limited l)y the broad hyaline margins, and conmionl_y with little tendency to l)e striate when dry. Arenarla acAileala is a ]ilant with spreading, })rocumbent, matted stems retaining their more scattered widely spreading dead foliage for several years; the leaves stiff, tapering at the ajiex into an extremely sharp horny spine; and the sepals with a broad midrib not usually sharply delimited and when dry commonly 3 to 5-striate. In the field the plants are at once distinguishable b}^ their strikingly differ- ent habit and by the difficulty of handling acaleata, the leaves of wdiich readily pierce the skin, a difficulty which was not ex- perienced in the case of intviicola. Our plant is a characteristic species of the open slopes of pulverized pumice-stone about the rim of Crater Lake, Mount Mazama, Oregon, and specimens in the National Herbarium collected by Lemmon in 1S75 show that it occurs also in north- eastern California. Arenaria acidcuta ranges from the plateau of northern Arizor.a through the mountains of Nevada and Utah to those of southwestern Idaho and eastern Oregon. Our plant bears considerable resemblance to some herliarium specimens which are refert"ed to Arenaria conf/esta sn.bcongesta Wats., but the type of that complex of forms differs in its spread- ing instead of erect leaves, slenderer and more persistently leafy branches of the rootstock, longer calyx (about 5 mm.) and gla- brous stems and intlorescence. Cardamiiie bellidifolia pachyphylla, v:ir. nov . Plant wholly (lovi)i(l of imbesceuce, low, 4 to S cm. lii.u;!i, from a l>ruiu"li- iiig caudex commonly 2 nim. thick, and with a deep ta]) root, the branches usually short, but sometimes long and fiexuous ; leaves mostly gathered in subrosulate tufts at the ends of the caudex brandies, the blades fleshy in texture, even the midrib nearly obliterated, 6 to 12 or even 16 mm. long, obovate to narrowly oblong, rounded at the apex, entire or with an indistinctly defined lobe on either side toward the apex, abruptly or gradually narrowed into petioles 1 to 3 cm. in length and purplish at the base or throughout ; flowering stems short, erect, 1 or 2 from each branch of the caudex, 3 to 5 cm. high, leafless or bearing one or two short- petioled oblanceolate or obovate leaflets ; inflorescence a short terminal raceme, the flowers seldom more than 10, on jiedicels commonly 5 to 10 mm. long; sepals 2 to 3 mm. long; petals a little more than twice as long, spatulate, obtuse, white or rose-colored-; siliques about 3 cm. long Two New PIa)itsJ're locality. — Guadalupe Island, off Lower California. Type No. S3617, (^ ad., U. S. National Museum. Collected on the beach on west side of Guadalupe May 22, 1892, by C. H. Townsend. Cranial characters. — Contrasted with skulls of Arctorepltalns {ausiralli^ or jihiUipi) from the Galapagos Islands, skulls of .1. toimscndi ditfer in some- what smaller size; much shorter rostrum; shorter nasals ; larger and more freely open incisive foramina; heavier and shorter ascending branches of premaxillfe, which do not push backward along the nasals as in iin.^lralis ; smaller, flatter, and smoother audital bulliie; murli nar- roii'L'r and more deeply excavated palate; narrower postjjalatal notch; broader and heavier jugals; broader zygomatic jtrocesses of maxilliB, which are expanded to form a broad floor under the anterior half of the orbit; larger, broader, and more rounded anterior nares in the male, and absence of sagittal crest lietween frontals- The most important characters are the exceedingly narrow and exca- vated palate, flat audital bulla?, short and thick ascending arm of i)re- maxilla, and broadly expanded zygomatic root of maxilla, forming a floor under the anterior half of the orbit. There are also tooth characters : the first n])[)er molar (5th molariform tooth) is mainly i)Osterior to plane of anterior I'oot of zygoma; both upi)er true molars are double rooted, and the last upper i)remolar is incompletely double rooted. In the female of tou')isendi the narrow and deeply excavated form of the jialate is even more emphasized than in the male, and the postorbital constriction is very m.ich narrower than in the female of aii.^lnUis. Mea.'iHrenieiifs of ff' Skidl of Arrtsp. nov. Tijiw from old Fort Tejon, Canada dcslan Uvas, California. No. 29815, (^, U. S. Nat. Mas., Biological Survey Coll. Collected June 28, 1891, by C. Hart Merriam. Original No. 208. General characters. — Similar to .1. jnilliiJux but uniformly larger (forearm averaging 5 mm. or more longer) and darker ; ears somewhat narrower (breadth 18 or less instead of 21 or more) and less convex anteriorly, with posterior edge of upper third slightly eniarginate instead of straight. Color. — Ui)per parts ochraceous butt", strongly washed with dusky ; under parts rich bulf instead of whitish. Mcti.'oirenu'ii.ts (of type, from alcoholi(; specimen). — Head and body, 70 ; tail, 43; head, 25; ear from external basal angle, 30; tragus fi-om inner base, 10 ; greatest breadth of ear, 17.5; forearm, 59 ; thumb, 11 ; 3d finger, 93; 5th finger, 73; tibia, 21 ; hind foot, 13. Vol. XI, pp. 181-183 July 1, 1897 PROCEEDINGS BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON ^ DESCRIPTION OF A NEW GENUS AND SPECIES OF SPH.EPtOMID.E FROM ALASKAN AVATEPvS* BY HARRIET RICHARDSON. The dredgings made by the U. S. Fish Commission Steamer 'Albatross' off the Alaskan coast in the years 1888-1894 contain a number of specimens of Spha3romid8e which evidently belong to a genus hitherto undescribed. Although it is impossible to refer these specimens to the genus Ancinus of Milne Edwards, yet they are more closely related to that genus than to any other. They resemble Ancinus in the possession of subchelate hands terminating the first and second pairs of gnathopods. Tecticeps gen. nov. Body oval and some\yhat flattened. Head snbquadrangulav, broader anteriorly than posteriorly, with its anterior and lateral margin.s produced, concealing the antennaj. The antennae, which are entirely hidden, extend backward and lie under the epimeral plates at the sides of the thorax. The first and second pairs of legs are subchelate ; the first pair terminate in a large hand and finger, bearing a small hook ; the second pair terminate in a more irregularly shaped hand. All the other legs are simple in structure. The terminal segnient of the abdomen is tri- angular and entire and is pointed at its extremity. The uropoda are double-branched and lateral, and resemble closely those of the genus Sphxroma. Fig. 9. — Tecticeps cilas- censts. X 2'%. * Published by permission of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Insti- tution. 43— Biot.. Soc. Wash., Voi,. XI, 1897 (181) 182 RlcJuirdson — Sphseromidai j'wiii Alaskan Waters. This genus differs from the genus Ancinus of Mihie Edwards — 1. In having uropoda with two hranches instead of one. 2. In having the ahdomen entire and not truncate at the tip. 8. In tlie proniinent projection of tiie anterior and lateral margins of the head. 4. In the concealment of the anteiin;e, which are verj- conspicuous in the Ancinus. Tecticeps alasceiisis sj). nov. Outline of ])ody oval. Surface (jnite smooth, lint covered with little points of depression. Head large; twice as long as any one of the thoracic segments. The anterior margin is produced in a way to conceal the antennae, as are also the antero-lateral margins, making the anterior portion of the head in front of the eyes much broader than the posterior portion, and forming very acute antero-lateral angles. This frontal margin forms a very broad obtuse angle with its apex in the median line. On either side of this apex to the antero-lateral angle this portion of the head is somewhat de- pressed. The antennfe are not conspicuous, lying concealed beneath the frontal margin of the liead. The first pair extends Chi:£n^j==>- ^^ ^''^ iwsterior angle of the first thoracic segment ; its flagellum contains ten articles. The second pair reaches the middle of the second segment ; its flagel- lum is twelve-jointed. The eyes are dorsally situ- ated on the i)Osterior half of the liead. Fig. lo.-a, Antenna of rpj^^ thoracic Segments are about equal in length. ''f 2d iiair X s-^ "^^'^ ^^"^^ *^"^ extends laterally around the posterior portion of the head, forming a broad plate at the side of the segment. The epimera of all the segments are about twice as broad as long, with the exception of those of the fifth segment, which are nearly square and very conspicuous. The first segment of the abdomen has three suture lines, and its pos- terior margin jirojects down at the sides over the terminal segment. The terminal segment is triangular, and has a very pointed extremity. The uropods differ considerably. The in- ner one is In'oad and tai^ering. and does not reach the tip of the abdomen. The outer one is slender and shar))ly pointed, and extends beyond the abdomen. The first pair of legs are subchelate, as are also ,the second pair. In the first jiair the propodus is large and oval in shape, and bears in the imlma a row of stiff Fig. n.-a, Mandi- bristles at regular intervals and pointing obliquel v in the ^^^ ' *' Mandibu- . . , ., ., ■ , e a -1- " ■ i.- lar appendage. same direction, wlule a thick row of hue cilia, pointing ^ ^,/ ^ 5/3- ol)liquely in the oi)posite direction, cross these almost at right angles. The dactylus terminates in a single hook, at the base of which two smaller hooks are situated. In the legs of the second pair the propodus is irregular in shape with an indication of a rudimentary Splixromidx frotii jilaskan ]Vater,s. 183 ))olle\-. There are no hairs or bristles in the palnia. The legs of the tiiinl, fourth, and fifth pairs present nothing unusual in structure, but resemble the ambulatory legs common to this family. In the si.xtli and seventh pairs the structure is the same as that of the preceding legs of the third, fourth, and fifth pairs, but with an increasing dis- proportion in the length of the propodus and dactylus. In the seventh pair of legs these joints, but more especially the propodus, attain a size most conspicuous for their length. Tiie ])ropodus becomes over 3.} times longer than the carpus Avhich immediately precedes it. Color.— The color varies fromdark brown to yellow, more or less dotted with black. In the darker specimens the epimera and the uropods are almost white, with scat- tered spots of black. Other specimens are brown with markings of red, and some are blaish-gray in color tinged with brown or orange. Type. — The type specimen was f() Merriam. — The Chipmunks of the Genus Eutaniias. squirrels of the subgenus or genus Ictidomys Allen, and Eutaniias from those of the subgenus or genus Amvwsperinophilns Merriam. The substance of the present preliminary paper may be con- veniently arranged under the following headings : 1. General remarks on distribution. 2. Seasomd changes in pelage. 3. List of species and subspecies. 4. Remarks on the iownsendi group (nnth keys). 5. Remarks on the speciosus group. 6. Note on Tamias quadrimaculalus Gray. 7. Descriiptions of new species and subspecies. 1. General Remarks on Distribution. There are no Chipmunks in the Sonoran deserts of the western United States, but the vast sage-brush plains of the central and northern parts of the Great Basin are inhabited by a small gray- ish species (Eutamias plctas), and other species live in the higher mountain ranges. On reaching the eastern base of the Sierra Nevada in California, and of the Cascade range in Oregon and Washington, one enters the region where the genus Eutamias attains its highest development. Excepting the great interior valley of California and one or two small valleys in southwestern Oregon, which are not inhabited by any Chipmunks, the strip of territory included between the east base of the Cascade-Sierra S3^stem and the Pacific Ocean may be said to be fairly overrun by these animals, containing not less than 14 species and sub- species. The chaparral-covered hills of southern California and the lower slopes of the mountains that surround the Mohave Desert and the great San Joaquin Valley have only a single species ; but the boreal forests that clothe the higher mountains and practically the whole of western Oregon and Washington are the homes of a large number of forms belonging to three or four distinct groups. In the forests west of the Cascade Mts. only a single species occurs (E. toivnsendi), except along the ex- treme southwestern coast of Oregon, where it is replaced by an allied form (E. ochrogenys). On the eastern slopes and higher parts of the Cascade Mts. two species are found together — the small E. amoenios, which extends southward on the Sierra Nevada to about latitude 87°, and the large E. townsendi, which inhabits the Cascades from British Columl)ia southward to a point between TJie Chipmit}>l:'< of tlir Or}ivi< Eiifamias. 191 latitude 44° and latitude 45°, and is then replaced ])y PJ. senex, which ranges thence southerly to the headwaters of the Merced, a little south of latitude 38°. But it is in the Sierra Nevada of California that the genus Eu- tdiiilds reaches its most extraordinary develoi)ment. On l)oth slopes of this lofty range species of Chipmunks are distributed in belts, one above the other, corresponding with the strongly marked life zones of the slopes. In most parts of the Sierra two species occur together, in some localities three, and in a small area near timber-line in the Yosemite National Park probably four. Since in following the Sierra northward the Boreal zones come lower and lower down, so certain Chipmunks which in the southern part are found only at high altitudes descend in the north till they reach base level at the upper end of the Sacra- mento Valle3^ In crossing the High Sierra between Owens Valley and Fresno one traverses in a distance of only 50 miles the ranges of at least seven very distinct Chipmunks, as follows : On beginning the climb in Owens Valley one finds in the sage-brush the ordinary Great Basin species, E, pictus ; a little higher up, in the nut pine belt, the most beautiful species of the genus, E. panninintinus. Then on entering the Boreal Zone he encounters two very dis- tinct species, E. amcenus and E. speciosiis. Still higher, in the neighborhood of timber-line, he sees for the first time the little Alpine Chipmunk, E. alpinus, and a little farther north the large E. senex.'-^ On descending the west slo})e he passes through the zone inhal)ited by E. callipeplas, a strikingly beautiful member of the speciosus group, and on the lower slo|)e enters the belt in which E. merriami is the sole representative of the genus. If the section were made as far north as the Yosemite National Park, two others would be added, E. senex, along tlie. summit of the range, and the superb E. quadriviaculatus, at lower altitudes on the west slope. A good deal of work remains to be done in determining the exact boundaries of the areas inhabited by each species, but enough is already known to show that the group j)resents some very interesting peculiarities of distribution. For instance, Eu- tamias alpinus is distinctly an animal of the Iludsonian Zone of * Whether or not E. alpinus and senex actually occur together is not known. E. amrmus M^as not collected bj^ the Death Valley Expedition south of Independence Creek. 192 Merria'm — The Cldptnunks of the Genus Eutamias. the southern High Sierra, and does not reach so far north as Lake Tahoe. E. amcenus, on the other hand, is not found so far south as Mt. Whitney, but begins apparently in the latitude of Independence Creek, and ranges thence northward to British Columbia. True speciosus seems to be restricted to the east crest of the High Sierra and the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mts. on the other side of the Mohave Desert* In the mountains about Lake Tahoe it is replaced by a closel}^ related form, E.frater, which does not reach northern California. The large E. senex begins near the headwaters of the Merced in the Yosemite Na- tional Park and extends northward over the Sierra and eastern slope of the Cascades to a point in Oregon between latitude 44° and latitude 45°, where it is replaced by townsendi. E. townsendi continues northerly to British Columbia, and on the west side of the mountains reaches southward nearly to Rogue River. South of the mouth of Rogue River it is replaced liy an allied form, E. ochrogenys, which follows the coast southward almost to San Francisco Bay. This form is restricted to the narrow coast stri[) known as the ' redwood belt.' Innnediately east of this belt its range abuts against that of E. hindsi, which latter animal is re[)laced in the coast ranges soutli of San Francisco Bay b}^ the allied E. merriami. E. merriami not only inhabits the coast ranges from San Francisco Bay south to the Santa Ynez Mts., but pushes on in a southeasterly^ direction along the San Gabriel, San Ber- nardino, and San Jacinto Mts. to the Cuyamaca Mts., and north- easterly by way of Mt. Piiios and Tehacha})i Mt. to the west slo])e of tlie Sierra, which it follows northward along the lower sloi)es as far at least as the Yosemite National Park. 2. Seasonal Changes in Pelage. The seasonal color changes in the genus Eutamias are startling, the difference in most species between the gra_y winter coat and the ' red ' or bright golden-fulvous post-breeding pelage being almost incredible. In fact, in some instances^ the same animal ill different pelages has been named as two different species. Dr. J. A. Allen, in his elaborate and admirable })aper on the Chipmunks,! has pointed out the striking color change tliat takes * For interesting facts respecting tlie distribution of nieinber.s of the speciosus group, see pages 199-201. tBull. Am. Mas. Nat. Hist., New York, vol. Ill, No. 1, pp. 45-ll(), LS90. The CliipiiiiiitL:^ of the Genus Eutamias. 193 place at the close of the bi'eeding season, and in his detailed de- scri})tions of the various si)ecies and subspecies has treated the ' In-eeding ' and ' post-breeding ' pelages under separate headings ; but he remains silent as to what the worn breeding pelage was before it became worn, leaving it to be inferred that it was the left-over sunnner pelage of the preceding year. In fact, he speaks of onl}^ a single molt — that from the worn to the new summer pelage— which commonly takes place in June or July. There is, however, a second complete molt in the fall, usually in September or October, which results in a change of color hardly less remarkal)le than that of the summer molt. In general terms it ma}^ be said that while the change from the breeding to the })ost-breeding pelage results in a brightening of the tints, w^ith a great increase in the fulvous or tawny colors, the change from summer to winter pelage is the reverse — the bright tawny colors giving place to lich grays and browns. The character of the i)elage differs also, the summer coat being relatively short and hispid, while the winter coat is long, full, and woolly. A remarkable circumstance connected with the change of pelage is that while tlie winter coat is worn about 9 months, the summer coat is worn only al)Out 3 months, and in some cases for a considerably shorter period. The animals breed while still in the left over winter pelage, which in early summer is often so worn and faded that it has the appearance of another })elage. In fact, although there are only two molts, it would not be amiss to describe 3 pelages: (1) the fresh fall or winter pelage; (2) the worn summer or l)reeding ])elage [= the left-over winter pelage], and (3) the bi'ight fresh reddish i)ost-l)reeding pelage. The change from the summer or ' post-breeding ' pelage to the winter coat takes place by complete molt, as in the case of the change from thel^reeding to the post-breeding pelage ; but there is a radical difference, at least in some species, in the way the molt progresses. At the close of the breeding season the animal is usually in worn, shaljljy pelage, and not infrequently the hairs are worn off so short that the dorsal stripes disappear. The new coat appears in irregular patches,* usually beginning on the head and covering the anterior half of the back next ; in other words, while somewhat irregular, it progresses from before back- wards. The late fall molt, on the contrary, begins on the rump *In some specimens the post-breeding pelage seems to creep in insid- iously without the usual ' patchy ' stage. 104 Merriam — Th,c Cltijwmiiks of the Genus E'litainias. luid })rogresse>s IVuin behind t'urwiird, the new luiir.s coming in iinifonnl}'' and not in irregular patches as in summer molt. The winter molt succeeds the summer molt so soon that the summer l)elage has not had time to become much worn; consequently, at tliis season, such shabby specimens as those commonly found at the end of the breeding season are unknown. o 3. List of Chipmunks of California and of Western Oregon AND Washington, with Type Localities.* 1. Entamins pidiis (Allen) Kelton, Utah. 2. nlpiiiua {^levv'mm) Mt. Whitnej', California. 3. amoenn.fi (Allen). Fort Klamath, Oregon. 4. jKimnnlntlnuii (Merriam) Panamint Mts. , California. Speciosus gro'iip : 5. Eiitainias speciosus (Merriam) San Bernardino Mt., California. G. frater (Allen). . . Donner, California. 7. inyoensls nob. . .White Mts., California. 8. caUipeplus (Mev- riam') ]\lt. Pinos, California. Intermediate between speciosus and townsendi groups : 9. EiUnmlas (jiiadriinacidalns (Gray)..Michi,u;an Bluft", California. Townsendi group : 10. Eulamias senex (Allen) Donner, California. 11. townsendi (Bachman).. . .Lower Colnmbia River, Oregon. 12. ochrogcmis nob. Mendocino, California. 13. Idndsi (Gray) Near San Francisco, California. 14. merrlaml (Allen) San Bernardino Mt., California. 4. Rkm.arks on the townsendi Group. Eatdvwis tovmscadl and its relatives are the largest and darkest members of the genus. I'liey inhabit tlie Pacific coast region from southwestern British Columbia (Westminster and the Mt. Baker range) southward to the Cuyamaca Mts. in extreme south- ern California ; and if, as seems probable, E. ohsairus is a member of the same series, the range will be extended to San Pedro Martir Mt. in Lower California. No member of the group is known from any i)oint east of the east base of the Cascade-Sierra S3^stem. The group comprises five forms, all but one of which seem worthy *This list does not include the tln-ee new exti'alimital forms descrilied in the present paper {palincri, \). 208; oreoceles, p. 207 ; and dorsalis utah- ensis, p. 210). The Chipmunks of the Genus Eutamias. 195 of full specific recognition.* Three of the species are Boreal namely, townsendi, ochrogenys, and senex. The remaining two, hindsi and merriavii, belong to the Transition and Upper Sonoran belts. The group may be thus subdivided into two series, the townsendi or Boreal series and the hindsi or Sonoran series. The princi})al characters of the five, with the geographic ranges of each, follow. Keys are given also, by means of which it is be- lieved that specimens in any pelage may be referred to their proper species. Eutamias townsendi (Bachman). Townsend's Chipmunk. • General characters. — Under parts white at all seasons, moderately en- croached upon by color of sides ; general coloration uniform dull fulvous in post-breeding pelage, and uniform olive yellowish in winter jjelage; post-auricular spots and ear stripes bluish gray, large and conspicuous ; sides of face slightly washed with yellowish in winter pelage, more strongly washed with fulvous in post-breeding pelage ; five dark dorsal stripes black, more or less obscured by fulvous or yellowish tipped hairs, but black always showing thi'ough ; median dorsal stripe longer anteriorly than in any other species, always reaching to and often beyond anterior base of ears; ant-orbital part of middle facial stripe obsolete as in ochrogenys ; inner pair of light dorsal stripes in both pelages same color as general color of upper parts ; outer pair yellower. Range. — Northern Pacific coast region from the southwestern corner of Britisb Columbia (Westminster, Mt. Lehman, Chilliwack, and Mt. Baker range) southward over the whole of western Washington and Oregon to the Rogue River "N'alley ; eastward in the northern Cascades to the east base of the range (head of Lake Chelan); westward to the extreme coast. On the east slope of the Cascades E. townsendi crosses the Columbia River and pushes southward a little beyond Mt. Hood. A short distance farther south on this slope it is replaced by E. sene.v. Eutamias townsendi ochrogenys Merriam. Redwood Chipmunk. General characters. — Lender parts never ivldte, Init encroached ujion by color of sides in onbnary pelage, and strongly washed with salmon-ochra- ceous in post-breeding pelage; sides of face suffused with ochraceous in all pelages ; post-auricular spots bluish gray, large and conspicuous ; an- terior part of eye stripe obsolete. ( For full description see p. 206. ) Range. — A narrow strip along the coast of southern Oregon and northern California, from near the mouth of Rogue River in Oregon to Cazadero, a short distance north of San Francisco Bay, in California. * It is an interesting fact that most, if not all, of the species have one pelage in which they resemble one pelage of one of the other species, while the other pelage is always distinctive. In some instances it is the winter pelage, in others the post-breeding pelage that is distinctive. 196 Merricmi — The Chipmunhs of the Genus Eatamias. Butamias senex (Allen). Allen's Cliii)nmnk. Geiu'val diararfcrs. — Tail rather short, narrow, and pale fnlvons under- neath and at base of hairs on upper side; under parts white in both pelages ; ear stripes and post-auricular spots sharply defined and con- si)icuous; general color of upper parts in winter pelage gray, in summer fnlvons, exce])t on head and rum]); outer pair of light stripes whitish, inner pair grizzled grayish, in post-breeding pelage obscured anteriorly by fulvous; toj>of head and runip grizzled grayish in all pelages, onlyslightly more fulvous in post-breeding pelage ; ant-orbital part of middle facial stripe only slightly marked ; sides of face never suffused with yellowish ; dark dorsal stripes obscured l)y fulvous, the black showing through, par- ticularly on the median stripe. " Range. — The Sierra-Cascade system from Farewell Bend on the Des Chutes River in (Oregon south to the headwaters of the INIerced River in Yosemite National Pai'k. In Oregon senex follows the east slope of the Cascade range down to base level, being common at Fort Klamath, as well as at similar elevations farther noi'th. It occurs also at the Paulina Lakes, in the Paulina Mts., wliich range is connected with the main body of the Cascades by continuity of Boreal forest. The species was found at Prospect, in the Cjiper Rogue River Valley, and is common also in the Siskiyons along the boundary between Oregon and California. In the Sierra Nevada of central California it is confined to high altitudes, and does not ap})roach base level on either slope. East of the Sierra proi)er, in Lassen Co., it inhabits the Big Valley Mts.* Eutamias hindsi (Gray). Hinds' Cbipnuink. General cJiaraclers. — General coloration redder than in any other mem- ber of the iownsendi series ; under parts white, except in post-breeding pelage, when they ai'e faintly washed Avith fulvous; ear sti'ii)es and post- auricular spots fairly well defined, more cons])icuous than in merri<(.mi, but nuicli less conspicnous than in toiviisendi or ncJirogengs ; general color of upi^er parts in winter pelage grizzled grayish and dull fulvous ; in sum- mer i)elage intense ferruginous anteriorly and on sides, becoming pale posteriorly. In winter pelage the dark dorsal stripes, except the median one, are obscured by fulvous, but in post-breeding pelage there are always three distinctly black dorsal stripes, and in some specimens the black shows through in the external lateral stri|)e. The outer light stripe is whitish, more or less suffused with yellowish in sunntier pelage ; in winter ])elage it is bluish gray. In winter pelage the fulvous is most marked on the lateral dark stripes which enclose the outer pair of light stripes, so that the striped effect is much more pronounced in winter pelage than in *The form from the Big Valley Mts. differs from typical senez in hav- ing the post-auricular patches and outer pair of light stripes much luhiter. It is evidently not an intergrade between seue.r and qaadrirnaculalas, but may be regarded as an incipient subspecies, not yet requiring a name. The Chipmunks of the Genus Eutamias. 197 post-breeding pelage. The hairs of. the upper side of the tail have a broad median Ijand of fulvous which shows through in lioth pelages, giving the tail a rich fulvous glow not present in the other memliers of the series except — and to a less extent — in tovnacndi in post-l)reeding pelage. Jtaitge. — Wooded or brushy hills of northern California west of tlie Sacramento Valley and north of San Francisco Bay. Northern liniit of range unknown. Specimens have been examined from Nicasio north- ward to Sherwood, Cahto, and the head of Eel River. On the west the range of ////;'?.s-(' joins that of oclirogoiyx. Eutamias merriami (Allen). Merriam's Chipmunk. General characters. — Tail very long ; ear stripes and post-aui'icular spots not sharply defined and not consi)icuous ; under parts white ; general color of upper j>arts grayish in winter pelage, fulvous in summer pelage; outer i>air of light stripes whitisli and always conspicuous ; dark dorsal ^stripes obscured by fulvous-tipped hairs, the median one only showing any clear black ; sides of face never washed with yellowish or ochraceous ; median facial stripe continuous in front of eye, usually dusky, bordered on both sides by fulvous ; inner pair of pale dorsal stripes grizzled grayish. Range. — Brush-covered slopes of the Upper Sonoran and Transition zones in southern California from the Cuyamaca, San Jacinto, and San Bernardino Mts. northward in the coast ranges to San Francisco Bay, and along the west slope of the Sierra to the Yosemite Valley. In the Sa!i Bernardino Mts. merriatnl occurs as far west as Wilson Peak, beyond which it is sejiarated by a considerable gap from Mt. Piiios, where it is abundant. Owing to the low altitude it inhabits, its range is practically continuous arouml the southern end of the San Joaquin Valley, speci- mens having heen collected on Tehachain Mt. and at Havilah near Walker Basin. The colonies inhabiting the Cuyamaca, Smith, San Jacinto, and San Bernardino Mts. are isolated. The form inhabiting the coast strip between Santa Cruz and San Francisco Bay is a little moie highly colored than the typical animal, and has been named pricei. Key to Members of Townsendi Guoup in all Pelages. Ear stripes and spot liehind ear well defined ; tail not exceed- ingly long. Under parts wlide (not washed with fulvous). Upper parts (excepting strijies) of ntiifonn color from post-auricular spots to tail. Color yellowish olive-gray (winter pelage) or dull yellowish fulvous (post-breeding pelage) townsendi. Upper parts not of uniform color. Rump grizzled gray ; tail small, narrow, dull ful- vous below senex. Rump grizzled golden-brown ; tail large and bushy, deep chestnut below klndsi. 4r,— HioL. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 198 Merriam — The Chipmunks of the Genus Eutamias. Tinder parts not vhite (washed with fulvous). 3 dorsal dark stripes black ; stripe from nose to ear distinct; side of face not suffused with yellowish (summer pelage) hindsi. 3 dorsal dark stripes not black ; stripe from nose to oar absent; sides of face strongly suffused with yel- lowish ochrogenys. Ear stripes and spot behind ear not well defined; tail exceed- ingly long , merriami. 'O'J Kky to Members of Townsendi Group in Ordinary Pelage. Tail exceedingly long ; ear stripes and post-auricular spots in- distinct. General color grayish merriami. Tail not exceedingly long ; ear stripes and post-auricular spots conspicuous. Rump and general ground color clear light gray ; dark stripes rusty ; flanks bright ochraceous fulvous senex. Rump and general ground color not gray ; dorsal stripes not rusty (except in Jnndsi). Under parts suffused with fulvous and strongly en- croached upon by color of sides ; sides of throat and face strongly suffused with fulvous. General color rich dark grizzled olive-gray oclirogenys. Under parts white, not encroached ujion by color of sides; sides of throat not suffused, and face only slightly suffused with fulvous. General color uniform yellowish olive-gray, includ- ing flanks and rump ; all 5 dark stripes showing more or less black ; outer pair of light stripes broad, pale yellowish, becoming grayish with wear toivnsoidi. General color not uniform and not yellowish olive gray ; flanks ))right fulvous, becoming pale with wear ; dorsal stripes rusty, the median one (and sometimes the inner lateral pair) showing black along middle ; outer pair of light stripes narrow, whitish Jdndsi. Key to Members of Townsendi Group in Reddish Post-breeding Pelacje. Tail exceedingly long. Ear stripes and post-auricular spots not sharply defined ; outer pair of light stripes whitish; inner pair grizzled gray merriami. The Chipmunks of the Genus Eutamlas. li)*> Jail not exceedingly long. Upper parts with at least 3 dorsal stripes distincthj black. Ground color of upper parts (including flanks and inner pair of light stripes) uniform dull yellowish ful- vous from neck to tail ; outer pair of light stripes slightly yellower and very hroad ; external lateral dark stripe showing hlack (making 5 stripes showing black) ; ear stripes and post-auricular spots sharply defined and very conspicuous townsendi. Ground color of upper parts not uniform ; flanks and fore part of back rich ferruginous ; outer pair of light stripes whitish, more or less washed with fulvous, and nari-ow ; external lateral stripe rusty ; ear stripe and post-auricular spots only moderately defined. . .hindsi. Upper parts with only one dorsal stripe {tlie median) distinctly black. Top of head and rump grizzled gray ; outer pair of light stripes whitish ; inner pair grizzled gray ; under part^ leliite ; under side of tail dull ful>:ou,s senex. Top of head and rump grizzled fulvous or golden-ful- vous; outer pair of light stripes grizzled grayish, inner piair yellowish-fulvous; under parts strongly suf- fused ivith sabnonfulvous ; undei" side of tail deep rich chestnut ochrogenys. 5. Remarks on the speciosus Group. The sj)eciosus group is of hardl}' less interest than the townsendi group, from which it differs totally in ap{>earance. The mem- bers of the towiisendl series are large and dark, with relatively dull stripes ; those of the speciosus series are decidedly smaller and lighter, with very bright stripes. Most members of the Unvn- seadi group have become differentiated into full species, while those of the speciosus grouj) (except j^ulmeri, which is separately described) are still only subspecies. The townsendi group, as already shown, has both Boreal and Transition representatives ; those of the speciosus group are purely Boreal, inhabiting the Hudsonian and Canadian zones from timber-line down to the lower limit of spruce and firs. Their distribution therefore is not continuous, but takes the form of isolated colonies occupj''- ing the summits of the higher mountains from San Jacinto Peak, in southern California, northward to the neighborhood of Donner, a little north of Lake Tahoe. The exact northern limit is un- known, but the group does not reach the mountains of northern California. The mountains on which members of the group are 200 3[erriam — The CJiipmimls of the Genus Eufamias. knoAvn to occur are San Jacinto, San Bernardino, Mt. Pinos, the Inyo and White Mts., and the High Sierra. The type locality of the species is Mt. San Bernardino, and the typical form occurs also on San Jacinto Peak, and on the eastern crest of the southern part of the High Sierra in the neighl)orhood of Mt. Whitney. Owing to the high altitudes it inhabits, its range is nowhere con- tinuous except in the High Sierra. Curiously enough, the northern form in the Sierra (neighbor- hood of Donner and Lake Tahoe) differs very ai)preciably from typical sipeciosus and may be known as subspecies /rafer (Allen). The form from the White and Inyo Mts. is also subspecifically separable and may l)e known as inyoensis nob. The form inhabiting the summit of Mt. Pinos is still different and may be known as subspecies callipej^lus (Merriam). A closely related form, differing so little that it is included under the same name, inhabits the western crest of the southern Sierra. In studying the distribution of these Chipmunks it is interest- ing to observe that with the single exception of Mt. Pinos the mountains which encircle the west end of the Mohave Desert are too low to furnish a home for any member of the group, so that the colony of subspecies callipeplus inhabiting Mt. Pinos is sepa- rated widely not only from the nearest colony of typical speciosns, but also from the nearest part of the range of the Sierra colony of its own subspecies. rteca})itulating, it appears that there are four forms of speciosus which seem worthy of recognition by name : (1) sjieclosus proper, inhabiting the San Jacinto and San Bernardino Mts. and the eastern crest of the High Sierra from Olancha Peak and Mt. Whitney northward an unknown distance, but not reacliing the headwaters of the San Joaquin river; (2) callipeplus, inhabiting the summit of Mt. Pinos and tlie western sloi)e of the Sierra from the headwaters of Tule liver northward nearly to the Yosemite Valley; (o) inyoensis, inhabiting the higher parts of the Inyo and White Mts., and (4) f rater, inhabiting the higher parts of the main Sierra in the Lake Tahoe region of central California. It is difficult to understand why there should be three recog- nizable forms within a distance of 150 miles in the Sierra Nevada while two of these forms reappear on isolated mountains 100 and 150 miles south of the southernmost limit of their ranges in the Sierra. This seems the more remarkable since in the Sierra the The Chipmunks of the Genus Eutamias. 201 two forms in question — spcciosus and callipejjlas — are separated, if at all, by a gap only 15 miles in width. In view of these facts it is important to bear in mind that the southern part of the lofty Sierra is split lengthwise by the upper valle}'' of Kern River into two parallel ridges, one of which (the eastern) is inhabited by true speciomts, the other (the western) by callipeplus. It should be remembered also that the Mt. Piiios colony of callipeplus lies southwest of the Sierra colony, and that the San Bernardino Mt. colony of speclosas lies southeast of the Sierra colon\^ of the same form. These facts, taken in connec- tion with the close relationship of speciosus with quadrivittutus of Colorado, point to the former continuous range of the group across the south end of the Great Basin from the Rocky Mts. to the Sierra, San Bernardino Mt., and San Jacinto Peak ; Avhile the presence of a distinct form {callipeplus) on Mt. Pinos at the ex- treme west end of the Mohave Desert and on the western range of the Sierra not only points to a former connection between the now separated colonies of this form by way of Tehachapi and the intervening low mountains, but also seems to show that the two existing colonies of true speciosus now separated by the Mo- have Desert were never united — unless in very remote times — by continuity of range along the horseshoe of mountains which connect the San Bernardino range with the Sierra. These facts argue great antiquity for the spechsus-quadriviUatus type and seem to show that very little change has taken place during the nian}^ thousands of years that have elapsed since the climate was cool enough to admit of continuity of Boreal forest across what are now the torrid Sonoran deserts of eastern California, southern Nevada, and southwestern Utah. Tliis view receives additional support from the large amount of differentiation undergone by the colonies of clearly derivative forms of these animals now stranded on isolated mountains within the area of former continuous range of quadrivittatus-speciosus across the southern part of the Great Basin. These forms are the subspe- cies inyoensis of the Inyo and White Mts., and tlie very distinct species pa^ium of the Charleston Mts., Ijoth of which must have developed their distinctive i)eculiarities since the great change in climate took i)lace. And it is interesting to note that the degree of differentiation of these forms is proportionate to the climatic isolation of their homes. 202 Merrlam — The Chlpmniiks of the GentiM Eataiiiias. Characters of the 4 subspecies of Eatanilas specUtsus. Eutanilas speciosas (Merriaui) is the smallest and shortest-tailed mem- ber of the series. In ordinary i>elage it is the grayest of the group, and in all i>elao;es the tail is deep rich fulvous above and below, and the fulvous of the upper surface is only partly hidden by the l)lack tips of the hairs. Tlie facial stripes are strongly marked and the post-auricular i)atches whitish and well defined. Ealamias speciosas f rater (Allen) is considerably larger than tme speclo- sus; the fulvous of the sides (below the external-lateral stripe) is brighter and more extensive ; the tail, particularly the upper side, is paler fulvous, the black tip is shorter, and the edges and tips of hairs on the upjier sur- face are grayish instead of deep yellow. Eutamias speciosus inyoeiisis {noh.) is about the same size as /ra/er and has the longest tail of any member of the group. The l)lack tip of the tail is short, like that offraier, but the fulvous of the upj^er side is much deei)er and richer. The subspecies differs from all others in having the facial stripes less pronounced, the post-auricular patches indistinct, the back of the neck largely gray, the median dorsal stripe black, and the inner pair of light stripes grayish white. It agrees with callipeplus and differs from all the others in having the rump grizzled golden yellowish instead of gray. Eutamias speciosus callipeplus (Merriam) is the largest of the group. It agrees with inyoensis and differs from all the otliers in the grizzled golden yellow (instead of gray) of the rump, and the unusual amount of bright rufous in the upper side of the tail. The whitish post-auricular patches are larger and more clearly defined, and the yellow edging of the tail more extensive than in any of the others. In the typical form (from Mt. Pinos) the Ijlack tip of the tail is short ; in the Sieri'a form it is long — and this is the only difference I am aljle to detect between the two colonies. We have no specimens from Mt. Pinos in post-breeding pelage, but sjjeci- mens in this pelage from the west slope of the >Sierra dilfer from frater in the same pelage in having the {)ost-auricular ])atches better defined; the dark facial stripes darker and sharper and the white ones whiter; the inner pair of light dorsal stripes more obscured by fulvous; the rump yellower; the ears longer ; the tail larger and more bushy, edged with deep yelloin instead of grayish or i)ale yellowish, witli the ujiper surface very much deeper and richer fulvous. Eutauiias speciosus callljK'pIus in post-breeding pelage resembles E. (juudrimacuUUus in corresponding pel- age, but differs in smaller size, shorter ears, very much brighter tints ; in smaller, grayer, and less sharply defined post-auricular patches ; broader external white dorsal stri|)es; blacker ant-orbital i)art of eye stripe; and yellowish instead of hoari^ tips to the hairs on the upper side of the tail. The Chipmunks of the Genus Eatamias. 203 6. Note on ' Tamias quadrimaculatus ' Gray. Eutamias quadrimaculatus (Gray). Long-eared Chipmunk. TnmiaK qnndrimacnlatn.'i Grav, Ann. & Mas;. Nat. Hist., 3d ser., XX, 4.15, 1807; Allen, Ball. Am. Mas. Nat. Hist., Ill, 80-82, 1890. Taiiiid!^ man'orltdhflolis Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc, Wash., HI, 25-28, ,Tan. 27, I88(i; Allen, Ball. Am. Mas. Nat. Hist, III, 78-80, 1890. The material necessary for the final determination of the status and interrelations of the large Chipmunks of the Sierra Nevada was collected by the Death Valley Expedition. The names that have been given to these species are Tdmias (iiiadrimaculatus Gray (1867), r. macrorhabdotes Merriam (1886), T. merriami Allen (1889), and T. seaex Allen (1890). T. merriami is a very distinct species from the one under consideration, and need not be discussed in the present connection. (See p. 197.) Taiiiias qaadrimacidatas was described by Gray in 1867 from a specimen from Michigan Bluff on the west slope of the Sierra in Placer County, California. This specimen is in the red post- breeding pelage, as shown by the original description and by a note from Mr. Oldfield Thomas, ])ublished by Dr. J. A. Allen (Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., Ill, p. 82, June, 1890). The species was not recognized by EJaird, and Allen, in his Monograjjh of the Sciuridffi (1877), gave it as a synonym of toivnsendi. In 1886 I described, under the name Tamias macrorhabdotes, a long-eared and strikingly colored Chipmunk from Blue Canon in the Sierra Nevada of central California. At this time no speci- men of Gi'ixy'' s qiiadrimaculatas was available for comparison, the only specimen extant (the type) being in the British Museum. Subse(|uently I came in possession of a single specimen in rather poor pelage from Nevada City, California, which differed from the S2:)ecimens of macrorhabdotes from Blue Canon (the type lo- cality) in having considerably smaller and less distinctly striped ears, smaller post-auricular spots, the shoulders,, anterior half of the back, and flanks deeply suffused with intense ferruginous, and the hind feet of the same color, though duller. This speci- men was correctly identified by both Doctor Allen and myself as Gray's quadrimaculatus. Owing to the differences just men- tioned. Doctor Allen, in his revision of the species of the genus Tamias, concurred wuth me in admitting Gray's quadrimaculatus and my macrorhabdotes as different species. In addition to the material available when Dr. Allen wrote 204 Merriam — The Chipmxmlcs of the Genus Eutamias. his revision of the group, large series of specimens are now before me from the tliree localities involved, namely, Nevada City, Michigan Bhiff (the type locality of (jtiadrhnacuhUus), and Blue Canon (the tyi)e locality of viacrorJiabdotcs). The Nevada City specimens alone are sufhcient to settle the question. Some of them have just attained the post-breeding or summer pelage; others are in the worn breeding pelage, and others still are im- mature. Those in the fresh summer j)elage agree with the speci- men above described from the same locality, except that the ears and |)Ost-auricular spots are decidedly larger. Specimens in worn l)reeding })elage, however, are quite different, having merely a suspicion of the rich rusty color on the back and shoulders, and the rusty of the hind feet much less pronounced. These specimens, in fact, agree with specimens of macrorhdbdotes from Blue Canon in corresponding pelage. Furthermore, to put the matter beyond dispute, a series of specimens was obtained by the expedition from Michigan Bluff, the actual type locality of Gray's quadrimacuhitas. The}^ were collected in the latter part of October by Mr. Vernon Bailey, and agree in every particular with October specimens from Blue Caiion, the type locality of macrorhabdotes. They agree also with the Nevada City specimens in breeding pelage, except that the colors are a little deeper, the coat being new instead of worn. It is obvious, therefore, that qundrimaculatas Gray and macrorhabdotes Merriam are one and the same animal — the former in summer, the latter in fall pelage.* The much greater development of ferruginous on the original Nevada City specimen and on the additional specimens in sum- mer pelage more recently obtained from the same locality is purely a seasonal character, pertaining to the short-lived sum- mer pelage. The October sjiecimens of ' macrorhabdotes ' then available for comparison were believed by both Doctor Allen and myself to be in the post-breeding or summer pelage, and there- fore strictly comparal)le with the Nevada City specimen — the late fall or winter pelage not having been recognized at that time in this or any other species of the genus. * Doctor Allen states that he was at first inclined to regard the two as identical, and Mr. Oldfield Thomas, Cnrator of Mammals in the British Museum, who compared a Blue Canon specimen with Gray's type, wrote on the back of the label : " Certainly identical with the type of T. quadri- macnlatiLs Gr., which only differs ])y more yellowish and less sharply de- fined underside and more fulvous flanks and shoulders." — Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., Ill, June, 1890, 82. The Chipmunks of the Genus Eutamias. 205 The summer pelage is of very brief duration, and a reexamina- tion of the original Nevada City specimen (collected in October, 1872, ))y E. \V. Nelson) shows that it had already begun to as- sume the winter pelage, which is fully developed on the tail and rump, the deep rusty back of the summer pelage remaining in sharp contrast. In August s})ecimens from Nevada City the rusty of the back reaches farther posteriorly. All of the original specimens from Blue Cailon described l)y me as macrorhabdotes and also those described later by Doctor Allen were collected in June and October — the latter in winter pelage, the former in breeding pelage, which is the winter pelage with the tips of the hairs worn off. Neither of us, as already remarked, had seen the summer pelage, though at that time we believed the October specimens to be in this pelage. The original Nevada City specimen had abnormally short ears, and the ear stripes were indistinct and quite different from those of the original Blue Canon specimens, the whole of the dark stripe, covering the anterior two-thirds of the ear, being obscured by rusty. Examination of the additional material now available shows that the full development of the -ear stripes is a seasonal character and is only attained in the winter pelage. In this l)elage the posterior third of the ear is clear blue-gray, sharply defined by a stripe of blackish which occupies the anterior two- thirds, and is margined with rusty in front only. In summer pelage the rusty spreads over the whole of the dark stripe, ol)- scuring it and giving the ear a wholly different appearance. The outer pair of pale dorsal stripes is whiter in summer than at any other season. The excessive length of the ears, Avhich adds much to the re- markable appearance of the animal, is most pronounced in the Blue Caiion specimens. The ears are nearly as long in the Michigan Bluff specimens and only slightly shorter in those from Nevada City. In some respects Eatamtas qwidrimaculalas seems to hold an intermediate position between calUpeplus of the speciosus group and seiiex of the towasendi group, but in reality it is not interme- diate. The particulars in which it differs from callipeplus have been stated (p. 202). In post-breeding pelage it resembles senex, but it differs from senex in the following points : ear larger and longer ; white face stripe, ear stripe, post-auricular patches, and outer pair of white dorsal stripes whiter; dark facial stripes 47— Hioi,. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 206 Merriam. — TJic Chipmunks of the Germs Entamias. darker ; tail more strongly fulvous, particularly on upper sur- face. In quadrimaculatus the lower cheek stripe is usually dusky, at least posteriorly, and reaches backward behind the plane of the ear ; the post-auricular patches are larger than in senex, and are pure white instead of bluish gray; the eye stripe is usually blackish both behind and in front of the eye ; the outer pair of dorsal stripes are almost as white as in speciosus, though not so broad. The geographic range of E. (puidrimaculatus is a narrow belt along the lower part of the west slope of the Sierra Nevada from the Yosemite National Park northward to Quincy, in Plumas County. In its relations to other forms, it lies below the range of scnex and seems to replace merrinmi on the lower slopes north of the Yosemite. 7. Descriptions of New Species and Subspecies. Eutamias townsendi ochrogenys subsp. nov. Redwood Chipmunk. T(/;)(froin Mendocino, California, No. 671S2, J* ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected July 17, 1894, by J. E. McLellan. Original No. lOlo. (In change of pelage : anterior half of body in fresh post-breeding coat.) General clMvaclers. — Size large; general coloration dark and rich; post- auricular spots and ear stripe bluish gray, large and conspicuous ; aide of face ochraceouf! in all pelages ; color of sides extending far down on under- parts except in post-breeding pelage when the under parts are strongly mashed irlih salmon-ochraceous ; ant-orbital part of middle dark facial stripe obsolete. Resembles merriami in corresponding pelages, but differs in uniformly darker coloration, moi'e conspicuous ear stripes and post- auricular spots, presence of ochraceous suffusion on underjiarts and sides of face, and absence of ant-orbital i)art of middle dark face stripe. Differs from loivnsendi in all pelages by color of underparts, which is alwaj'S white in tovmsendi, and by different colors of upper parts. Color. — Winter pelage (in spring and earl}' summer, before replaced by post-breeding pelage) : upper parts rich olive, finely grizzled with gray and golden, and becoming dull fulvous on sides ; dorsal dark stripes black, more or less obscured by fulvous-tipped hairs ; 'inner pair of light stripes only fiiintly paler than general ground color of upper parts ; outer pair of light stripes grayish ; post-auricular spot and posterior ear stripe bluish gray and sharply defined ; rest of ear dusky or blackish ; becoming more and more fulvous as summer advances ; sides of fiice, including stripes, suffused with ochraceous, increasing in intensity and area as the season advances; fore and hind feet olive gray slightly tinged with pale fulvous, the fulvous increasing in summer; tail above blackish with hoary tips ; below rich chestnut with Inroad submarginal black band. The CJiipiiiKiiks of the Genxs Entainias. 207 Pod-brcediag pdage : uj)pef parts fulvous, Ijrightest and richest on sides, becoming paler and duller on rump ; dark dorsal stripes much redder than in winter pelage, the median one only showing any clear black ; inner pair of light stripes also suffused with fulvous; outer pair graj'ish ; face (sometimes including nose), anterior and inner pait of ears, under parts, and fore and hintl feet strongly suffused with fulvous. Measurements. — Ti/pe specimen: total length, 2G1 ; tail vertebrjB, llo; hind foot, 38. Average of 8 specimens from type locality: total length, 26.'5; tail vertebne, 115.5; hind foot, 38.5. Average of 18 specimens from Cazadero and Gualala, California: total length, 2()0.5; tail vertebra, 111.6; hind foot, 38.5. Remarks. — In post-breeding pelage E. nchrogemjs assumes a fulvous pelage, which while differing conspicuously from the corresponding pelage oihindsi is very much more like hindsi in worm spring pelage. In fact, except for the dates on the labels it would be hard to tell from the color whether certain specimens were the redwood Chipmunk in post-breeding l)elage or hindsi in spring pelage. Of course the post-breeding pelage is fresher and less worn, and carries with it a salmon -fulvous suffusion on the belly which is much less extensive in hindsi. In some specimens of }iindsi in summer pelage the fulvous of the sides washes across the belly, but this wash is much less extensive and less intense than in the redwood animal. There is also a difference in the color of the upper parts, although this is sometimes hard to be sure of. The post aviricular patches are whiter than in Jiindsi, and the inner pair of light stripes are more strongly suffused with yellowish. All of the stripes are shorter posteriorly, so that the unmarked area of the rump is more extensive than in hindsi. Contrasting specimens in corresponding pelage, there is no difficulty in separating the two animals. E. hindsi in summer pelage is a very red Chii)munk, and the upper parts, particularly from the back of the neck to the lumbar region, are very bi'iglit rich fulvous. In hindsi, moreover, in post-l)reeding pelage the three dorsal dark stripes are hUick, and even the external lateral stripe is distinctly marked, though washed with fulvous. In the redwood animal the dark stripes are never black, and the external lateral stripe is nearly obsolete. Eutamias oreocetes sp. nov. Timber-line Chipmunk. Tijpe from timber-line near Summit, Teton Mts. [main range Rocky Mts.], Montana. No. 72468, ? ad. (nursing). U. S. Xat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected June 14, 1895, by Vernon Bailey. Grig. No. 5024. General characters. -In spi'ing pelage similar in color and general ap- pearance to Eutamias minimus and (dpinas, which very distinct species bear a surprisingly close seperficial resemblance to one another ; dorsal stripe longer, broader, and blacker than in either mini)nas or alpinus, in this resj)ect resembling the larger ajjinis in spring pelage. Color. — -Type in spring pelage [:= left-over winter ]»elage] : upper parts gray with a buffy yellowish suffusion on flanks and on side of neck just in front of foreleg; post-auricular spots whitish ; top of head grizzled 208 Merriam, — The Chip mimics of the Genus Eutamlas. grayish, dorsal stripe from between ears to tail hlucJc ; lateral dark stripes black, the hairs tipped with rusty; inner pair of jmle stripes whitish ; outer pair white; rump gray ; feet whitish ; tail a])ove, grizzled buffy yel- lowish ; below, pale fulvous with l)lack submarginal band edged with buffy ochraceous. Cruniid ckaracters. — The skull of Eatainlas oreocetcs is so much smaller than that of its geograi^hical neighbor, E. affinls, that no detailed com- jiarison is required. Contrasted with the skull of E. alplnus from the High Sierra of California, the skull is slightly larger, the frontals decidedly narrower between orbits ; parietals longer ; rostrum blunter and much more swollen ; teeth disproportionally larger, especially the molars. Measurements. — Type specimen, 9 ad. : total length, 193 ; tail vertebrae, 90; hind foot, 31. Cranial measurements: basal length, 26; zygomatic breadth, 18; palatal length, 15.5 ; upper molar series on crowns, 5. Eutamias speciosus inyoensis subsp. nov. Inyo Chipmunk. T!jpe from White Mts., Inyo Co., Calif No. Ulll, d Yg- ^^"^^ U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected July 7, 1891, by E. W. Nelson. Original No. 10G9. Geographic distribution. — Boreal summits of White and Inyo Mts., Cali- fornia. General characters. — Similar to E. speciosus, but facial stripes less pro- nounced ; post-auricular patches ill defined ; rump grizzled golden yel- lowish instead of gray ; middle dorsal stripe blacker; gray on back of neck more extensive ; black tip of tail shorter. Color. — Type (-Inly 7) : top of head grizzled grayish ; dorsal stripe from between ears to base of tail black, faintly edged with rusty along middle of back ; lateral dark stripes rusty anteriorly, becoming black edged with rusty on posterior half; outer pair of light stripes wliite ; inner pair gray ; sides, from in front of foreleg to rump, bright fulvous ; back and sides of neck grayish white, the post-auricular spijts indistinct ; rump golden yel- low, grizzled by l>lack hairs ; ui)})er surface of hind feet fulvous ; fore feet washed with pale fulvous ; tail above, grizzled yellowish-ochraceous and black ; below, fulvous with submarginal black Inind. Measaremanls. — Type: total length, 225; tail vertebne, 102; hind foot, 34. Average of 4 specimens from type locality: total length, 227; tail vertebra, 100; hind foot, 33.3. Eutamias palmeri* sp. nov. Palmer's Chipmunk. Tijpe from Charleston Peak, Nevada (altitude about 2450 meters or 8000 feet). No. llUh d ad., U. S. National Museum, Biological Survey Coll. Collected by T. S. Palmer and E. W. Nelson Feb. 13, 1891. (Original No. 432.) * Named in honor of Dr. T. S. Palmer, who was in command of the expedition during my absence, and who was in charge of the party that visited Charleston Peak and discovered the species. The Chipimmks of the Genus Eittamias. 209 Gcti.cr(tl <-li?from Austin, Nevada. No. UTil, d" YS- ad. U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survev Coll. Collected Nov. 11, 1890, by Vernon Bailey. Original No. 2007. General dmrnclers. — Size large —largest of the genus after T. hnUnrorus. Two color phases: pale buff and dark plumbeous slate. Skull suggesting that of T. biilhirorus ; incisors curving far forward, tail of medium length. Color. — Nornud ))elas from Humboldt Bay, but smaller ; under parts brighter fulvous ; incisors white instead of yellow and sloping more strongly f(jrward ; all the teeth much smaller. Color. — Upi>er {)arts from nose to tail dull fidvous brown, becoming brighter on sides and belly; nose, sides of mouth, and ear spots dusky [no dusky ring round eye] ; fore and hind feet whitish; tail yellowish buff. Crroi hd and denial chnracten^. — Braincase 1 )road ; zygomata widely spread- ing; temporal ridges parallel, distant ; interparietal rather large, shield shaped ; skull similar to that of 2\ laticeps but smaller ; nasals narrower and more deeply notched posteriorly ; basi-occipital narrower ; incisors sloping far forward, their anterior faces white (sometimes slightly stained with i)ale yellow), narrower and more rounded than in hdicep:^. Mensnronents. — Type specimen : total length, 221; tail vertebrae, 68 ; hind foot, 29. Thomomys opeiarius sp. nov. Tijpeh'om Iveeler, Owens Lake, luyo Co., California. No. ll\lt, (J ad. U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected Nov. 29, 1890, by E. W. Nelson. Original No. 1. General characters. — Size small ; color pale buffy ; fore claws very long and slender; cranial characters peculiar. Does not require comparison with any known species. Color. — Uniform buffy yellowish or buff gray (according to pelage) from end of nose to tail ; post-auricular spots plumbeous; under parts plum- beous strongly washed with white ; fore and hind feet and tail white. Cranial characters. — Skull short, broad, and massive, with widel}^ and S(iuarel3' s])reading zygomata, short and broad rostrum, broad interorbital region, and well marked temporal ridges (1-2 mm. apart in adults). 216 Mcrriam — Descrqjtions of Eight Nciv Pochi Gojyhers. Measurements. — Type specimen: total length, 22S ; tail vertebrpe, 67; hind foot, 30. Average of 14 specimens from type locality : total length, 217; tail vertebne, iu ; hind foot, 21). 2. Thomomys alpinus s}). nov. Ti/pc from ^It. Whitney, High Sierra, California. E\'act locality. Big Cottonwood Meadows (aititude, 10,000 feet', 8 miles SE. of Mt. Whitney peak. No. lUU, d' ad. U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Col- lected August 6, 1S91, by B. H. Dutcher. Original No. 167. General rharactcrs. — Size rather small ; coloration dark ; similar in gen- eral to 7\falpns, 1)nt fulvous tints much duller and j)aler ; skull smaller and less angular. Color. — Tyi)e (in jxile pelage) : upper parts between sepia and drab brown, suffused with very jiale dull fulvous brown; nose and sides of mouth dusky, the dusky reaching up between eyes ; ears dusky, but with- out distinct post-auricular spot ; under parts plundjeous, strongly washed with ochraceous buff; throat, fore feet, and tail irregularly white; hind feet white. There is a very much darker pelage in which the tips of the hairs are russet brown. Cra^alal diuraders. — Skull rather small, rounded; zygomata spreading; frontals broad and flat interorbitally ; nasals rather short. The skull of T. alpiMHS differs from that of T. fultms in smaller size, shorter and less angular zygomata, shorter nasals, more smoothly rounded braincase, and less pronounced temporal ridges. Measurements. — Type specimen: total length, 228; tail vertebrye, 67; hind foot, 30. A verage of 6 specimens from type locality: total length, 220.5; tail vertebne, 63; hind foot, 30.2. Thomomys nasicus sp. nov. 7)/pe from Farewell Bend, Des Chutes River, Oregon. No. 79815, d ^f'- U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected Aug. 4, 1896, by E. A. Preble. Original No. 1274. General diaraders. — Similar to 2\ inazaina, but slightly paler, and with distinctive cranial characters. Color. — Upper parts from in front of eyes to tail uniform pale russet fulvous ; under parts dark plumbeous, strongly washed with pale fulvous ; nose and front of muzzle pale dusky ; a dark spot around and behind ear ; fore and hind feet and tail whitish. Cranial characters. — Skull long and slender, similarto that of 2'. mazama, but rostrum longer; nasals exceedingly elongated; zygomata sloping strongly backward; audital bu Ike very small; temporal ridges distant; interparietal large and transversely elongated. Measurements. — Type specimen: total length, 214; tail vertebrae, 69 ; hind foot, 27. Vol. XI, pp. 217-218 July 15, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON OVIS NELSONl A NEW MOUNTAIN SHEEP FROM THE DESERT REGION OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA. BY C. HART MERRIAM. . Mount:iiU sheep were found by tlie Death Valle}' I{]x])editioii in several of the desert ranges of southern California and south- ern Nevada, where ten specimens were secured b}^ Mr. E. \V. Nelson. They were killed in the northern continuation of the Funeral Mountains, locally known as the ' Grapevine Range.' Compared with the well known Bighorn of the Rocky Moun- tains and Cascade-Sierra system, they are much ])aler in color, somewhat smaller in size, and have very much smaller molar teeth. Compared with Ovis aionei recently described by Dr. Allen, the contrast in color is even more marked ; but the pat- tern seems to be the same, and the darkening of the under parts and legs is also a character of stonei. In the absence of neces- sary material for comparison it seems best to treat the new form as a full species. The geograi)hic range of the southern liigborn is unknown, but it is probable that all of the sheep of the semi-barren desert ranges of Mexico and the southern United States, from Texas to California, belong to the present form. It is a noteworthy coincidence that Mr. Nelson, who in north- ern Alaska discovered and named the northernmost American Sheep {Ovk chdll), should also secure, in the Sonoran deserts of California, the southernmost representative of the group. In view of these facts, it seems peculiarly api)ro})riate that the new sheep should perpetuate Mr. Nelson's name, which I take ])]eas- ure in bestowing upon it. 49— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (217) 218 Merriara—Ovis nelsonl, a Neiv Mountain Sheep. Ovis nelsoni SJ). WOY. Type from Grapevine Mauntains, on boundar}' between California and Nevada, jnst south of latitude 37°. No. HW^, ? ad. U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected June 4, 1891, by E. W. Nelson. Orig- inal No. 942. General cluiracieis. — Apparently similar to Orit; stonci Allen in pattern of coloration, but much paler; rump patch small and completely divided on median line; tail sliprt and slender ; molar teeth very small. Coloi: — Upper parts, except rump patch, pale dingy brown ; under parts and legs much darker, contrasting sharply with the white areas ; inguinal region, hinder part of belly (narrowing to a point anteriorly some distance behind forelegs), inner aspect of thighs and posterior as- pect of fore and hind legs, white. Measurements (taken in flesh by collector). — Total length, 1280; tail vertebrae, 100; hind foot, 360; height at shoulder, 830. In the dry skin the rump patch measures about 190 in breadth by 150 in length (from apparent base of tail). Vol. XI. pp. 219-220 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON DESCRIPTIONS OF TWO NEW PUMAS FROM TH NORTHWESTERN UNITED STATES. BY C. HART MERKI.\M.. Felis hippolestes sp. nov. Ttjpe from Wind River Mts., Wyoming (neai* head of Big "Wind River). No. 57936, (^ old. U. S. Nat. Mu.?., Biological Survey Coll. Collected in November, 1892, by John Barlingham. Gcnevnl characters. — Size enormous; color reddish brown; skull and teeth large and massive ; frontal region elevated ; upper carnassial with well developed inner cusp. Color. — Upper parts dull pale rufous brown, darkest along middle of back and on tail ; tip of tail black ; nose to eyes grayish brown ; a pale patch over each eye ; outer sides of legs and feet pale dull gi'ayish ful- vous; back of ears blackish; chin, lips (except dark patch at base of whiskers), throat, breast, under side of fore legs, inguinal region, and hinder j)art of belly soiled white ; under side of tail grayish white. Cranial and dental cliaracter.i. — Contrasted with skulls of Felis concolor from Patagonia and Costa Rica, the skull of F. Jtippolestes differs in very mucli larger size (basal length ITS, instead of 160 or less; zygomatic breadth 160, instead of i;]5 or less) ; frontal much more elevated and swollen; postorbital processes broader, shorter, more swollen, and more decurved ;* nasals more angular (deflexed) with a pit in frontals over their apex ; teeth uniformly larger ; upper carnassial with well developed inner cusp ; lower premolars much more swollen. Measurements (from well made skin).— Total length, 2600 ; tail vertebrae, 930; hind foot, 270. Cranial measurements : basal length, 178; zygomatic breadth, 160; palatal length (from gnathion), 93; postpalatal length (basion to postpalatal notch), 98 ; occii^ito-sphenoid length, 65 ; breadth across postorbital processes, 84; interorbital Ijreadth, 49. * In J'. coHcofor of corresponding age (rather old) from Pacuare, Costa Rica, the frontals are flat, with relatively long, slender, and only slightly decurved postorbital processes. 50— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (219) 220 Merriam — Descriptions of Two New Painas. Felis hippolestes olympus subsp. nov. Ti/pc from Ijake Cnshman, Olympic Mts., Wasliington. No. 77073 (' (j^ ' ?) ad. U. S. Nat. Mus., Biol. Survey Coll. Collected April IS, 1896, liy Thomas Hayes. General characters. — Similar to F. hippolestes, but color very much darker '. tail concolor to black tip (not grayish white below, as in Jdppolestes) ; whitish areas on under parts much more restricted and less white. Color. — Upper parts dark rufous brown, darkest along middle of l>ack and on tail ; tip of tail blackish ; nose to eyes dusky ; whole top and sides of head dark except a pale spot over each eye ; backs of ears black except posterior edge, which is grayish ; lips (except blackish patch at base of whiskers), chin, and anterior part of throat white ; neck dull ful- vous, palest Ijelow ; breast and inguinal region soiled whitish ; underside of fore legs only lighj^ly washed with whitish ; tail dark all round — not grayish white below as in hippolestes. Remarks. — The type, though fully adult, is very much smaller and has a much smaller skull than F. hippolestes. It is marked '(j",' but possibly this may be an error. Measurements (from well madedry skin).— Total length, 2095 ; tail verte- brae, 775 ; hind foot, 260. Criininl measitroiienis : basal length, 162; zygo- matic breadth, 127 ; jmlatal length (fromgnathion), "6 ; postpalatal length (basion to postpalatal notch), 85; occipito-sphenoid length, 60; breadth across postorbital processes, 71 ; interorbital breadth, 39. Vol. XI, pp. 221-223 July 15, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THR BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON t^ DESCRIPTIONS OF FIVE NEW RODENTS FROM THE COAST REGION OF ALASKA. BY C. HART MERRIAM. Microtus sitkensis sp. nov. Tiji)c from Sitka, Alaska. No. 73S;>9, cJ'ad. U. S. Xat. Mas., Biological Survey Coll. Collected August 3, 1895, by C. P. Streator. Original No. 4745. General cluiraders. — Similar in color and general ai)pearance to M. cali- fornicns in corresponding pelage, but somewiiat darker and more reddish brown; bell}' washed with pale buffj^ fulvous ; ears smaller; tail rather short, upper side black. Cranial and dental characters distinctive. CVo;-. — Ui)per parts uniform grizzled brown, not conspicuously lined Avith black hairs, and with a distinct ' reddish brown ' suti'usion, espe- cially on rump and neck, which is probably peculiar to late summer pelage; under parts plumbeous (without white), the bell}' washed with ochraceous buff; tail sharply bicolor, black above, white beneath ; fore and hind feet and ankles dusky. Cranial and dental chnracters. — Skull long and narrow, very broad inter- orbitally; braincase rounded (not angular); interparietal subtriangular and rather small ; zygomata not spreading ; audital bulhe large and rather elongated (not rounded) ; incisive foramina very narrow and slit like, falling far short of molars; teeth as in subgenus Microtus; first lower molar with 3 closed loops on inner side and 2 on outer side, the anterior loop with no external and only 1 internal salient angle. Remarks. —While externally Microtus sitken,sis resembles M. calif ornicus, its cranial characters place it in a different group, along with the small J/, kadiacensis. Measurements. — Type specimen: total length, 155; tail vertebne, 42; hind foot, 23. Cranial measurements : basal length, 25 ; zygomatic breadth, 14; palatal length, 13 [to incisorl ; interorbital constriction, 4.2. 51-Bioi. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 (221) 222 Merriam — Descriptions of Five New Rodents. Microtus kadiacensis sp. nov. Tijpc fniin Kadiak Lslaiid, Alaska. No. 65827, 9 ad. U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected Sept. 12, 1.S93, l)y B. J. Bretherton. Original No. 213. General characters. — Similai' to M. silkenxift in color and general appear- ance, but much smaller, somewhat paler, and under parts white instead of ochraceous bufl"; tail and ears rather short. Color. — Upper jjarts uniform grizzled pale brownish with pale dull ful- vous suffusion, not conspicuously lined with black hairs; under parts l^lumbeous, stnjngly washed with pure white ; tail sharply bicolor, dusky above, white beneath; fore and hind feet grayish brown. Cranial and dental characters. — Skull similar to that of M. sltkensls, but very much smaller ; interparietal much more elongated transversely and nan-ower ; audital bulUe very much smaller and narrower ; postpalatal pits deeper; teeth essentially as in sitkcnsis, hut first lower molar with only 2 completely closed loo])S on each side. Measurements.— Type specimen, measured in flesh by collector: total length, 141; tail vertebrte, 23 [probably 33] ; hind foot, 18 [probably li) or 20]. Cranial ineasurevieiits : basal length, 23.5 ; zygomatic breadth, 13.5 ; l)alatal length, 12.8; interorbital constriction, 3.8. Microtus unalascensis sp. nov. Type from Unalaska, Alaska. No. lU^h ? ""■ U. S. Nat. Mus., Bio- logical Survey Coll. Collected Aug. 13, 1891, by C. Hart Merriam. Orig- inal No. z. General characters. — Similar to M. kadiacensis, bnt apparently somewhat darker; audital bullae much shorter and more globular; front lower molar witli two closed and two open loojis on inner side, and two closed and no open loops on outer side. Color. — (Specimen immature): Upper parts yellowish brown, darkest on head ; under j)arts plumbeous "washed with whitish ; tail sharply bi- color, narrowly 1>Iack above, broadly white below; fore and hind feet grayish. Measureiiniits. — Type specimen (not full grown) : total length, 122; tail vertebrfe, 28; hind foot, 19. liemorks. — This species, which resembles M. rutdceps of Europe in the enamel pattern of the first lower molar, is closely related to 3f. kadiacen- .S-/.S, from which it may be distinguished at a glance'by the much shorter and more globular audital bulUe and the pattern of m i. During the single night spent at Unalaska on my return from the Seal Islands, I caught several of these Voles along the edges of a small pond on the outskirts of the Aleutian village of Iluliuk. Unfortunately, all but one were eaten by Ravens shortly after daylight. The one secured had dragged the trap into the water and drowned out of reach of the Ravens. Descriptions of Five New Rodents. 223 Peromyscus sitkensis sp. nov. Tiipe from Sitka, Alaska. No. ToSOi), cj^ ar('r.sT/'(^'/'< resembles »S'. oreopolns, a small short-tailed species inhabiting the Sierra 'Nevada de Colima of Jalisco. Measurements. — Type specimen: total length, 126; tail vertebrae, 52; hind foot, 16. Average of 5 specimens from type locality : total length, 125; tail vertebrfe, 53; hind foot, 16. * Field measurements not yet received from collector, t Named in honor of Dr. Philip Lutley Sclater, the distinguished Secre- tary of the Zoological Society of London. DcMriptions of Five New Shreivs. 229 Sorex salvini * sp. uov. Type fromCalel, Totonioapaii, Guatemala (alt., 10200 ft. ----- 3100 meters). No. 77035, 9 ad. U. S. Nat. :Mu.s., Department of Agriculture Coll. Col- lected Jan. 12, 1S9(), l.y E W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original No. 9057. Generdl chitracfcrf!. — Size small (about equalling ^S". veiitralk) ; ears me- dium or rather large ; tail rather short ; />ectoral, 21. Bering Sea, Lat. N. 55° 19', Long. W. 1()8° 11' (station 3608, Aug. 12, 1895; 276 fathoms). MACRURID.E. Macrurus lepturus. Type 22 inches long. D., 14-122. A., 116. P., 20. V., 8. Scales deciduous and moderate, oblong or oval with reduced exposed surfaces; those on the back or above the lateral line have a few (3-5) ridges beset with sj>ines, })ut those below are mostly unarmed. Head one-sixth of entire length, regularly conical. Snout moderatelv ex- tended. Median tubercle very projecting; lateral wfli developed, con- nected by well defined ridge; infraorbital vertical, with the ridge linear and near the orbit. Teeth cardiform in both jaws ; the lower teeth beset the outer slope of the jaw. Bering Sea, S. W. of Pribilof Islands (station 3604; 1401 fathoms). Macrurus dorsalis. Type length, 26 inches. D., 15-120. A., 122. P., 21. V., 9. Scales deciduous and rather small, diversiform, with small exposed sur- faces; near the dorsal they have about five radiating spinigerous ridges, but below the lateral line these ridges are fewer and unarmed. Head a little more than one-sixth of the length. Snout short, itrojecting a con- siderable length beyond the eye and a little beyond the supraniaxillary. Median tubercle very i)rominent ; C(jnnecting ridge is well defined ; infra- orbital nearly vertical, with the ridge linear and near the orbit. Teeth cardiform. Bering Sea, S. W. of Pribilof Islands (station 3604; 1401 flithoms). 234 GUI (.(• Townsend — Diagnoses of New Sj^ecies of Fishes. Macrurus firmisquamis. Type 31 inches long. D., 12-120. A., 105. P., 20. V., 8. Scales firmly affixed, oblong or rather short, and with considerable ex- posed snrfaces, which have sabeqnal radiating ridges beset with numerous Hcnte spinelets ; the ridges vai-y from 3 to 8 in number. Head regularly convex in profile, a fifth of the entire length. Snout longer than the diameter of the eye. Rostral tubercles obsolete and infraorbital ridge rounded. Teeth biserial or triserial. This species is distinguishable from all its American congeners, at least, by the very firm scales. Bering Sea, S. W. of Pribilof Islands, 1895. Macrurus (Nematonurus) magnus. Type 43 inches long. D., 9-128. A., 121. P., 15. V., (i. Scales moderately large, readily deciduous, decidedly oblong or long, with a small exposed surface which is beset with five to seven radiating unarmed ridges. Head regularly conical, less than one-fifth of the length. Snout rather long ; i)rojects half its length beyond the mandible. Tuber- cles feebly (developed, plain and continuous from 3 parallel ridges; infra- orbital flat, with the crest rather nearer the orbit than its lower mai'gin ; its entire surface scaly. Teeth in the upper row biserial or triserial ; in lower jaw imperfectly biserial or uniserial. Bering Sea, S. W. of Prit)ilof Islands. Macrurus (Nematonurus) suborbitalis. Type 20 inches long. D., 12-85. A., 102. P., 19. V., 11. Scales closely adherent and rather large, mostly short and roundish, with considerable exposed surfaces, having radiating ridges beset with weak spines. Head a little more than one-sixth of the entire length. Snout projects little. Median and lateral tuberciles are faintly developed ; infraorbital narrow, divided into two well marked areas — an upper wider, distinguished by the glassy tul)ercular scales, and the narrow lower, al- most skinny and scaleless; the ridge indei)endently, is little marked. Teeth biserial in the ui)per jaw, robust in the outer row, very weak in the inner ; uniserial in lower jaw and scarcely incurved. Bering Sea, S. W. of Priljilof Islands (station 3603; 1771 fathoms). PLEURONECTID.E. Hippoglossoides robustus. Body rather high, its greatest height nearly equaling half the length from the snout to base of caudal. Profile decurved above the eye. Body thick. Scales on head separate and rarely touch each other. Lateral line more arched than in allied species. Teeth of the single row mostly separated from each other by intervals equal to width of teeth, curved inward, and uniform on the sides; toward front four or five enlarged teeth, preceded by two smaller, leaving the middle toothless. In the lower jaw of nearly uniform size and inclining backwards. Bering Sea, Lat. N. 56° 14^, Long. W. 164° 8' (station 3541 ; 49 fathoms). Vol. XI. pp. 235-240 September 17. 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON' '^A 't^ * V ON A SMALL COLLECTION OF MAMMALS FROM HAMILTON INLET, LABRADOR. BY OUTRAM BANGS. In the early summer of 1895 INIr. C. H. Goldthwaite started for Hamilton Inlet, Labrador, to collect mammals for the Bangs' Collection. Upon reaching St. Johns, Newfoundland, he was met by the discouraging news that on account of the troubles of the government and the low state of its finances, there was some doubt as to whether its steamer would make the usual annual trip u}) the Labrador coast for the purpose of carrying supjdies and picking up shipwrecked fishermen and explorers. Most of the fishing vessels that visit Labrador in summer had alread}'' sailed, but after much delay and trouble he secured passage from Conception Bay in a belated fisherman, and finally arrived at Hamilton Inlet, after a long and tedious voyage. Here he collected from July 5 to September 9, in the immediate vicinity of the Hudson Bay post of Rigoulette, about eighty miles up Hamilton Inlet, or Grosswater Bay, as it is usually called bv the inhabitants. I had hoped that his work would cover a larger area, and that he might get far enough from the post to collect fur-bearing and other large animals, but this proved impossible. The only way to make such a trip successfully would be to go prepared to remain throughout the winter. In summer the in- habitants are all busy with salmon fishing, their principal means of subsistence, and cannot be induced to go inland, even if this were practicable. The heavy growth of moss, saturated with moisture, into which a man sinks above the knee at every step, 55— Bioi,. Soc. Wash., Vol XI, 181)7 (235) 230 Banr/s — Mammals from Hamilton Inlet, Labrador. makes traveling so laborious as to be nearly impossible, while the constant annoyance from the attacks of blood-sucking flies of four or five kinds becomes almost intolerable. In winter traveling on snow-shoes or on dog sledges is very easy. Then all the men go inland to their various trapping grounds and stay through the season, and if a collector went along with them he could undoubtedly reap a rich harvest. The countr}'' about Rigoulette is heavily wooded with a rather stunted growth of spruce and fir, but so near timber line is it that the tops of the hills are devoid of trees. In some places there were large fields of snow that remained unmelted throughout the entire summer. The country is monotonous and offers little diversity for trapping, and with the exception of the lemmings (Dlcrostonyx), which in- habit only the treeless tops of the hills, all the smaller mammals live under about the same conditions. In collecting small mammals anywhere one is sure to find some pest to interfere with tra])ping by eating specimens or bait, or both, and Hamilton Inlet was no exception to the rule. Mr. Goldthwaite's two principal enemies were tlie Labrador jay and the Esquimaux dog. The jays soon discovered what he was doing, and would follow him in a loose flock, sitting about and watching while he set a trap, and would then descend upon it and steal the bait the moment his back was turned. Often one of them fell a victim to the wicked little Schu3der trap, but this never deterred the others, and no matter how many were killed, there were always as many more following him.- TJie dogs were even worse, for turned out in the summer to forage for them- selves, they hunt over the country in packs for miles in evei'y direction. They feed largel}^ on mice, lemmings, and all small mammals, and were ver}' cpiick to find one caught in a trap. Several of the dogs also got into baited steel traps, and as they are highly prized, especially the leaders. Mr. Goldthwaite was requested by the owners to refrain from setting steel traps at that season of the 3' ear. Mr. Goldthwaite collected the following mammals : *o Lepus aniericanus ameiicanus Erxl. Abundant everywliere. A fine series of 14 young and adult examples has led me to take up a careful study of a large number of S2)ecimens of the American hare from many jioints in eastern North America, the re- sults of which will be pul>lislied in a separate i)aper. Mnmmnh from Tlamilfon Lilcf, Lahrtirlor. 237 The type of Lepn^ (iinericanui^, as is well known, cam(> fnini tlie south side of Hudson Strait. HainiUon Inlet is not only much south of this, but appears to have quite a diflei'ent fauna, the small mammals especially beinij; different from those taken at Fort Chimo by L. M. Turner. It is therefore probable that typical Lcpus americanus is even more extreme than the Hamilton Inlet series, which is at present the best working material available.* Zapus hudsonius (Zimmerman). Three specimens were caught in the damp mosgyspruce woods. Fiber zibethicus (Linn.) ^luskrats were very scarce al)out Hamilton Inlet, but were said to be abundant in the lakes and rivers of the interior. The one specimen col- lected, an adult, agrees in every waj' with true zibdliicus of northeastern North America generally, and shows no approach to the insular form {Fiber obscnrus) found in Newfoundland. Dicrostonyx hudsonius (Pallas). Three specimens of the Hudsonian lemming were secured, all taken at the entrance to one hole on top of a treeless hill. A fourth was also trapped at the same hole, but afterwards destroyed. The lemming was well known to the natives, who called it 'hill mouse,' and said it was usually abundant on all the hills. Mr. Goldthwaite worked very hard to get more, but the dogs had visited all suitable places and dug out the lemmings before he arrived, and the hole where he caught his specimens was the only one he could find that was occupied. Mr. Gerrit S. Miller, Jr., who examined these specimens at the time he wrote his 'Genera and Subgenera of Voles and Lennnings,' tells me that this lemming is not like any of the old-world species. The name Mns Jiudsonius Pallas t apparently applies to this species, which may be briefly described as follows : Color. — Upper parts gray (about the color of a Maltese cat), somewhat mixed with l)lack tipped hairs and slightly touched in places with rusty ; a narrow black stripe along middle of back ; long hairs covering ear, mixed black and rusty ; a spot of pale yellowish rust color at base of whiskers. Lower sides and under parts dull brownish gray, irregularly washed with rusty, the rust color predominating in front of arms, across * The Arctic Hare is said to occur at Hamilton Inlet, but Mr. Goldth- waite was unable to get one. It was reported to ))e more abundant in winter than in sunmier. t Richardson (Fauna Boreali-Americana, 1829, p. 132) refers the specific name hudsonius to Forster. I cannot find that Forster ever gave his ani- mal (a mutilated specimen) a scientific name, merely styling it 'a small animal called a Field Mouse. Churchill River,' 238 Bangs — MammaU from Hamilton Li let, Labrador. chest, and about vent. Feet, liands, and tail dull gray, hairy. Tail with a long pencil nearly equaling length of tail. Measurements. — The three specimens measured as follows: No. Sex. Total len gth. Tal verteline. Hind foot 4166 J^old. 150 .21 20 4167 d yg- a mm. more and the skull being actually larger; the tail is also longer. It is a jnty that only one specimen from each locality is in existence, as more material from Labrador would probably show that two well marked forms occur there, as is the case with Erotomys and probably with Phenaconiys ungava also. The n^easurements of the si)ecimen, No. 3972, (^ young adult, are : total length, 114; tail vertebrse, 25; hind foot, 21. * Miller, North American Fauna, No. 12, p. 39, foot-note, July 23, 1896. MaminaJs from Hamilton hilcf, Labrddor 239 Microtus enixus Bangs.* Next to Evotdmijs, tliis species was the coiiini(ine«t siiuill iiiaiiniial aliout Hamilton Inlet. It was found living every- where, but was especially abundant along the banks of the brooks where a few reeds and grasses grew ; 80 specimens were obtained. It is very distinct from all other eastern voles, and is at once distinguished by its peculiarly small, weak, molar teeth. (See figure lo.) Evotomys proteus Bangs.f The Evotomys was the connnonest small mam- mal, and was found everywhere. No less than 99 specimens were collected. Several times while walking through the forest Mr. Goldth- waite discovered one sitting upon a spruce branch ' like a squirrel.' I have never known of this arboreal habit being noticed in other species. The range of individual color varia- tion in Ecotomijs proteus is simply astounding, and it seems incredible that extremes from the series can belong to the same species, yet any specimen picked out can be graded by the most delicate steps into any of the other extremes. The at-companying plate shows admirably a few of the most pronounced color phases. The Hamilton Inlet and Fort Chimo red-backed mice are very difierent, representing opposite extremes in the genus. The latter, lately described l)y Vernon Bailey as Evotomys' uv(java,X is a small form with small hind foot, short tail, and little ears concealed by the fur. E. 2>roteus is a very large form, with heavy skull, big feet and tail, and large ears. Fig. 13.— a. Left upper molar series of Alicrotiis pennsyl- vanicus (Topotype No. 2336 Bangs coll.) b. Left upper molar series of Microtus enixus (Topotype No. 3970, Bangs coll.) Phenacomys ungava ■Nlerriam. The 11) individuals of this interesting species that were caught were all found in one small area on the bank of a little ])rook, associated with MicrotKs enixus and Evotoinys proteus. None were taken anywhere else. Mr. Miller had this series when he wrote his ' Synopsis of the Voles of the Genus Phenacomys,' and found tluxt the form is much larger than true P. ungava. It is very possible that more specimens from Fort Chimo would show the Hamilton Inlet form to be worthy of separation. * Preliminary Description of a New Vole from Labrador, American Naturalist, XXX, Dec. 5, 1896, p. 1051. t In Vernon Bailey's Revision of the American Voles (jf the Genus Evotomys, Proc. Biol. Soc. of Washington, XI, May 13, 1897, p. 137. tLoc. cit, p. 130. 240 Bangs — Mammals from Hamilton Inlet, Labrador. Sciurus hudsonicus hudsonicus l-^ i-.\l Red Hquii-rels were not at all coininon, four being all that Mr. Goldtli- waite was alile to get, though constantly on the lookout for them. Sorex personatus I. GeofFroy St. Hilaire. This species is represented by one skull, kindly identified as S. perso- natus by " V "^-^rrit S. Miller, Jr. It is strange that in all the trapping lie did near Hamilton Inlet Mr. Goldthwaite caught but one shrew and no moles.* Putorius cicognani cicognani (Bonaparte). Mr. Goldthwaite's collection contained 2 specimens J^ and 9; which, though taken at a locality so strictly Hudsonian in character, are per- fectly referable to the Canadian form, true cicognani. This would seem to indicate that typical Putorins cicognani pushes farther north in the east than it does in the central part of the continent. The two specimens col- lected measure as follows : No. 3951, cf adult : total length, 300 ; tail verte- bra, 90; hind foot, 43. No. 3952, $ young adult : total length, 256; tail vertebme, 66 ; hind foot, 31. Possibly another form may be found farther inland, as the sj^ruce and fir forest only extends in a narrow belt along the coast, the whole inte- rior being open ' barren grounds,' where the conditions of life must be dif- ferent from those near the coast. EXPLANATION OF PLATE IV. A series of toi-)otypes of Evotomys proieus, in collection of E. A. and O. Bangs, showing some of the color phases to which the species is subject. (All specimens are from Hamilton Inlet, Labrador.) Fig. 1, No. 4054; Fig. 2, No. 4053; Fig. 3, No. 4068; Fig. 4, No. 4088; Fig. 5, No. 4085; Fig. 6, No. 4118; Fig. 7, No. 4139. * One morning Mr. Goldthwaite saw sevei'al dogs nosing about a star- nosed mole {Condglura, cristata) which they had caught but did not relish. One of them, however, instantly swallowed it when he tried to rescue it. He was unable to find any signs of this mole anywhere and secui'ed no specimens. PROC. BIOL. SOC. WASH.. XI, 1897 PL. IV \P -c^i^iiiMtMBtaisa o o o I/) o < < > Z 5: o X in UJ I- O oc CL 1/5 >- s o (- o > "■'•> B'SKe ad nar A.HU.-11 K<*u.I.i(lt. n^Iiii Vol. XI, pp. 241-270 December 17, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON ^' A LIST OF THE GENERIC AND FAMILY NAMES OF RODENTS. BY T. 8. PALMER. Generic names of mammals have undergone many changes in recent years, and in no group is this more apparent than in the Rodentia. Not only have new names been proposed for a host of new forms, but man}^ well-known genera now appear under names long forgotten, but revived in obedience to the law of priority. Linnteus, in 1758, recognized only six genera of ro- dents (including Rhinoceros!) ; Agassiz, in 1842-'46, recorded about 220 generic names in this order, and ISIarschall, in 1873, added 65 more, making a total of somewhat less than 300. The present list contains more than 600 (a large proj)ortion of which are, of course, synonyms), comprising perhaps 15 percent of the entire number of generic and subgeneric names ever proposed for mammals. Recent changes in the nomenclature of the Rodentia are well exemplified in two important papers wdiich have appeared dur- ing the past few months — one, by Mr. Oldfield Thomas, entitled ' On the Genera of Rodents ' ; ' the other, by Dr. E. L. Troues- sart, comprising part of the second edition of his ' Catalogus Mammalium.' The former paper gives merely a list of the groups of living rodents which the author considers worthy of generic rank, together with references to the original description of each genus. Trouessart's Catalogue, more ambitious in its scope, is iProc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, pp. 1012-1028. 56-Bioi.. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 • (241) 242 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. intended to include all the species, living and extinct, now recog- nized. Even with these aids the student will often find difficulty in looking up synon3any or determining the earliest name of a genus, for Thomas gives only about one-third of the names, while Trouessart does not pretend to include all the generic synonyms and frequently omits references. The present paper differs from either of those just mentioned. It is neither an index nor a catalogue of recognized genera, but merely an attempt to bring together nil the names, generic and subgeneric, ever pro])Osedi It is not complete in itself, inasmuch as it gives neither references to descriptions nor localities ; but the authority, date of publication, and type or included species under each name will throw some light on these points. In ar- ranging this list everything has been subordinated to convenience of reference. Genera and subgenera have been treated alike and distributed under families, while the alphabetical arrangement has been followed both in the sequence of higher groups and in the names under each family. Some difficult}^ has been experienced in properly grouping the genera, and about a dozen names have not been referred to any family for lack of sufficient information' regarding their status. Thomas' classification of recent genera has been followed, except in the case of Lophiomijidx, which is given full family rank, instead of being placed as a subfamily under Muridx. To these 22 groups have been added 5 additional families of extinct rodents recognized by Zittel,' making a total of 27 families. More than 200 names occur under Muridse, and for simplicity they have been placed under subfamilies, but this is the only instance in which the alphabetical arrangement of the family has not been followed.'' The date is always the year of actual iiuhrication, often very different from the date of apparent puljUcation. For exam[)le, the description of Schizo don was published in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London for 1841, but it did not actually appear until March, 1842. Arctomys was described in a part of the fourth volume of Schreber's Saugthiere, issued in 1782, but the name was first published on plates accompanying this work, which are known to have been distributed in 1780. Schizodon 1 ' Handbuch der PaUeontologie,' IV, 1892-'93. ^I am iiide1)ted to Mr. Thomas for looking over the genera of Mnridx and Octodontidw and for several suggestions as to the arrangement of the list. Generic and Family Names of Rodents. 243 is therefore quoted as 1842 and Ardomys as 1780.' Preoccupied names have been marked, and cross-references made to those proposed to replace them. A few names have become ahnost unrecognizable by reason of the changes they have undergone in the process of emendation. Among such may be mentioned the correction of Aplodoatla to Haploodus, Pithechelr to Pithe- cochirus, and Gelogenus to Genyscoelus.'^ The original spelling is always given, but no attempt has been made to include all variations, although the more important have been noted. If the first letter of a word has been changed, both forms have been inserted in the list, but other changes have been indicated in foot-notes. Each genus is followed by the type or species on which it was based. When no type was designated and none has been indi- cated by a subsequent reviser, all the species are mentioned in the order given in the original description. No doubt some errors will be detected here, for at first an attempt was made to determine the types for as many genera as possible. This plan was subsequently abandoned in favor of an enumeration of all the species originally mentioned, but some cases of elimination may have escaped correction. More or less lack of uniformity exists in the nomenclature of certain families, as, for examjjle, in the cases of the American Porcupines and Chinchillas. Thomas, considering the New World Porcupines worthy of separation, erected the family Ere- thizontidx, and Trouessart, a few months later, recognized the same group, but renamed it Coendidse. No less than three family designations for the Chinchillas are in common use — Chhichil- lldre, Eriomyidx, and Lagostomyidie. Such a condition of things is obviously unnecessary, and can only lead to confusion. As ^ While this paper was in press, my attention was called to Sherborn's announcement of the discovery of Lacepede's well-known ' Tableau Methodique' (usually quoted 1801), in the Didot edition of Buffon's Histoire Naturelle, Quad., vol. XIV, 1799 (Nat. Sci., XI, p. 432, Dec, 1897). Lacepede's genera Agouti, Arvicola, Coendoti, Hamster, Pika, and Talpoides therefore date from 1799, instead of 1801, but the necessary corrections could only be inserted in the cases of Pika and Talpoides. '^In explanation of this remarkal)le emendation the author says: " Le u grec ne repondant pas a I'u latin, le nom de Cuvier \_Ccelogenus'] n'est pas acceptable, puisqu, il renferme une faute d'orthographie ; et, pour faire un nom d'apparence reellement latine, il aurait au uioins fallu ^crire Genyscoelus et non Ccelogenus." Liais, Climats du Bresil, 1872, p. 537, 244 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. an aid in selecting the proper name in such cases and to help in determining questions of priority, it has seemed best to give under each group all the family and subfamily names based on genera belonging to it. Full references have also been in- serted, inasmuch as authors seldom indicate the place where such names were first published. Groups first described as full families and afterwards reduced to subfamilies have merely a reference to the original description, but those first introduced as subfamilies and afterwards raised to family rank have refer- ences to both places of publication. This part of the list has been limited strictly to names ending in ' idse ' or ' i»«,' the only exception being old designations with the closely related termina- tion ' ina.'' Here, as elsewhere, the object has been merely to bring together under each family all the available names, without at- tempting to discriminate between synonyms and names which have a claim to recognition.' This list is supplementarj^ to a complete ali)habetical index of the genera of mammals, containing full references to descriptions and localities, which is now almost ready for the press. The data relating to the Rodentia are here grouped under families and published in condensed form for the purpose of inviting sug- gestions and criticisms as to arrangement, type species, and grouping of genera. The list is therefore merely an experiment. Although the names have been brought tt)gether, much remains to be done in working out the synonym}^ of types, but such work properly belongs to the specialist and the reviser of groups. When this has been done some examples of duplication of names will probably be found even more striking than the case of the lemmings, in which a single species (^Mns torquatus Pallas) has served as the basis for five or six nominal genera. As a help in distinguishing the names, extinct genera are printed in italics; an asterisk (*) indicates that the original description has not beens.een; a dagger (f) that the name is preoccupied, and a double dagger (J) prefixed to a family or subfamily that the name is not available, either because the genus on which it was based is preoccupied or because it is antedated by some other valid name. ' Forsyth Major has recently projiosed Nesomyivx for certain Old World mice usually classed under Crireiime; but as he does not give the limits of this group Thomas' classification is necessarily followed, although Nesomyinse may be entitled to subfamily rank as much as the group under which it is placed, Generic and Family Names of Rodents. 245 ANOMALURIDiE. Anomalurina Gervais, in D'Orbigny's Diet. Univ. d'Hist. Nat,, XI, p. 203, 1849. Anomaluridae Gill, Arrangement Fam. Mamm., p. 21, Nov., 1S72. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Anomalurus Waterliouse, 1843. Anomalunis fraseri. Aioaethrus Waterliouse, 1843. . Sagge.ste(i to replace Anoraaliirus, in case hitter is preoccupied. Idiurua Matschie, 1894 Idiarus zenkeri. APLODONTIID^. Haploodontidae Lill.ieborg, Syst. Ofversigt Gnag. D.'iggdjuren, pp. 9, 41, 1866. Aplodontiidae Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, p. 1015 (1897). Aplodontia ' Richardson, 1829. . . Aplodontialeporina (=Anisonyx rufa Raf. ) BATHYERGIDiE. Bathyergina Gervais, in D'Orbigny's Diet. Univ. d'Hist. Nat., XI, p. 203, 1849. Bathyergidae Bonapakte, Conspectus Syst. Mastozoologiae, 1850. Georhychinae Gill, Arrangement Fam. Mamm., p. 20, Nov., 1872. i Orycterideae Lesson, Nouv. Tableau Regne Animal, Mamm., p. 120, 1842. Name, authority, and date. Type or inchided species. Bathyergus lUiger, 1811 Mus maritimus. Coetomys Gray, 1864 Bathyergus csecutiens, B. damarensis. Cryptomys Gray. 1864 Georychus holosericeus. * Fossor Forster (?) Georychus 2 Uliger, 1811 Mus capensis (type), M. talpinus, M. aspalax. t Heliophobius Peters, 1846 Heliophobius argenteo-cinereus. Heterocephalus Riippell, 1842. Heteroeephalus glaber. Myoscalops Thomas, 1890 New name for Heliophobius Peters. Orycterus Cuvier, 1829 Mus maritimus. Typhloryctes Fitzinger, 1867.. Georyehus ochraceo-cinereus, Bathy- ergus eteeutiens. 1 Emended to Haplodon (Wagler, 1830), Aploudonlia, Apludontia, Apluodontia, Haploodon, Haploudon, Hapludon, Haploudontia, Hai)lo- dus, Haploodus, Haploudus, and Hapludus. (See Coues, Century Diet. , III, p. 2712.) ■^Emended to Georhychus (Wagner, 1843). 57— Biol. Soc, Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 246 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. CASTORIDiE. Castoridae Gray, London Medical Repository, XV, p. 302, April 1, 1821. MylagauUdx Copk, Bull. U. S. Geol. & Geog. Surv. Terr., VI, No. 2, p. 362, Sept. 19, 1881. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. * Aulacodon Kaup, 1832 Aulacodon typus. Castor Linnpeus, 1758 Castor fiber (type), C. moschatus. * Castoroinys Pomel, 1854. C'hallcomys sigmodiis. Cludlcotnys Kaup, 1832 Chalicomys jaegeri. Chelodus Kaup, 1832 . . Chelodus typus. t C/i/oro?n?/s(Meyer)Schlosser, 1884 Chalicomys eseri. Conodontes Laugel, 1862 Conodontes boisriUeUi. t Conodus Gervais, 1867-'69 Emended form of Conodontes. Dlahroticus Pomel, 1848 Diahroticus schmerlingii. Eucastor Leidy, 1858 Castor tortus. Mylagaidas Cope, 1878 Mylagaidus sesquipedalis. Palxocastor Leidy, 1869 Steneofiber nebrascensis. Palaeomys Kaup, 1832 Falaeomys castoroides. Sigmogomphius J. C. Merriam, 1896. ISigmogomphius lecontei. Steneofiber GeofFroy, 1834 Steneotlterium Geoffrey, 1833.... Trogontherium G. Fischer, 1809. . Trogontherlum cuvieri, T. werneri. CASTOROIDIDiE. Castoroididx J. A. Ai,i,ex, Mon. N. Am. Rodentia, p. 419, Aug., 1877. Name, authority, and date. Type or included .species. Amblyrhiza Cope, 1868 . . Amhlyrlnza inundata. Castoroides Foster, 1838. . Castoroides ohioensis. t Leptomylus Cope, 1869 Misprint for Loxomylus. Loxomylus Cope, 1869 Loxomylus longidens. CAVIIDiE. Caviadae Gray, London Medical Repository, XV, p. 304, April 1, 1821. Hydrocharina Gray, Thomson's Ann. Philos., XXVI, p. 341, Nov., 1825. Hydrochoeridae Gill, Arrangement Fam. Mammals, p. 22, Nov., 1872. Kerodoutina Gervais, in D'Orbigny's Diet. Univ< d'Hist. Nat., XI, p. 204, 1849. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Anchymis Ameghino, 1880 Cardiodon leidyi. Anoema F. Cuvier, 1809 Cavia cobaya. ? C(dUjdontomys Ameghino, 1889. . Callodontomys vastatus. Capiguara Liais, 1872 New name for Hydrochoerus. (Con- sidered i^referable by Liais because derived from the Indian name.) Generic and Family Names of Rodents. 247 Cardiatherium Ameghino, 1883. . Cardiathenuvi dceringi. t Cardiodon Ameghino, 1885 Cardiodon marshii, C. leidyi. (See Eu- cardiodon.) * Cardiodus Bravard, 1857 Cardiodus waterhousii, C. medius, C. niiniis, C. dubius. Cardiomys Ameghino, 1885 Cardiomys cavinus. Cavia Pallas, 1766 Cavia cobaya. Cariodnn Ameghino, 1885 Caviodon multiplicatus. f Ceratodon Wagler, 1830 Emended form for Kerodon, Cerodon Wagler, 1830. . . Emended form for Kerodon. Cobaya Cuvier, 1817 Cavia cobaj'a. Controcavia Burmeister, 1885. . . . Controcaria matercula. Dlocartherium Ameghino, 1888. . Diocartherium australe. Dolichotis Desmarest, 1819 . . . Cavia patachonica. Eucnrdiodon Ameghino, 1891. . . New name for Cardiodon. Galea ^Nleyen, 1833 Galea musteloides. Hydrochaerus Brisson, 1762. . . Sus hydrochoeris. Kerodon F. Cuvier, 1823 The ' Moco ' of Geoffroy. Mara D'Orbigny, 1829 Dolichotis j^atagonica. Microcavia Gervais & Ameghino, Microcavia typus, M. robnsta, M. inter- ISSO. media, M. duhia. Neoprocavia Ameghino, 1889 .... New name for Procavia Ameghino. Oromys Leidy, 1 853 Oromys pesopi. Orthomyctera Ameghino, 1889 . . . Cavia rigens, Orthomyctera vaga, Doli- chotis lacunosa, Orthomyctera lata. Palxocavia Ameghino, 1889 Cavia impar, C. avila, Palxocavia pam- pa'ki, P. minuta. Phugatherium Ameghino, 1887 . . PhngatJierium cataclisticum. Plexochcerus Ameghino, 1886. . . . Hydrochcenis paranensis. Prea Liais, 1872 New name for Cavia. (Preferred by Liais because native name.) Procardiatherium Ameghino, 1885 Procardintherium simplicidens. t Procavia Ameghino, 1885 Procavia mesopotumica. (See Neopro- cavia.) Scavia Blumenbach, 1802 Modified form of Cavia. Strata Amegliino, 1886 Strata elevata. CHINCHILLIDiE. Chinchillidae Bennett, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1833, p. 58. X Eriomyidee Burmeister, Syst. Uebersicht Thiere Brasil., I, p. 188, 1854. t Lagostomidae " Bonapartk, Synopsis Vert. Syst., 1837." Viscachideae Lesson, Nouv. Tableau Regne Animal, Mamm., p. 104, 1842. Name, authority, and date. Type or included .species. Briaromys Ameghino, 1889 Briaromystrouessartianus. Callomys D'Orbigny & Geoffroy, Callomys viscacia, Mas laniger, Cal- 1830. lomys aureus. 248 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. Chinchilla Bennett, 1829 Mus laniger. ColposleiJima Amegh'ino, 1891.... Colposteinma slnuata. -f Epiblema Ameghino, 1886 Epiblemahorridula. {See Neoepiblemn.) flriomys Lichtenstein, 1829.... Eriomys chinchilla. Eiip}itlu.i! Aniegliino, 1889 Eaphilus amhrosdtianas, E. kurlzii. Gyriahrus Aniegliino, 1891 Gyriahrus glut'matus. Lagidium Meyen, 1833 Lagidium peruanum. Lagostomus Brooke.s, 1829 .... Lagostomus trichodactylus. f Lagotis Bennett, 1833 Lagotis cuvieri. Megamys D'Orb. & Laurillurd, 1842 . Megamys patagonensis. Neoepiblema Ameghino, 1889. . . . New name for Epiblema Ameghino. Ferimys Ameghino, 1887 Periinys erutus, P. onustus. Pliolagostomus Ameghino, 1887. . Pliolagostomus notatus. Potamarchus Burmeister, 1885.. . PotamarcUus murinus. Prolagostomus Anieghino, \SS7 . . Prolagostomus p^isillus, P. divisus, P. profluens, P. imperialis. Scotaeumys Ameghino, 1887 Scotaeumi/s imminntus. Sphxramys Ameghino, 1887 Sphxramys irrupfus. Sphiggomys Ameghino, 1887 .... Sphiggomys zonatus. Sphodromys Ameghino, 1887. . . . Sphodromy.'i scalaris. Strophodephanos Ameghino, 1891. Strophostephanos ihcringii. Tetrastylus Ameghino, 1886 Megamys? laevigatus. Vizcacia^ Schinz, 1824 (?) Vizcacia pamparmn. DASYPROCTIDiE. Agoutidae Gray, London INIedical Repository, XV, p. 304, April 1, 1821. J Chloromina Gervais, in D'Orbigny's Diet. Univ. d'Hi.st. Nat.. XI, p. 204, 1849. J CcBlogenina Gervais, in D'Orbigny's Diet. Univ. d'Hist. Nat., XI p. 204, 1849. X Ccelogenyidae Burmeister, Syst. Uebers. Thiere Brasil., I, p. 227, 1854. Dasyporcina Gray, Thomson's Ann. Philos., XXVI, p. 341, Nov., 1825. Dasyproctina Gray, List Spec. Mamm. Brit. Mus., pp. xxv, 124, 1843. Dasyproctidae Bonaparte, Conspectus Syst. Mastozoologite, 1850. Name, .authority, .and date. Type or included .species. Agouti Lacepede, 1801 Agouti paca (= Mus paca Linnseus). Cloromis F. Cuvier, 1812 Includes the agoutis. Coelogenus ^ F. Cuvier, 1807. . . Coelogenus subniger, C. fulvus. Cutia Liais, 1872 New name for Dasyi^rocta Illiger. Dasyprocta Illiger, LSll Cavia aguti, C. acuschy. Genysccelus Liais, 1872 Emended form for Coelogenus. Osteopera Harlan, 1825 Osteopera platycephala. Paca Fischer, 1814 Paca maculata (= Cavia paca). Platypyga Illiger, 1811 (?) ^ Viscacia Rafinesqne, 1815 (nomen nudum), Rengger, 1830. '"^ Cpelogenus (Griffith, 1827); Caelogenys (Agassiz, 1846) ; Coelogenys (Illiger, 1811) ; Genysccelus (Liais, 1872). Generic and Familn Names of Rodents. 2-iO DINOMYIDiE. Dinomyidee Alston, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, ji. OH. Dinomys Peters, 1873 Dinom\'s branickii. DIPODIDiE. Dipodina Bonaparte, "Synopsis Vert. Syst., 1837." Dipodidae Waterhouse, Ann. & iNIag. Nat. Hist., X, p. 203, Nov., 1842. Dipodae Gervais; in D'Orbigny's Diet. Univ. d'Hist. Nat., XI, p. 203, 1849. Dipsidae Gray, London IMedical Repository, XV, p. 303, April 1, 1821. J Gerboidae Waterhouse, Charles worth's Mag. Nat. Hist., Ill, p. 186, April, 1839. Jlerboidae Gray, Thomson's Am. Philos., XXVI, p. 341, Nov., 1825. % Jaculina Carus, Handbuch Zool., p. 101, 1868. J Jaculidae Gill, Arrangement Fam. Mamm., p. 20, Nov., 1872. Sminthinae Alston, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1876, p. 80. Sminthidae Schulze, Schrift. Nat. Ver. Harz., Wernigerode, V,p. 24, 1890. Zapodidae Couks, Bull. U. S. Geol. & Geog. Surv. Terr., I, 2d ser.. No. 5, p. 253, 1875. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Allactaga Cuvier, 1836 Dipus allactaga. Beloprymnus Gloger, 1841. . . . New name for Allactaga. Cuniculus Brisson, 1762. ...... Dipus allactaga. Dipus Schreber, 1782 Dipus jaculus, D. sagitta, D. cafer, D. meridianus, D. tamaricinus. Euchoreutes W.L.Sclater,1891. Euchoreutes naso. t Halticus Brandt, 1844 Dipus halticus. Haltomys Brandt, 1844 Dipus aegyptius, D. hirtipes, D. mac- rotarsus, D. mauritanicus. Jaculus Erxleben, 1777 Jaculus orientalis, J. giganteus, J. tor- ridarum. t Meriones Cuvier, 1825 Dipus americanus. Platycercomys Brandt, 1844. . Dipus platyurus. Pygeretmus Gloger, 1841 Dipus platyurus. Scarturua Gloger, 1841 4-toed species of Dipus. Scirteta Brandt, 1844 (?) Scirtetes Wagner, 1841 New name for Allactaga Cuvier. Scirtomys Brandt, 1844 Alactaga tetradactylus (^Scarturus Gloger, 1841). Scirtopoda Brandt, 1844 Dipus halticus, D. aegyptius, D. hirti- pes, D. macrotarsus, D. mauritan- icus (^ Halticus + Haltomys). ^Sminthus represents the subfiimily Sminthinae, Zapus the Zapodinee, and the other genera belong to the Dipodinae. 250 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. SminthusKeys. & Blasius,1840. Sininthiis iiordiiianni. Yeibua Forster, 1778 Yerbua tarsata (= Tarsius spectrum), Y. sibirica, Y. capensis {= Pedetes cafer), Mus ineridianus, Yerbua kauguru (= Macropus giganteus) ; Mus longipes,M. jaculus, M. sagitta. Zapus Coues, 1875 Dipus hudsonius. EOCARDIDiE. Eocardklx Ameghino, Re vista Argentina, I, Ent. 3, p. 1-45, Junio, 1891. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Dicardia Ameghino, 1891 . Dicardia maxima, D. modica, D. exca- vuta. Eocardia Ameghino, 1887 Eocnrdia mnntana. Hedymys Ameghino, 1887 Hedymya integrns. Phanomys Ameghino, 1887 Phanomys mixius. Procardia Ameghino, 1S91 Eocardia eliptica. Schistomys Ameghino, 1887 Schistomys erro. Tricardia Ameghino, 1891 Eocardia divisa. ERETHIZONTIDiE. J Cercolabina Gray, List Spec. Mamm. Brit. Mus., pp. xxiv, 123, 1843. j Cercolabinee Gill, Arrangement Fam. Mamm., p. 22, Nov., 1872. X Cercolabidae Ameghino, Enum. Sist. Mam. Fos. Patagonia Austral, p. 9, Die. 1887. Chaetomyinae Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 189fi, 1026 (1897). Coendidae Trouessart, Cat. Mamm. tam viv. quam foss., fasc. Ill, p. 619, Oct., 1897. Erethizontina Bonaparte, Conspectus Syst. Mastozoologiae, 1850. Erethizontidae Thc^as, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, 1025 (Apr., 1897). J Sphingurinae Alston, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1876, p. 93. f Synetherina Gervais, in D'Orbigny's Diet. Univ. d'Hist. Nat., XI, p. 204, 1849. + Synetherinae Trouessart, Cat. Mamm. Viv. et Foss., Rongeurs, p. 182, 1881. Name, authority, and date. Type or included .species. Acaremys Ameghino, 1887 Acarcmys murinus^ A. minutus, A. mi- nidissimvs. Cercolabes Brandt, 1835 New name for CoendouLacepede, 1801. Chaetomys Gray, 1843 Hystrix subspinosus. Coendou' Lacc'pede, 1801 Hystrix prehensilis. Echinoprocta Gray, 1865 Erethizon rufescens. Echinothrix Brookes, 1828. .. Hystrix dorsata. ' Emended to Coendous (Temminck, 1820) ; Coendus (lUiger, 1815) ; Coendus (Rafinesque, 1815) ; Cuandu (Liais, 1872), Generic and Family Names of Bodents. 251 Erethizoni F. Cuvier, 1822 Hystrix dorsata. Hi/stricops Leidy, 1858 Hystrix venustns. Ouychura Brookes, 1828 Onychura spinosa. Plectrochoerus Pictet, 1843 ... Plectrochcerus moricandi. Sciamys Ameghino, 1887 Sciamys principalis, S. varians. Sinoetherus' F. Cuvier, 1822. . . Hystrix prehensilis. Sphiggurus^ F. Cuvier, 1822... Sphiggurus spinosus, Steiromys Ameghino, 1887. ..... Stt'iromys detentus, S. duplicatus. GEOMYIDAE. Geomyina Box.\parte, Conspectus Syst. Mastozoologipe, 1850. Geomyinae B.\ird, Mamm. N. Am., pp. xxx, 366, 1857. Geomyidae Gill, Arrangement Fara. Mamm., p. 21, Nov., 1872. + Pseudotomina Gr.\y, Thomson's Ann. Philos., XXVI, p. 342, 1825. X PaeudostomidaB Gervais, Ann. Sci. Nat., Paris, 3* ser., XX, p. 245, 1853. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Ascomys Lichtenstein, 1825. . . Ascomys canadensis (= Mus bursa- rins). Cratogeomys Merriam, 1895. . . Geomys merriami. Diplostoma Eatinesque, 1817.. Diplostoma fusca (=Mus bursarius). Geomys Rafinesque, 1817 Geomys pinetis (= Mus tuza Ord). Gyinnoptycfius Cope, 1873 Gymnoptychus cJirysodon, G. nasuius, G. trilophus, and G. minutus. Heliseomys Cope, 1873 Heliscomys vetus. Heterogeomys INIerriam, 1895. Geomys hispidus. Macrogeomys Merriam, 1895. . Geomys heterodus. Orthogeomys Merriam, 1895.. . Geomys scalops. Oryctomys Eydoux & Gervais, Five subgenera : Diplostoma, Sacco- 1836. phorus, Saccomys, Poephagomys, Ctenomys. Pappogeomys Merriam, 1895. . Geomys bulleri. Platy geomys Merriam, 1895. . . Geomys gymnurus. Pseudostoma Say, 1823 Pseudostoma bursaria Saccophorus Kuhl, 1820 Mus bursarius. Thomomys Maximilian, 1839. . Thomomys rufescens. *?Tucanus Rafinesque, 1815 Nomen nudum? Zygogeomys Merriam, 1895. . . Zygogeomys trichopus. ' Emended to Erethison ( Waterhouse, 18.39); Eretison (McMurtrie,1831); Eretizon (Cuvier, 1825) ; Erythizon (Alston, 1876). ^Emended to Sinetheres (Agassiz, 1842); Sincetherus (Cuvier, 1825); Synaetheres (Gervais, 1859) ; Synetheres (G. Cuvier, 1829) ; Synoetheres (Lund, 18.39). ^Emended to Sphingurus (Waterhouse, 1848) ; Spiggurus (Gray, 1847) • Si)igurus (Swainson, 1835). 252 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. GLIRIDiE.i Gliridae Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, 1016 (1897). X Myosidae Gray, London Medical Repository, XV, p. 303, April 1, 1821- I Myoxidae Wateriiouse, Charlesworth's Mag. Nat. Hist., Ill, p. 184, April, 1839. Platacanthomyinae Alston, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1876, p. 81. Name, autliority, ami date. Type or included speeie.s. Bifa Lataste, 1885. Bifa lerotina. Braclujmys Meyer, 1847. New name for Mlcromys Meyer, 1846. Cscnomys (Bravard MS.) Lydek- Cxnomys typus {^= Myoxiis murinus). ker, 1885. Claviglis .Tentink, 1888. Claviglis crassicandatus. Eliomys Wagner, 1843. Myoxus melanurus. Glis Brisson, 1762. Sciurus glis. Graphiurus F. Cuvier, 1838. Graphinrus capensis. *tiV/n'OH(//.s Meyer, 1846. Mlcromys ornatus. [See Brachymys.) Muscardinus Kaup, 1829. Myoxus muscardinus. Myoxus Schreber, 1782. Myoxus glis, M. dryas, M. nitela, M. muscardinus. Platacanthomys Blytli, 1859. Platacanthomys lasiurus. Typhlomys Milne Edwards, 1877. Tyi^hlomys cinereus. HETEROMYIDiE. Dipodomyna Gervais, Ann. Sci. Nat, Paris, 3™^ ser., XX, p. 245, 1853. Dipodomyinae Coues, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1875, p. 277. Heteromyina Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1868, p. 201. Heteromyinae Alston, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1876, p. 88. Heteromyidae Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. N.Y., V, p. 233, Sept. 21, 1893. Perognathidinae Coues, Proc Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1875, pp. 277-278. J Saccomyna Gray% List. Spec. Mamm. Brit. Mus., pp. xxiv, 120, 1843. I Saccomyidae Baird, Mamm. N. Am., pp. xxx, 365, 1857. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Abromys Gray, 1868 Abromys lordi. Chaetodipus Merriam, 1889.. . . Perognathus spinatus. Cricetodipus Peale, 1848 Cricetodipus parvus. Dasynotus Wagler, 1830 Mus anomalus. Dipodomys Gray, 1841 Dipodomys philli})ii Dipodops Merriam, 1890 Dipodomys agilis. "? Enloptydms Cope, 1878 , Enioptychus cavifrons, E. planifrons, E. crassiramis. Heteromys Desmarest, 1817. . . Mus anomalus. Macrocolus Wagner, 1844 Macrocolus halticus. ' Platacanthomys and Typhlomys belong to the Platacanthomyinte, the others to the Glirinpc. Generic and Family Names of Rodents. 253 Microdipodops Merriam, 1891. Microdipodops megacephalus. Otognosis Cones, 1875 Otosnosis longimembris. Perodipus Fitzinger, 1867 Dipodomj'S agilis. Peiognathus Maximilian, 1839. Perognathus fasciatus. PleuroUcif-t Cope, 1878 Pleurolicus sulcifrons. Saccomys F. Caviar, 1823 Saceomys anthophihis. HYSTRICIDAE. Histricidae Gray, London Med. Repository, XY, p. 304, April 1, 1821.- Hystrixideae Lesson, Nouv. Tableau R«gne Animal, INIamm., p. 90, 1842. Name, authority, and date. Type or includeil species. Acantherium Gray, 1847 Acanthion javanicum, A. tlemingii. Acanthion Cuvier, 1822 Acantliion javanicum. Acanthochoerus Gray, 1866. . . Acantboehoerus bartlettii, A. grotei. Atherurus F. Cuvier, 1829 Hystrix fa.sciculata. * Eucritus G. Fiscber, 1817 (?) H[/st)'icotherium Croizet, 1853 . . . Hystrix refossa. Hystrix Linnajus, 1758 Hystrix cristata, H. prebensilis, H. dorsata, H. macroura, H. bracbyura. Lamprodon Wagner, 1848 Lamprodon priynigenius. CEdocephalus Gray, 1866 Acantbion cuvieri. * Oreojin/s Aymard, 1854 Oreomys daveris. Trichys Giintber, 1876 Tricbys lipura. ISCHYROMYIDiE. Ischyroinyidx Alston, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1876, pp. 67, 78. Name, autliority, and date. Type or ineluded species. Colonomys Marsb, 1872 Colonomys celev. Colotaxis Cope, 1873 Colotaxis crlstutus. Ischyromys Leidy, 1856 Ischyromys typus. ? Mysops Leidy, 1871 Mysops minimus. Paramys Leidy, Nov. 28, 1871 . . Paramys delicatus, P. ddicatior, P. dcli- calissimus. Pseudoiomus Cope, 1872 Pseudotnmus hians. Sciuravus Marsb, June 21, 1871. ScinraviLs nllidus, S. imdans. ? Scinroiiv/s Scblosser, 1884 Sciuromys rayUixi. Syllophudus Cope, ISSi New name for Mysops Leidy, 1871 (erroneously said to be preoccupied). Taxymys Marsh, 1872 Taxymys lucaris. TiHomys Marsb, 1872 Tillomys senex, T. parvus. LEPORIDiE. Lagidae Schulze, Helios, XIV, p. 82, 1897. Leporidae Gray, London Medical Repository, XV, p. 304, April 1, 1821. Lepusidae Gkrvais, Ann. Sci. Nat, o^^ser., XX, p. 246, 1853. 58— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 18uded species. Chrotomys Thomas, 1895. . . . Chrotomys wliiteheadi. Hydromys Geoffroy, 1805 Mus coypus, Hydromys chi-ysogaster, H. leucogaster. Xeromys Thomas, 1889 Xeromys myoides. MICROTIN/E. J Arvicolidae Gray, London Med. Repository, XY, p. 303, April 1, 1821. i EUobiinae ^ Gill, Arrangement Fam. Mamm., p. 20, Nov., 1872. Lemnina Gray, Thomson's Ann. Philos., XXYI, p. 342, Nov., 1825. Microtinae Riioads, Am. Nat., XXIX, p. 940, Oct., 1895. Miller, N. Am. Fauna, No. 12, p. 8, July, 1896. JOndatrina Gray, Thomson's Ann. Philos., XXYI, p. 341, Nov., 1825. Xame, authority, and date. Tj'pe or included .specie.?. Agricola Blasius, 1857. Arvicola agrestis. Alticola Blanford, 1881 Arvicola stoliczkanus. Alviceola Blainville, 1817. .... ' Le genre campagnoL' (Misprint for Arvicola?) Ammomys Bonaparte, 1831. . . New name for Psammomys Le Conte. Anaptoijouia Cope, 1871 . Arvicola hiatidens. Anteliomys ^Miller, 1896 Microtus chinensis. Arvicola Lacepede, 1801 Mus amphibius (= M.terrestris Linn.) Aulacomys Rhoads, 1894 . ... Aulacomys arvicoloides. Bicunedeus Hodgson, 1863. . . . Bicunedens perfascus (nomen nudum = Neodon sikimensis). Borioikoii Poliakoff, 1881 M\'odes torquatus. Brachyurus Fischer, 1813 Musarvalis, M. rutilus, M. amphibius, INI. lemmus, ]\I. torquatus, jM. allia- rius, Brachyurus blumenbachii, B. fulvus, B. niloticus. Bramxfi Pomel, 1892 Bramus harharus. tCampicola Schulze, 1890 Arvicola arvalis, A. subterraneus, A. campestris. Chilotus Baird, 1857 Arvicola oregoni. ^ Preoccupied by EUobiinse, a subfamily of MoUusks. See Adams, Gen. Recent Moll., II, p. 237, 1858. 258 Palmer — Generic and Fanubj Names of Bodenfs. *ChthonoergusNordmann,lS;!9. Mus imu'inus (= M. tulpiuus Pallas). t Cuniculus Wagler, 1830 Mus lemmus, M. torquatus (type), M. aspalax. (See Borioikon, Dicrosto- nyx, Misothernius, Tylonyx.) Dicrostonyx Gloger, 1841 Mus hudsonius? t Ellobius Fischer, 181-1. , Mus talpinus (type), Ellobius zocor (=Mus aspalax), Mus capensis, M. hudsonius. Eothenomys Miller, 1896 Microtus melanogaster. Eiemiomys Poliakoff, 1881 . . . Georyohus luteus, Muslagurus (type). Evotomys Coues, 1874 Mus rutilus. Fiber Cuvier, 1800 Castor zibethicus. *f Glareolus Oken, 1816 Mus arvalis, M. campestris? Hemiotomys Selys-Long- Arvicola fulvus (= A. arvalis), A. am- chanips, 1836. phibius (= A. terrestris). Hyperacrius Miller, 1896 Microtus fertilis. Hypudaeus lUiger, 1811 Mus lemmus, M. amphibius (= M. ter- restris), M. arvalis. Imdelta Cope, 1871 Arvlcohi speofhen. Lagurus Gloger, 1841 Lagurus migratorius (= Mus lagurus Pall. ?) Lasiopodomys Lataste, 1887. . x^rvicola brandti. Lemmomys Lesson, 1842 Mus talpinus. * Lemmus Link, 1795 Mus socialis, M. lagurus, M. lemmus (type), M. torquatus, M. glareolus, M. hudsonius. Microtus Schrank, 1798 Mus terrestris (=M. arvalis Pall., type), M. amphibius (= M. terres- tris Linn.), M. gregarius (=M. ar- valis Pall. ?) t Micrurus Forsyth Major, 1876. Arvicola nebrodensis. Mictomys True, 1894 Mictomys innuitus. Misothermus Hensel, 1855 Myodes torquatus. Mussascus Oken, 1816 Ondatra americana (= Castor zibethi- cus). Mynomes i Rafinesque, 1817. . . Mynomes pratensis (^ Arvicola penn- sylvanicus). [Myocastor Kerr, 1 792 Mus Myocaster coypus (type), Mus M. zibethicus. (See Octodontidee.)] Myodes Pallas, 1811 Mus lemmus, M. torquatus, M. lagu- rus, M. oeconomus, M. arvalis, M. saxatilis, M. gregalis, M. socialis, M. alliarius, M. rutilus. * Myolemmus Pomel, 1854 Myolemmus amhiguus. Neodon Hodgson, 1849 Neodon sikimensis. Neofiber True, 1884 Neofiber alleni. I Emended to Myonomes (Coues, 1874). Generic and Family Names of Rodents. 259 Ochetomys Fitzinger, 1867. . . . Mus amphibius, Hypud;eus pertinax, Arvicola destructor, Mus terrestris, Hypudeeus nageri, Arvicola mouti- cola, A. americanus. * Ondatra Link, 179c Ondatra coypus, O. zibethicus. t Paludicola Blasius, 1857 Arvicola amphibius (^ A. terrestris), A. nivalis, A. ratticeps. Pedomys Baird, 1857 Arvicola austerus. * Phaiomys Blyth, 1863. Phaiomys leucurus (= Microtus blythi Blan.) Phenacomys Merriam, 1889. . . Phenacomys intermedins. Pinemys Lesson, 1836 Psammomys pinetorum. Pitymys McMurtrie, 1831 New name for Psammomys Le Conte. f Praticola Fatio, 1867 Arvicola amphibius (= A. terrestris), A. nivalis, A. arvalis, A. ratticeps, A. campestris. t Psammomys Le Conte,1830. .. . Psammomys pinetorum. (See Am- momys, Pinemys, Pitymys.) * Simotes Fischer, 1829 (?) (?) t Sylvicola Fatio, 1867 Arvicola agrestis. Synaptomys Baird, 1857 Syuaptomys cooperi. t Terricola Fatio, 1867 Arvicola subterraneus, A. savii. Tetramerodon Rhoads, 1894.. . Arvicola tetramerus. Tylonyx Schulze, 1897 Mus torquatus. MURIN/E. Muridae Gray, London Medical Repository, XV, p. 303, April 1, 1821. Musideae Lesson, Nouv. Tableau Regne Animal, Mamm., p. 134, 1842. >';une, autliority, and date. Type or included species. Acanthomys Lesson, 1842. . . . Mus setifer, M. alexandrinus, Acan- thomys perchal, Mus platythrix, M. hispidus. f Acanthomys Gray, 1867 Acanthomys leucopus. Acomys Geoffroy, 1838 Mus cahirinus. Acosminthus Gloger, 1841 Mus cahirinus, M. dimidiatus. Apodemus Kaup, 1829 Mus agrarius. Arvicanthis Lesson, 1842 Lemnuis niloticus. Bandicota Gray, 1873 Bandicota gigantea. Batomys Thomas, 1895 Batomys grantii. Carpomys Thomas, 1895 Carpomys melanurus. Chiropodomys Peters, 1868... Chiro..odomys penicillatus. Chiiuiomys Thomas, 1888 Chiruromys forbesi. Cdnilurus Ogilby, 1838 Conilurus destructor. Crateromys Thomas, 1895 Phloeomys schadenbergi. Craurothrix Thomas, 1895 New name for Echiothrix Gray, 1867. Cricetomys Waterhouse, 1840. Cricetomys gambianus. Dasymys Peters, 1875 Dasymys gueinzii. 260 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. t Echiothrix ^ Gray, 1867 Echiotbrix leucura. (See Craurothrix.) • ? Elomi/s Aymard. 1848 Elomys prlsnts. Epimys Trouessart, 1881 ' Gymnomys et Acanthomys p. Gray, 1807 ' (57 species, including Mus caraco, decumanus, rattus, etc.)- Euchaetomys Fitzinger, 1867. . Muspalmaruni, M. novane, M. setifer, M. })erchal, INI. kok, M. hardwickii, M. rufescens, M. ellioti, M. lepidus, M. vittatus, M. pumilio, M. pardu- leus, ]M. zebra, Rattus donovani. Golunda Gray, 1837 Golunda ellioti, G. meltada, Mus bar- bara. Gymnomys Gray, 1867 Mus (Gymnomys) celebensis. Hapalomys Blyth, 1859 Hapalomys longicaudatus. f Hapalotis Licbtenstein, 1829. . . Hapalotis albipes. Heliomys Gray, 1873 Heliomys jeudei. Isomys Sundevall, 1842 Mus variegatus (^Lemmus niloticus). f Lasiomys Peters, 1866. Lasiomys afer. (See Lophuroniys.) Leggada Gray, 1837 Leggada booduga, Mus-iolatythrix. Lemniscomys Trouessart, 1881. Mus barbarus, pulchellus, zebra, line- atus, lineato-aflfinis, pumilio, trivir- gatus, dorsalis, univittatus. t Lophiomys Deperet, 1890 Lophiomys pyrenaicus. (See Triloplio- mys). Lophuromys Peters, 1874 New name for Lasiomys Peters, 1866. Malacomys Edwards, 1877 Malacomys longipes. Mastacomys Tbomas, 1882 Mastacomys fuscus. Micromys Deline, 1841 Micromys agilis. Murinus Rafinesque, 1815. ... Nomen nudum. Mus Linnpeus, 1758 Mus porcellus, M. leporinus, M. lem- mus, M. marmota, M. monax, M. cricetus, M. terrestris, M. amphib- ins, M. rattus, M. musculus, M.avel- lanarius, M. sylvaticus, M. striatus, M. longii)es, M. jaculus, M. volans. Musculus Rafinesque, 1814 .. . Musculus frugivorus, M. dicbrurus. (Modified form, proposed to super- cede Mus). Nannomys Peters, 1876 Mus (NannoniyS') setulosus. Nesokia Gray, 1842 Mus liardwickii. Notomys Lesson, 1842 Dipus mitcbellii. Pelomys Peters, 1852. . Mus (Pelomys) fallax. Pithecheir^ Cuvier, 1838 Pitliecbeir melanurus. Pogonomys Edwards, 1877 .... Mus (Pogonomys) macrourus. ^Ecbinotbrix Alston, 1876. 2 Emended to Pitcheir (Scliinz, 1845), Pithecbir (Jentink, 1892), Pitb- ecbirus (Agassiz, 1842), and Pithecochirus (Gloger, 1841). Generic and Family Names of Rodents. 261 Pseudoconomys Rhoads, 1896. Mus (Pseudoconomys) prooonodon. Pseudomys Gray, 1832 Pseudomys australis. Rattus Ziininermann, 1777 Rattas somnolentus, R. migrans. t Saccostomus Peters, 1846 Saccostomiis caiiipehitris. Spalacomys Peters, 1861 Spalacomys indicus. ? Tenomys Rafinesque, 1815. . . . Nomen nudum. Trilophomi/s Deperet, 1892 New name for io;j/i«omj/s Deperet, 1890. Uromys Peters, 1867 Mus macropus. Vandeleurla Gray, 1842 Mus oleraceus. NEOTOM'N/E. Neotominae Merri.am, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., pp. 228, Sept. 24, 1894. Name, authoritj-, and date. Type or iucluded species. ? Bothriomijs Ameghino, 1889 Bothriomys caienata!^. Hodomys Merriam, 1894 Neotoma alleni. Nelsonia Merriam, 1897 (See page 277.) Neotoma Say & Ord, 1825 Mus fioridanus. ? Paciculus Cope, 1879 Puciculus insolitus. Ftyssophorus Ameghino, 1889... Plyssophorus elegans. Teonoma Gray, 1843 Neotoma drummondii (= Myoxus drummondii). Tirtoniysf Ameghino, 1889 Tretomys atuvus. Xenomys Men-iam, 1892 Xenomys nelsoni. OTOMYIN/E. Otomyinae Tho.m.\s, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, p. 1017 (1897). Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. ? Euryotis Brants, 1827 Mus irroratus. Oreinomys Trouessart, 1881 . . . New name for Oreomys Heuglin, 1877 f Oreomys Heuglin, 1877 Oreom3-s typus. Otomys F. Cuvier, 1823 Two species,afterwards named Otomys unisulcatus (Sept., 1829), and O. bi- sulcatus (Oct., 1829). PHLCEOMYIN/E. Phloeomyinae Alston, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1876, p. 81. PhlcBomys Waterhouse, 1839. . Phloeomys cumingi. RHYNCHOMYIN/E. Rhynchomyinae Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, p. 1017 (1897). Rhynchomys Thomas, 1895. . . Rhynchomys sorlcoides. SIPHNEIN/E. Siphneinae Gru., Arrangement Fam. Mammals, Nov., 1872, p. 20. 59— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vor,. XI, 18'J7 262 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Myospalax Blyth, 1846 Georyclius fu.scocapillus. Myotalpa Kerr, 1792 Mus talpinus, M. capensis, M. mari- timus, M. aspalax, Myotalpa typhla. Siphneus Brants, 1S27 Mus aspalax. OCHOTONIDAE. + Lagidae Schulze, Helios, XIV, p. 82, 1897. JLagomina Gray, Thomson's Ann. Philos., XXVI, p. 341, Nov., 1825. X Lagomyidae Lii.ljeborg, Syst. Ofvers. Gnag. Diiggdjuren, i^p. 9, 58, 1866. Ochotonidae Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, p. 1026 (1897). Name, autliority, and date. Type or included species. Abra Gray, 1863 Lagomys curzonife. * Aniphilagas Pomel, 1854 AmpJdlagns antiquus. * Lagodns Pomel, 1854 Lagodus ])icuides. f Lagomys G. Cnvier, 1800 Le pika (Lepus alpinus). L((gopsis Scblosser, 1884 Lagomys oeningensis, L. verus. .* Manmsiomys^ Croizet, 1853 (?) 3//yo/«f/»,s Hensel, 1856 Lagomys sardus. Ochotona Link, 1795 Lepus pusillus, L. alpinus, L.ochotona. * Pika Lacepede, 1799 Lepus alpinus. ■* PUdyodon Bravard, 1853 Nomen nudum. * Prolagas Pomel, 1854 Lagomys saiisaniensis. T'danomys Meyer, 1843 Titanomys visenoviensis. OCTODONTIDiE.2 I Aulacodina Bonaparte, Conspectus Syst. Mastozoologiae, 1850. Capromyna Gervals, D'Orbigny's Diet. Univ. d'Hist. Nat., XI, p. 204, 1849. * Emended (?) to Marcuinomys (Croizet, 1859). ^Considerable diversity of opinion exists as to the subdivisions of tlie Octodonts. Some authors arrange the genera in 3, and others in 4 groups. Caprorayinae : AdeJpJiomys, Aulaoodus, Capromys, Discolomys, Eumy- sops, Graphimys, Guillinomys, GyrignopJias, Isodon, Lomomys, Mastonotus, i/ore)ii«,Myocastor,Myopotamus, Mysateles.iVgoreomys, Olenopsis, Ondatra, Orthomys, Faranomys, Plagiodontia, Potamys, Pseudoneoreomys, Scleromys, Spaniomys, Stichomys, Triaulacodus, Trihodon(?), and Thryonomys. Ctenodactyiinae : Ctenodactj'lus, Massoutiera, Pectinator, Pellegrina, Petromus, and Rusclnomys (?). Echimyinae : Carterodon, Cercomys, Dactylomys, Echimys, Isothrix, Kannabateomys, Lasiomys, Lasiuromys, Loncheres, Lonchophorus, Me- somys, Nelomys Jourdan, Nelomys Lund, Phyllomys, Platythri::, Pceci- lomys, Thrichomys, and Thrinacodus. Octodontinae : Abrocoma, Aconaemys, Adenomys, Ctenomys, Den- d robins, Dlcu^lopJioras, Dlcolpomys, Octodon, Pldoramys, PiilLanoiomys, Platxomys, Ptuphagomys, Psammoryctes, Schizodon, and Spalacopus. Ge^ieric and Family Names of Bodents. 263 Capromysideag Lesson, Nouv. Tabl. Regne Animal, Mamm., p. 12-t, 1842. Capiomyidae Bukmeister, Syst. Uebersicht Thiere Brasil., I, pp. 187, 189, 1854. Ctenodactylina Gervais, Ann. Sci. Nat., 3""" sew, XX, p. 245, 1853. Ctenodactylinae Gilt,, Arrangement Fam. Mamm., p. 22, Nov., 1872. Ctenodactylidee Zittel, Handb. der Pal;eont., IV,2'«Lief.,p. 542, 1893. Ctenomysideae Lesson, Nouv Tabl. Regne Animal, Mamm., p. 105,1842. Echymyna Gray, Thomson's Ann. Philos., XXVI, p. 341, Nov., 1825. Bchymyidae Bonap.\rte, Conspectus Syst. Mastozoologite, 1850. Echinomyidae Ameghino, Mam. Fos. Repub. Argentina, in Actas Acad. Nac. Ciencias, Cordoba, VI, p. 131, 1889. Loncheridae BLTRMioisTER,Syst.Uebers. Thiere Brasil., I, pp. 188,192,1854. I Muriformidae AmecxHino, Enam. Sist. Especies Mam. Fos. Patagonia, p. 10, Die, 1887. Myiopotamina Bonaparte, Conspectus Syst. Mastozoologipe, 1850. Octodontidae Waterhouse, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1839, p. 172. J Psammoryctina Wagnkr, Wiegmann's .\rchiv f. Natnrgesch., 1841, I. f Psammoryctidae Burmeister, S3'st. Uebersicht Thiere Brasil., I, pp. 188, 212, 1854. Spalacopodidae Lilljeborg, Syst. Ofversigt Gnag. Diiggdjuren, pp. 9, 44, 1866. (Spalacopodoi'des Brandt, 1855.) Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Abrocoma Waterhouse, 1837.. Abrocoma bennettii, A. cuvieri. Aconaemys Ameghino, 1891.. . New name for Schizodon Waterhouse. Acti'nomijs Bnrmeister, 1888 Adenomys cunicuUnus. AdelpJiomys Ameghino, 1887. . . . Adelphomys candidus. J Aulacodus Temminck, 1827. . . Aulacodus swinderianus. (See Thry- onomys, Triaulacodus.) Cannabateomys Lydekker, 1892. Emended form for Kannabateomys. Caproniys Desmarest, 1822 Capromys fournieri. Carterodon Waterhouse, 1848. . Echimys snlcidens. Cercomys Cuvier, 1829 Cercomys cunicularius. Ctenodactylus Gray, 1830 Ctenodactylus massonii. Ctenomys Blainville, 1826 Ctenomys brasiliensis. Dactylomys I. Geoffrey, 1838. . Dactylomys typus. Dendrobius Meyen, 1833 Dendrobins degus. i)ica'/op/iOi-us Ameghino, 1888 . . Dlca'lophorus latidens, D. simplex, D celsus, Ctenomys }^riscus. Dicolpomys Winge, 1887 Dicolpomys fossor. DiscoJomys Ameghino, 1889 Discolomys ciumis. Echimys i Cuvier, 1809 Echimys cristatus, E. spinosus. Eamysops Ameghino, 1888 Eumysops plicatus, E. Ixvlplicaius, E. robustus. GrapJiimys Ameghino, 1891 GrapJdmys provectus. Guillinomys Lesson, 1842 Guillinomys chilensis. 'Emended to Echinomys (Wagner, 1840), Enchomys (Gloger, 1841), 264 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. Guudi ('Fischer') Lataste, 1881 A common name for Ctenodactylus, erroneously credited to Fischer as a genus. Gyrifp/ojtJiHS Ameghino, 1891 . . . GyriijuopJins compUcatus. Habrocoma Wagner, 1842 Emended form for Abrocoina. Houtia Agassiz, 1842 Nomen nudum. Native name for Capromys, included by Agassiz in list of genera, without reference or mention of species, t Isodon Say, 1822 Isodon pilorides. Isothrix Wagner, 1845 Isothrix bistriata, I. pachyura, T. pa- gurus. Kannabateomys Jentink, 1891 Dactylomys amblyonyx. Lasiomys Burmeister, 1854 Lasiomys hirsutus. Lasiuromys Deville, 1852 Lasiuromys villosus. Lomnmys Ameghino, 1891 Lomomys ere.vus. Loncheres i lUiger, 1811 Loncherespaleacea, Hystrix chr5'suros. Lnnchophorus Lund, 1839 Lonchophorus fossilis. Massoutiera Lataste, 1885 Ctenodactylus mzabi. Mastonotus Wesmael, 1841. . . . Mastonotus popelairi (=:Mus coypus.) Mesomys Wagner, 1845 Mesomys ecaudatus. Morenia Ameghino, 1886 Morenia elephanlinn. Myocastor Kerr, 1792 Mus (INIyocastor) coypus (type), Mus (M.) zibethicus. Myopotamus Geoffroy, 1805. . . Myopotamus bonariensis. Mysateles Lesson, 1842 Mysateles poeppingii (=: Capromys prehensilis). Nelomys Jourdan, 1837 Echimys cristatus. I Nelomys Lund, 1841 Ecliimysantricola, E. sulcidens. (See Thrichomys.) AVo;v'o»i(/.s Amegliino, 1887 Ncorcojuys austrahK, N. indivisus, N. dt'cisHfi. Octodon Bennett, 1832 Octodon cumingii. Olenopsis Ameghino, 1889 Olenopsis uncinns. * Ondatra Link, 1795 Mus coypus. Castor zibethicus. Orlhoiiiys Ameghino, 1881 Ortlunnys dentatus. Orycteromys('Blainville')Agas- Used by Blainville in 1826, only in siz, 1842. the French form Orycterome,for the genus describe4 as Ctenomys. (See Orycteromys, p. 256.) Paranomys (Scalabrini MS. ) A me- ghino, 1889 Paranomys typicus. Pectinator Blytli, 1856. ... ... Pectinator spekei. PeUegrina Gregorio, 1886 Pellegrina panormensis. Petromus A. Smith, 1831 Petromus typicus. Phtoramys Ameghino, 1887. . .. Phtoramys homogenidens. ^Emended to Loncherites (London Encyclopoedia, 1845). Generic and Family Names of Rodents. 265 Phyllomys Lund, 1839 Phyllomys brasiliensis (?) Pithanotomys Ameghino, 1887. . . Fithanotomys columnaris. Plagiodontia 1 F. Cuvier, 18.36. Plagiodontia aedium. * I'liitiicoinijs Ameghino, 1881 I'latacomys scindens. * Platythrix Pictet, 1812 (?) * PcEcilomys Pictet, 1842 (?) Poephagomys F. Cuvier, 1834. . Pa'pbagomys ater. Potamys Larranhaga, 1823. Le quyiaof Azara (Myopotamus coyjius). Psammoryctes Pee ppig, 1835. . Psammoryctes noctivagus (= Spala- copus poeppigii). Psendoneoreomys Ameghino, 1891 Pseudoneoreomys pachyi'hynchus, P. lep- torhynchus, P. mesorhynchus. ? Ruscinomys Dep^ret, 1890 Ruscinomys europseus. f Schizodon Waterhouse, 1842.. Schizodon fuscus. (See Aconaemys.) ScUroitiys Amegliino, 1887 Scleromys angustus. Spalacopus Wagler, 1832 . . . Spalacopus poeppigii. Spaniomys Ameghino, 1887 Spaniomys riparius, S. modestus. Stidtomys Ameghino, 1887 Stichomys rcgularis, S. constnns. Thrichomys Trouessart, 1881.. Thrichomys antricola, T. inermis, T. brevicauda. Thrinacodus Glinther, 1879. . . Thrinacodus albicauda. Thryonomys Fitzinger, 1867... Aulacodus semipalmatus. Triaulacodus Lydekker, 1896. . New name for Aulacodus Temminck, 1827. (See Thryonomys.) Tnbodon Ameghino, 1887 Tribodon clemens. PEDETIDiE. X Halamydee Gray, London Medical Repository, XV, p. 303, April 1, 1821. Pedestina Gray, Thomson's Ann. Philos., XXVI, p. 342, Nov., 1825. Pedetidae Gill, Arrangement Fam. Mamm., p. 20, Nov., 1872. Name, aiitlioiity, aurt date. Type or included specie.'*. Helamys F. Cuvier, 1817 Mus cafer. Lagotis P)lainville, 1817 'La grande gerboise du Cap.' Pedetes llliger, 1811 Dipus cafer. PSEUDOSCIURIDiE. Pseudosciuridx Zittel, Handb. der Palseont., IV, 2'^ Lief., p. 523, 1893. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Adelomys Gervais, 1853 Theridomys vaillanti. (See Theridomyids;.) ? Decticadupis Lemoine, 1883 Decticadapis sciuroides. Pseadosciurus Hensel, 1856 Pseudoaciurus suevicus. Sciurodon Schlosser, 1884 Sciurodon cadurcense. Sciuroides Forsyth Major, 1873. . Sciuras rutimeyeri, Sciuroides fraasi, S. siderolitJiicus, S. ininimus. 1 Emended to Plagiodon (Alston, 1876). 266 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. SCIURIDiE. AUomyidee Maesh, Am. Journ. Sci., 3d ser., XIV, p. 253, Sept., 1877. Aictomydae Gray, London Med. Repository, XY, p. 303, April 1, 1821. Aictomysideas Lesson, Nouv.Tabl. Regne Animal, Mamm.,p.ll5, 1842. J Campsiurina Brandt, fide Carus, Handb. Zool., p. 96, 1808-75. Leithiidx Lydekker, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1895, p. 862 (1896). Nannosciurinae Forsyth Major, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1893, pp. 187, 189. Pteromidae Anderson, Yunnan Exped., p. 278, 1879. Sciuridee Gray, London Medical Repository, XY, p. 304, April 1, 1821. Name, auUiority, and date. Type or included species. AUowis JNIarsh. 1877 AUomi/s nitens. AmmospermophilusMerriam, 1892. Tamias leucurus. Amphisciurus (Bravard MS.) Ly- dekker, 1885 Amphisciurus typus. Anisonyx Rafinesque, 1817. . . . Anisonyx l)rachiura (= Arctomys co- Ininbianus). Arctomys Schreber, 1780 Arctomj^s marmota, A. monax, A. bobac, A. empetra, A. citillus. Atlantoxerus Forsyth Major, 1893. Xerus getulus. Baginia Gray, 1867 Sciurus platani. Callosciurus Gray, 1867 Sciurus rafflesii. Callospermophilus Merriam, 1897. Sciurus lateralis. Citillus Lichtenstein, 1827-'34. Citillus mexicanus, C. leptodactylus, C. mugosaricus. Colobotis Brandt, 1844 Spermophilus fulvus. Cynomys Rafinesque, 1817 Cynomys socialis, 0. grisea. EchinosciurusTrouessart,1880. Sciurus liypopyrrhus (type), S. varia- bilis, S. strainineus. Eosciurus Trouessart, 1880. . . Sciurus bicolor (type), S. giganteus, S. indicus, S. maximus, S. maorurus. Eoxerus For.syth Major, 1893. . Xerus laticaudatus, X. berdmorei, X. tristriatus, X. palmarum, X. insig- nis, X. hosei. Erythvosciurus Gray, 1867 Sciurus ferrugineus, S. siamensis. Eupetaurus Thomas, 1888 Eupetaurus cinereus. Eutamias Trouessart, 1880 Tamias asiaticus (type), T. harrisi, T. lateralis, T. laevtdens. Farunculus ('Lesson') Gray, 1867. Probal)ly a misprint for Funambulns. Funambulus Lesson, 1832 Funambulus indicus. Funisciurus Trouessart, 1880. . Sciurus lemniscatus. Geosciurus A. Smith, 1834. . .. Sciurus erythopus. Guerlinguetus Gray, 1821 Sciurus guerlinguetus. Heliosciurus Trouessart, 1880.. Sciurus annulatus. Heterosciurus Trouessart, 1880. Sciurus ferrugineus. Generic and Family Names of Rodents. 267 Ictidomys J. A. Allen, 1877. . . Spermophilus tereticaudus, S. mexi- canus, S. 13-lineatus (tj'pe), S. frank- lini. Lagomys Storr, 1780 "An unnatural and undefined com- bination of forms with squat bodies [including 24 species], but typified by species of Arctomys." — Gill, f Laria Gray, 1SG7 Sciurus insignis. Leiihia ^ Lydekker, 1896 Myoxus meliteasis. Lipura Illiger, 1811 Hjnax hudsonius. Macroxus Cuvier, 1823 Le guerlinguet et le toupaye. * Marmota Bluinenbach, 1779. . . Marmota alpina, M. cricetus, M. lem- mus, M. typhlus, M. capensis.' Meniscomys Cope, 1878 Meniscomys hippodas, M. midlipUcatus. Microsciurus J. A. Allen, 1895. Sciurus (Microsciurus) alfari. Monax Warden, 1819 Monax missouriensis (= Cynomys lu- dovicianus). NannosciurusTrouessart, 1880. Sciurus melanotis, S. exilis. Neosciurus Trouessart, 1880. . . Sciurus carolinensis (type), S. arizo- nensis, S. griseoflavus, S. aberti, S. fossor. Otocolobus Brandt, 1844 Synonym of Colobotis (?). Otospernaophilus Brandt, 1844. Spermojihilus beecheyi. Palxoscluras Pomel, 1854 Sciurus {P(dieosciurus) feignouxii,S.(P.) chalaniati. Palmista Gray, 1867 Sciurus palmarum, S. penicillatus, S. layardii, S. sublineatus. Parasciurus Trouessart, 1880.. . Sciurus niger. Paraxerus Forsyth Major, 1893. Xerus cepapi, X. palliatus, X. p3'rro- pus, X. congicus, X. lemniscatus, X. Isabella, X. boehmi. Petaurista Link, 1795 Sciurus volucella, S. volans, S. hudso- nius, S. petaurista (type), S. sagitta. Fleslarctomys Bravard, 1848-'52. Plesiarciomys gervaisii. PlesispennopJdlas Filhol, 1883. . . Plesispermophdus angnslidens. Protoxerus Forsyth Major, 1893. Sciurus stangeri, S. ebii, S. aubinuii. Pteromys G. Cuvier, 1800 Sciurus volans, S. petaurista. Pterotix Eafinesque, 1815. . .. Nomen nudum. Ratufa Gray, 1867 Sciurus indicus. Rheithrosciurus^ Gray, 1867. . Sciurus macrotis. Rhinosciurus Gray, 1843 Rhinosciuras tupaioides. ' This genus is only provisionally referred to the Sciurid?e. Lydekker has recently suggested a special family, LeltJuidx, for it. ^ From the 7th edition of the Handbuch d. Naturgeschichte, 1803. The first edition, 1779, not seen. ^Emended to Rhitiirosciurus (Lydekker, 1891). 268 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Rodents. Rukaia Gray, 1867 Sciurus macrourus, S. bicolor, S. ephip- piura. Sciuropterus F. Cuvier, 1825. . Sciurus volans. Sciurus Limifous, 1758 Sciurus vulgaris, S. niger, S. cinereus, S. flavus, S. getulus, S. striatus, S. volans. Spermophilopsis Blasius, 1884. Spermophilus leptodactylus. Spermophilus F. Cuvier, 1825. Mus cilillus. Spermosciurus Le.sson, 1836. . . Includes 12 species, mostly from Africa. Stereodectes Cope, 1869 Stereodectes tortus. Tamias Illiger, 1811 Sciurus striatus. Tamiasciurus Trouessart, 1880. Sciurus hudsonicus. Tenotis Rafinesque, 1817 Tenotis griseus (= Sciurus erithopus). Xeiospermophilus Merriam, 1892. Spermophilus mohavensis. * Xerus Hemprich & Ehrenberg, Xerus brachyotus (and X. syria- 1832. cus?). SPALACIDiE.i t Aspalacidae Gray, Thomson's Ann. Philos., XXVI, p. 342, Nov., 1825. Aspalomyina Waterhouse, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., X, p. 203, 1842. Rhizomyinae Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, p. 1021 (1897). Spalacidae Gray, London Med. Repository, XV, p. 303, April 1, 1821. Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Aspalax Desmarest, 1804 Mus typhlus. * Aspalomys Laxmann (?) Chrysomys Gray, 1843 Bathyergus splendens. NyctocleptesTemmiuck, 1832. Nyctocleptes dekan (=Mus suma- trensis). Ommatostergus Nordmann, 1840. Ommatostergus pallasii. Rhizomys Gray, 1831 Rhizomys sinensis, R. sumatrensis. Spalax Giildenstridt, 1770 Spalax microi)htlialinus (^S. typhlus Fall., 1778). Tachyoryctes Riippell, 1835. . . Bathyergus splendens. * Talpoides Lacepede, 1799 Mus typhlus. lypJdodon Fn\coner,li^GS Nomen nudum {Rhizoimjs sivalensis Lydekker, 1878?) THERIDOMYIDiE. Theridomyidx Alston, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1876, pp. 70, 88. Trechomymx Trouessart, Cat. Mamm. tam viv. quam foss, p. 392, 1897. * Chrysomys, Nyctocleptes, Rhizomys, Tachyoryctes and Typhlodon I belong to the Rhizomyinfe; Aspalax, Aspalomys, Ommatostergus, Tal- poides, and Spalax to the Spalacinte. Generic and Family Names of Rodents. 269 Name, authority, and date. Type or included species. Adelomys Gervais, 1853 Theridomys vaillanti. (See Pseudosciur'uhe.) Arclueomys Laizer & Parieu, 1839. New name for Palxomys Laiz. & Par. BlaimiUimys (Bravard MS.) Ger- vais, 184S-'52 TIwridtDin/x hktiiirillfi. Cournvmys (Croizet) Zittel, 1893. Synonym of Issidioromys. Cavierimys Bravard, 1848-'52. . . . Cuvierwiy^laurillardl. Dipoides Jilger, 1835 ... Species not named. Gergoriomys (Croizet MS.) Blain- ville, 1840 Species iiot named. * IsoptydMS Pomel, 1854 Theridomys {Isoptychus) jourdani, Isop- tychus aid)eryi, I. cmtiquus, I. ciivieri, I. vassoni, llieridomys aquaiiUs {f). Issidioromys (Croizet MS.) Blain- ville, 1840 . . Issidioromys pseudansema Gervais, 1848 t Neomys Bravard, 1844 Neomys lembronicus (= Theridomys lemhronicns). iN^fw^'^rodon Schlosser, 1884 Isiodoromys minur. * Onugodns Pomel, 1854 Omegodus ecldmydides. * Palanicma Pomel, 1854 Palanxma antiquus. t Palieomys Laizer & Parieu, 1839. . Paheomysarrerneusis. (See Arcltieontys.) * Perrieromys Croizet (?) Protecldmys Schlosser, 1884 Protechimys gracilis, P. major. ^'fTieniodns Pomel, 1854 EcJtiniys curristriutus. Theridomys Jourdan, 1837 Species not named in first description. Trechomys Lartet, 1869 Trechomys honduellii. INCERTiE SEDIS. Anotis Rafinesque, 1815 Nomen nudum. Archilagiis Hfeckel, 1895 Hypothetical genus— 'Atavus omnium Rodentium.' Asterumys^ Amegliino, 1897 Asieromys pH)U;lu!<, A. ^yrosjiiciius. Budo)iiys{'Cro\zeV) Bravard, 1843 Nomen nudum. Cephalomys^ Amegliino, 1897.. . . Cephalomys arcidens, C. plexus. Haplnstropha Ameghino, 1891 . . . Haploslropha scalabriniana. Hystriocomys Giebel, 1860 Hystriocomys thuringiacus. ? Mixodectes"^ Cope, 1883 Mixodecles pungens, M. crassiculus. Orchiomys^ Ameghino, 1897 Orchiomys prostans. ^ Cephalomyidx Ameghino, Bol. Inst. Geog. Argentino, XVIII, p. 592, Oct. 6, 1897. '^ Mixodectidce Cope, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., p. 80, May 22, 1883. " The discovery of some skeleton fragments in good association with a lower jaw of Mixodectus pungens makes it probable that this genus should be removed from the Primates and placed as an extremely primitive Ro- dent."—Matthew, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. New York, IX, p. 265, 1897. 60— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897. 270 Palmer — Generic and Family Names of Modents. Palaiotrogus Jiiger, 1839 ... Palaiotrogus steinheimensis. Paradoxoint/s ^ Ameghino, 1885. . Panidoxomtjs cancrivorus. Protechynus Filhol, 1891 Nonieii nudum. Protoptychiis ^ Scott, 1895 Proloptychus hatcheri. ^ I'aradoxomyina Ameghino, Bol.Acud. Nac.Cien., Cordoba, IX, p. 79, 1886. P(tradoxo)nyd,r Ameghino, Mam. Fos. Rejnib. Argentina, in Actas Acad. Nac. Cicncias, Cordoba, VI, p. 122, 1889. '■'"The genus is probablj^ to be regarded as the ancestral type of the Dipodidse, and indicates an American origin for this family." — Scott, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1895, p. 286. Vol. XI, pp. 271-275 December 17, 1897 PROCEEDINGS '/'" OF THE /jC^ BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTOl^ CERVUS ROOSEVELTl A NEW ELK FROM THE OLYMPICS. BY C. HART MERRIAM. For many years naturalists have known of the presence of Elk in the Olympic Mountains and other ranges along the Pa- cific coast, but until recently no specimen, so far as I am aware, has found its way to any museum. When in the Olympic Mountains last August I arranged with two trappers who had established a winter camp in the deep canyon of Hoh River, at the north foot of Mt. Olympus, to secure specimens as soon as the animals had put on the winter coat. The first of these — a fine old bull with massive antlers — has now arrived and is safely installed in our National Museum. Dr. J. G. Cooper, in his report on the Mammals of the 47th and 49th Parallels, pul)lished in 1860, states that the Elk was abundant in the dense forests of the Coast Range, and adds : "An intelligent farmer, who formerly hunted Elk in New York State, told me that he considered these a diffei'ent animal, ])eing much larger and having larger and differently formed horns."* In the same volume Geo. Gibbs states that " Judge Ford, long a settler in Washington Territory and an enthusiastic hunter, says that the Elk of the Pacific coast is not the Elk of the ' plains,' but has a larger and coarser head. He has been through life fa- miliar with game and is positive that they are different animals." f John KeastLord, in his ^ Naturalist in Vancouver Island and Brit- ish Columhia,^ published in London in 1866, says : " The Wapiti on the Oregon coast grows much larger, and differs in color from the animal found on the inland mountains." Dr. James C. Mer- * Pacific Raih-oad Reports, Vol. XII, Pt. II, p- 88, 1860. ■fibid., p. 133. 61-BioL. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI. 1897 (271) 272 Merriam — A New Elk from the Olympics. rill, Major and Surgeon U. S. Army, informs me that he also has seen numerous heads and antlers of the Olympic Elk, all of which were distinguishable at a glance from the common species. In the Oregon exhibit of the World's Columbian Exposition at Chicago, in 1893, were several mounted heads of this Elk. They were examined by Hon. Theodore Roosevelt, who told me that they differed from those of the Rocky Mountain animal in being black and in having antlers with relativel}^ straight beams and an irregular cluster of points at the tip instead of the usual incurved terminal prong. Mr. Roosevelt, in his entertaining ' Wilderness Hunter,^ describes the Rocky Mountain Elk or Wapiti as " not only the most stately and beautiful of American game, but also the noblest of the stag kind throughout the world ; " and adds : " Whoever kills him has killed the chief of his race, for he stands far above his breth- ren of Asia and Europe." These remarks must now be trans- ferred from the common Wapiti to the Pacific coast animal. Last summer, when engaged in field work in the Puget Sound region, I saw several heads and a few hides of this Elk, and was surprised that such a superb species had remained so long un- described. I deem it a privilege to name this splendid animal Roosevelt's Wapiti. It is fitting that the noblest deer of Amer- ica should perpetuate the name of one who, in the midst of a busy public career, has found time to study our larger mam- mals in their native haunts and has written the best accounts we have ever had of their habits and chase. Ceivus roosevelti sp. nov. Roosevelt'^ AVai)iti. T(/j>e from IMt. Elaine (on ridge between heads of Holi, El wall, and Soleduc rivers) near Mt. Olympus, Olympic Mts., State of Wasliin<;t(iii. Type No. 91579, J* ad., U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Col- lected Oct. 4, 1897 by Hans and Chris Emmet. General characters. —S\ze large; head and legs black (probably only in winter pelagej ; skull and antlers massive ; beams of antlers relatively short and straight, with terminal prong aborted. Description of type specimen (which has nearly completed the molt from fall to winter pelage). — Face from between eyes to nose-pad, sooty blackish, somewhat grizzled on cheeks with golden-brown; eyelids black, sur- rounded by area of pale fulvous, incomplete anteriorly ; rest of head and neck brown, becoming black along median line and mixed black and reddish on top of head ; back and sides a peculiar grayish hrown with incomplete dusky stripe along median dorsal line; breast and belly dull reddish chestnut; legs and feet sooty black with space between hoof aii(i A New Elk from the Olympics. 273 dew claws fulvous, the fulvous reaching up a short distance along median line posteriorly; fore legs abruptly black fi-om body to hoof, with a nar- row fulvous patch on inner side of forearm ; hind legs and feet sooty black, the black on inner side of thigli reaching up nearly to groin, and on posterior asjiect reaching nearly to rump in a band 40-50 mm. wide which curves slighth' outward on eacli side of lower j)art of rump patch ; rump patch pale dull IjufFy-fulvous, deepening between thighs to pale tan ; throat grizzled black and dark golden-brown, becoming darker ante- riorly, with a narrow median beard (about 30 mm. broad) of pale fulvous, beginning opposite the angle of the mouth and sharjjly defined anteriorly and laterally by a blackish border, spreading and fading posteriorly ; chin and lower lip blackish with a sharply defined wedge-shaped mark of butfy fulvous on each side of median line, its base at anterior edge of lip, its apex directed posteriorly. Metatarsal gland (situate 160 mm. below heel on outer side) a conspicuous oval patch of reddish fulvous about 80 mm. in length, enclosing a white central stripe 35 mm. in length, and sur- rounded by the black of the leg and foot. Cranial characters.- — The skull of Cervus roosevelti, compared with that of C. canadensis from the Rocky Mountains, is much larger, broader and more massive. The frontals are not only conspicuously broader but are rery miic]i flatter, givino^ the cranium a different profile. The muzzle also is much broader. The cavities in front of the orbits, on the other hand, are decidedly smaller. Measurements ofti/pe specimen. — Total length, measured in flesh, 2490 mm. (=8 ft. 2 in.) ; tail in dry skin about 80 mm. ; ears in dry skin: from base posteriorly 225 mm., from base of opening 208 mm. Antlers : Spread 990 mm. (= 3 ft. 3 in.) ; length of left beam from burr to tip 1050 (=41| in.) ; circumference just above burr 285 mm. (= 11^ in.) ; least circumference above bez-tine 190 mm. (= Ti in.). Antlers. — The antlers are large, heavy and relativel}^ short, witli the terminal ])rongs aborted, so that the total length from burr to tip is about 500 mm. (nearly 20 inches) less than in well formed antlers of tlie Rocky Mountain Elk. The brow, bez, trez, and 4th tine are similar to those of the ordinary Wapiti, but above the 4th the antler is flattened and sub-palmate and ends in 2 or 3 short points the tips of which reach onl}^ slight!}^ above the tip of the 4th prong. Whether the aborted condition of the terminal part of the antler in Roosevelt's Wapiti is the result of long residence in tlie dense Pacific coast forests, where longer antlers w^ould be inconvenient, or is indicative of closer relationship with the stags of Europe and Asia, which normally carry somewhat similar antlers, is an interesting question. Among some black heads in a taxidermist shop in Victoria I saw one, said to haye been killed on Vancouver Island, in which 274 Merriam — A Netv Elk from the Olympics. the terminal prong of the antlers is much longer than usual, ap- proaching the normal condition of the Rocky Mountain animal. But it by no means follows that the antlers in question belong to the head on which they were mounted, for many taxidermists have a reprehensible habit of grafting handsome antlers on handsome heads irrespective of zoological or geographical ob- stacles. During the past three months I have seen more than a dozen mounted heads of Elk, Deer, and Antelope bearing horns which the taxidermists admitted were selected from stock in hand, without reference to the heads on which they grew. Other specimens. — In the taxidermist shop of L. F. Richolt & Co., at Centralia, Washington, I examined a very beautiful hide of a Wapiti killed in winter in Chehalis County. The color of the back and sides was a beautiful clear bluish gray, with a tint suggesting lavender, and the legs where they had been cut off" were abruptly black. The amount of black on the head varies considerably in different specimens. Probably part of this variation is due to age and ])art to season. All of the adult winter heads were black from nose to ears, with more or less black on the neck. Some had the entire neck black, the black reaching back to the breast and nearly to the shoulders. The development of the mane seems to be much as in the Rocky Mountain Wapiti. Geogra'phic distribution. — Roosevelt's Wapiti inhabits the dense coniferous forests of the humid Pacific coast strip from near the northern end of Vancouver Island southward through the coast ranges of Washington and Oregon to northwestern California. In LSGO, according to George Gibbs, it followed the coast "all the way down to San Francisco " (Pacific Railroad Reports, vol. XII, Pt. II, p. 133). This is a very natural distribution, corre- sponding with that of many other species. Through the agency of man the southern part of the range has now been cut off, but just how far I am unable to say. Mr. Charles H. Townsend, in his important ''Field Notes on the Mammals, Birds, and Reptiles of Northern California,^ published in 1887, says that the Wapiti "still exists in moderate numbers in Mendocino, Humboldt, and Trinity counties, along the upper courses of the Eel, Elk, and Trinity rivers. Two large Elk were shot in HumV)oldt County in December, 1885, and brought to Eureka, where I saw them.''* * Pron. IT, S, National Museum, X, pp. 168-169, 1887. .4 New Elk from the Olympics. 275 But the southern limit of its range is of far less consequence than the eastern limit, for the important question is, Do or do not the ranges of the Rocky Mt. and Pacific coast Wapiti come together? Apparentl_y they do not. Some of the old reports state tliat the Pacific p]lk formerly inhabited the Cascade range in Washington and Oregon. But even in this case the Cascades are separated, except at the. north, b}^ the full breadth of the Great Basin and Plains of the Columbia. North of the Columbia River the forest region of the northern Cascades is practically connected with that of the Rocky Mts. b\' means of the timber- covered parts of southern British Columbia and the Colville In- dian reservation of nortliern Washington. But this region, so far as I can learn, is not, and never has been, inhabited by Elk. Mr. John Fannin, Curator of the Provincial Museum at Victoria, tells me that while Elk are common on Vancouver Island they do not occur anywhere in British Columbia excej^t along its eastern border in the Rocky Mt. region. At the time of m}^ visit to the Olympics the latter part of August the Elk had been recently driven out of the upper Hoh and Soleduc canyons by Indians, and the numerous tracks seen were 10 days or 2 weeks old. Well-beaten trails followed the crests of the higher ridges and traversed the principal valleys. Many of these trails, with little labor, can be made available for horses and aft'ord almost the only means of penetrating the region. Mr. W. A. Perrv has published the following account of the way Indians kill Elk in these mountains. He says : " The i>rin- cipal Indian method of liunting the Elk, in the Ol3nnpic Range, is by driving them over precipices. Selecting a well-known spot, on a well-traveled Elk-trail, they will lie in wait for weeks, until a band appears coming down the mountain. The place usually selected is one wdiere the trail curves around some great rock, just at the edge of a precipice a hundred feet or more in height. A scout, stationed high up the mountain, gives notice of the a})])roach of a band, and then the Indians mass at the lower end of the curve, while others conceal themselves above the curve. As soon as the band passes the latter, they spring to their feet, rush down the trail, yelling and firing guns. The Indians at the lower end of the curve do the same, and the Elk, finding themselves surrounded, leap over the cliflf and are crushed on the rocks below."* *The Big Game of North America. Edited by G. O. Shields, p. 53, 1890. Vol. XI, pp. 211-11^ December 17, 1897 PROCEEDINGS BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON NELSONIA NEOTOMODON, A NEW GENUS AND SPE- CIES OF MURINE RODENT FROM MEXICO. BY C. HART MERRIAM. The collection of mammals made in Mexico by Mr. E. W. Nelson still contains many novelties. Recently, in looking at the skull of a large White-footed Mouse from the mountains of Zaeatecas, supposed to be a tyj)ical Peromyscus, I was startled to find that it had the flat-topped prismatic teeth of a Wood Rat, Xeoioma. Closer examination of the dentition showed that while the 1st and 2d upper and 1st lower molars agree essen- tially with those of Neotoma, the 3d upper and 2d and 3d lower differ so materially that it is necessary to erect a new genus for the animal's reception. The skull also is peculiar and unlike either Ncotomd or Peromyscus. The most important difference is in the antorbital slit, which does not notch the upper surface of the maxillary root of the zygoma. Another character is tlie production of the inferior angle of the antorbital slit to form a distinct process. The tail is large and Itlunt, much as in Neo- toma— not tapering to a slender point as in Peromyscus. The new genus may be defined as follows : Nelsonia gen. nov. Type. — Nelsonia neotomodon sp. nov., from Plateado, Zaeatecas, Mexico. Diagnosis. — Cranial characters: Skull in general resembling that of a large Pei'omyscas but flatter ; zygomata heavier, less depressed, and more spreading anteriorly ; antorbital slits relatively narrow and only faintly notching upper surface of maxillary root of zygoma ; inferior angle of antorbital slit thickened and protruding foi'ward and outward as a dis- tinct process ; audital buUse sub-conical as in Pfromi/scnx and Hodurnys, C2-Bi()i.. Sor. Wash., Vol,. XI, 1897 (277) 278 Merriam — A New Rodent Genus from Mexico. not bullate as in Neotoma and Xenomys ; brain case depressed as in Pero- mijscus, not elevated as in Neotoma, Xeiioiin/s, and Hodomij>< ; incisive foram- ina large and ojien, Ijroader anteriorly than in Neotoma or Peroniyscus ; coronoid i>rocess of inandil)le small, hardly larger than in Feromysciis. Dental chararierK (Fig. 14). — Teeth rooted, large, massive, and ])rismatic, witli flat crowns presenting deep reentrant angles of enamel (enamel of eijnal thickness throughout) as in Neotoma and Xe)iomi/s — totally differ- ent from the small tubercular teeth (with enamel of unequal thickness) of I'eromyscus. Crowns of 1st and 2d upper and 1st lower molars with enamel pattern essentially as in Neotoma, Hodomys, and Xenomys. Crowns of 3d upper and 2d and Md lower molars with enamel pattern unlike that of any known genus ; 3d upper molar with a single very deep and narrow reentrant angle on outer side, which pushes almost completely across the tooth, dividing the ^^)//'"^^/fl)/^)]/f^//''i^^ crown into two sub- triangular lobes, the posterior of which is ^y^[i^^ ^\j\j\^-' molar With one reen- ViQ. n.— Molar teeth of Nelsonia neotomodon and Neotoma \x^\\\j anu'le On each desertorum. X 3- gi,|e, thehiner deeper a (upper) b (lower) molars of Neotoma desertorum. ^^ ^^^^ passing an- c (upper) d (lower) :nolar.s of Nelsonia neotomodon. . tenor to, the outer, dividing the ci'own into two transverse loops the posterior of which is sometimes deeply notched on the inner side by a secondary reentrant angle ; 3d lower molar with a single and rather open reentrant angle on inner side, reaching only half way across tooth, and a slight projection (without distinct reentrant angle) on outer side. External characters. — Size (of only known species) equalling largest species of Peromyscus ; tail large and blunt as in Neotoma, and well haired, with terminal i)encil larger than usual in Peromyscus ; feet large, rela- tively as in Neotoma — decidedly larger than in Pero}ny.?cus. Nelsonia neotomodon sp. nov. Type from mountains near Plateado, Zacatecas, Mexico. (Altitude about 2500 meters or 8200 feet.) No. 90891, (^ ad. U. S. Nat. Mus., Biological Survey Coll. Collected Sept. 3, 1897, by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original No. 11625. General characters. — Size, coloration, and general £tppearance similar to the larger species of Peromyscus (as P. calif ornicus), but whiskers larger and coarser, tail larger and blunter, and feet larger ; ears large and nearly naked ; tail well haired, white- tipped, and with a distinct terminal pencil. Color. — Uj^per parts grayish brown, conspicuously lined with black on rump and posterior half of back, and suffused along the sides with pale dull fulvous, which becomes intensified inferiorly so as to form a fairly distinct band between the gray of the back and white of the belly, reach- ing all the way from cheeks to thighs; under jiarts white, the hairs A New Rodent Genus from Mexico. 279 plumbeous at base; fore and hind feet white ; outer side of hind legs dusky to ankles ; eyes surrounded by a narrow rin^; of black ; white of upper lip reaching up on sides of nose half way to eye ; tail sharp]}- bicolor; dusky above, white below, and at tip all round. Cranial and dental ckaraclers. — The cranial and dental characters have been so fully given in the generic diagnosis and are so well shown in the accompanying drawings tliat it will be unnecessary to describe them further unless a second spe- cies is discovered. Measurements. — Type specimen, (^ ad.: total length, 247 ; tail verte- brae, 121 ; hind foot, 29. Average of 6 specimens from tyjie locality: total length, 244; tail vertebne, 121; Q- hind foot, 29. Geographic distribution. — Speci- mens of this remarkable animal ^"^ were collected by Mr. Nelson in the higlier parts of the Sierra Madre in the western corner of the State of Zacatecas, and about 100 miles farther south in the same range, near Bolailos, Jalisco. Another series was obtained in a detached range, east of the Sierra ]Madre, near Plateado, Zacatecas. INIr. Nelson informs me that the animals were usually found a]:)out ledges or other rocky places in the pine forest, at an altitude of 8,000 feet or upwards. Near Plateado specimens were secured along the upper edge of the oak belt, where the oaks mix with the lower edge of the pines. None were found at lower altitudes. 15.— SkuU oi Nehouia neoiomodon. X 1%. Vol. XI, pp. 281-282 December 30, 1897 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON A NEW RACE OF PINE SQUIRREL FROM THE COAST REGION OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. . BY OUTRAM BANGS. Mr. C. A. Allen, of Nicasio, California, has sent me fourteen pine squirrels that were shot at Philo, Mendocino County, Cali- fornia, by a friend of his, who sent them to him in the meat, Mr. Allen measuring, sexing, and skinning them. This series shows the pine squirrel of the coast region of northern California, west of the mountains, to be a well-marked race. The region north of its range is occupied by S. hudsonicus douglasi, and in the mountains to the east is found S. hudsonicus ccdifornicus. The present form differs considerably from either of these squirrels, though undoubtedly it intergrades with one or both of them. The pine squirrel of the coast region of northern California may be known as follows : Sciurus hudsonicus orarius subsp. nov. I'l/pe from Philo, Mendocino County, California, $ old adult, No. 4978. Coll. E. A. and O. Bangs. Collected Dec. 9, 1895. Skinned, sexed, and measured by C. A. Allen. General characters. — Size and proportions of " 4VJ»S Sex. 9 old ad. 9 ad. . . . 9 old ad. ? ad 9 ad cj'oldad. 9 ad 9 ad 9 ad... c^ yg d ad 9 old ad. ■71 ■* O aa. ... ? yg Date. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec, Dec. uec. Dec. Dec. Dec. July Dec. 9, 1895 9, 1895 9, 1895 9, 1895 9, 1895 9, 1895 9, 1895 9, 1895 9, 1895 9, 1895 16. is«- 24; 1895 9, 1895 Total length. 320. 302.2 323.8 317.6 317.6- 327.2 316. 319.4 010 I 366!4 n7.6 514.2 Tail ver- tebrae. 134.8 131. 136.4 133.6 133.6 139.8 134.8 147.6 101 141.6 139.8 127. 136.4 Hind foot. 50.8 50.8 50.8 50.8 50.8 50.8 50.8 50.8 50 s 50.8 50.8 Ear. 00.0 50 8 50.8 22.4 22.4 22.4 22.4 22.4 22.4 22^4 22.4 '->2.4 22.4 20.6 m6' Remarks. — Compai'ed with S. h. douglasl, S. h. orarius has the same small ear, but ditiers very much in color, the dark olive shades of the upi)er parts of orarius, with but little rusty anywhere, being in marked contrast to the ferruginous dorsal region of douglasi. The white fringed tail of orariu.s, with a broad black snbapical band, can always be told from the rusty yellow fringed tail of douglasi. The under parts are, as a rule, much paler, more ochraceous-buff, less ochraceous-i'ufous than in douglasi. With S. lindsonicus calif amicus, S. hndsonieus orarius scarcely needs com- 2)arison, the large ear, white or creamy white under parts, and bright ochraceous-rufous dorsal stripe of californicus at once distinguishing it. Most of my specimens were taken on December 9, one only being taken in midsummer. The specimens taken December 9^ show all the stages from 2)robably the sununer to full winter coat, it ap])earing to be the time at which that change takes place. There seems to be but a slight differ- ence in color between the winter and summer pelages, though the black side stripes probably nearly disapi)ear when the full winter coat has been acquired, and the ears are more tufted and the under parts more vermic- ulated with blackish. INDEX New names are printed in heavy type A Page Abies shastensis xi Abra 262 Abrocoma 263 Abroniys 252 Abrothrix 254 Acaiitberiuni 253 Acanthion 253 Acanthochoerus 253 Acaiithodes 166 Acanthoniys 259 Acathoessus 166 Acaremys 250 Achtca 166 Aconiys 259 Aconaeniys 262, 263 Acosniinthiis 259 Acroinjs 254 Actsea ' 158 Actenomys 262, 263 Adeloni3''s 265, 269 Adelphomys 262, 263 JS^piiiiis 163 Aethra 167 Aethusa 167 Agouti 243, 248 Agricola 257 Akodon 254 AUactaga 173, 249 Allomys 266 Alticola 257 Alviceola 257 Amblyrhiza 246 Animoinys 257 AnmiospermophiUis 189, 266 Animospermophilus leucurus 148 Amorphopus 163 Aniphiaulaconi\ s 256 Amphilagiis 262 Amphinome 166 Aniphisciiirus 266 Aiiaptogonia 257 Anchimys 246 Ancinus iSi Anisonyx 266 Anisopus 158 Anoenia 246 Anomalurus 245 Anotis 269 Anteliomys 257 Anthericuni esculeiitum 64 Antrozous pallidiis iSo pallidus pacificus 180 Apia!« 164 Apioniaia 167 Apioinitlirax 164 Apocreninus 163 Aplodontia 245 Apodenius 259 Archseoniys 269 Archilagus 269 ArctocephaUis aiistralis 177 phillipi 177 to-wuseiidi 178 Arctomys 266 Arctopsis 161 Arenaria aculeata 169 puniicola 169 04— Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 Page Arenaria coiigesta subcongesta ■.... 170 Aroasthriis 245 Arvicanthis 259 Arvicola ■243, 257 Arvicola gapperi ]. 122 oregoni 74 A.scom\-s 251 Aspala'x \Z\[\ ^gg Aspaloni5'S 268 Astacus fluviatilis 160 Asteromys 269 Atelecycios ..." ijy Atergatis 15s Atherurus 253 Atlantoxertis 266 Aulacodon 246 Aulacodus 262, 263 Aulacolambrus .' igi Aulacomys 257 Avahi ly, B Babirussa 173 Baginia '.'."..!.".'.!"" 266 Bailey, Vernon : American voles of the genus Hvotoniys 113 Baiomys .". 254 Bandicota ; 259 Bangs, Outran! : I^ynxes of eastern North America 47 New red fox 53 Mammals from Labrador 235 New squirrel from California. 281 Bas.sariscus astutus flavus 185 oregonus 186 raptor 186 saxivola 185 Bathyergus 245 Batomys 259 Belopr3'mnus 249 Belostoma colossicum x Benaeus griseus x Bennettites 9 Benton, Frank : The giant bee of In- dia viii Bicunedens 259 Bifa 252 Blainvilliniys 267 Blarina fossor 227 mexicana 228 tlioniasi 227 Blarinomys 255 Borioikon 257 Bothriomys 261 Brachj'mys 252 Brachytarsomys 255 Brachj'uromys 255 Brachyura 153 Brachyurus 257 Bramus 257 Briaromys 247 Briggs, Iv. J : Water movement in soils xii Budomys 269 Bulbedulis 63 Bunotheria x (283) 284 The Biological Society of Washington c Page Ctelogeuus 248 Caenoinys ^52 Callinectes africantis i49 larvatus africanus i49 bocourti ^51 cayennensis 151 diacaiithus 149 exasperatus i49 gladiator 15° tumidiis gladiator 15° larvatus '49 latliuaiius 151 niarginatns i49 toxotes 151 trispinosus 15' tumidus H9. 150 Callodontoinys 246 Callomys 247 Callorh'iiius ursimis i75 Callosciurus 266 Callospermoplillus 189, 266 Calodromus 1^3 Calomvs 255 Camassia fraseri angusta 65 cusickii •• ^4 esculenta °3> "4 fraseri "5 howellii ^5 leichtliiiii ^3 quainash "4 Canipicola 257 Cancer antennarius m aintlionyi hi cornudo i57 dental us 15° fluviatilis 161 furcatus ^57 limbatus '59 pagurus i°° pauope i°° pelagicns i54 phalangiuni i°2 potamios 1°' rostratus '55 Sagittarius '5° sculptus 159 seticornis '5° squinado i59 superciocisns 15S uca 154 utidecim-dentatvis 15° Canis cagottis -7 estor 31 frustror 26 latrans 23 lestes 25 nieariisi 3° microclon 29 nigrirostris 27 ociiropus 58 palli«liis 24 peiilusiilse 28 vigilis 61 Cannabateomys 263 Capiguara 246 Caprolagus •••■ 254 Capromys 262, 263 Carcluides i°4 Carcinus ^"4 Cardamine bellidifoUa i/i bellUilfolia pacliypliylla 170 Cardiatheriiim 247 Cardiodon 247 Cardiodus 247 Cardiomys 247 Page Carleton, M. A.: Separation of Puc- cinia graminis avenae from P. g. tritici •• viu Climate an element in wheat environment '^^ Carpomvs ••••• 259 Carterodon 262, 253 Castor 246 Castoroides 246 Castoromys 246 Caudi volvulus '74 Cavia ^47 Caviodon 247 Cephalomys 269 Cercoleptes ^74 Ceratodon 247 Cercolabes •••• 250 Cerconiys 262, 263 Cerodoii 247 Cervaria ■ 4° Cervus canadensis 273 roosevelti 271 Chsetodipus 252 Chtetomys 250 Chalicomys 246 Charvbdea ^°\ Charvbdella i™ Charvbdis i°i Chelodus : 246 Chesnut, V. K.-. Exhibition of Cicuta vagans and Nerinm oleander vii Poison of black nightshade... x Casesof mushroom poisoning, xi Chilomys 255 Chilotus 73, 257 Chinchilla 24S Chionobates 254 Cliiropodomys 259 Chiruromys _._■ 259 Chlorogalum leichtlinii 03 Chlordialla I57 Chlorodius niger 15° Chloromys 246 Chrotomys 257 Chrysomys 2es Chrysothrix '74 Chtiionoergus 25S Cicuta vagans ^^l Citillus 266 Claviglis 252 Cloromis 24a Cobaya 247 Coelogenus 24S Coendou i73> 243. 250 Ccetomys 245 Colloniia mazania 35 Colobotis 266 Colonomys 253 Colotaxis 253 Colpostemma 24b Condvlura cristata 240 Conil'urus 259 Conodontes .j 246 Conodus .■". 246 Contracavia 247 Cook, O. F.: A new wingless fly xi Cosmonota '™ Cournomvs ;■■ 269 Coville. F. v.: Plant food of ducks in Chesapeake Bay ^ Water hyacinth x Abies shastensis xi Exhibition of peculiar forma- tion of pine needles xu Collomiamazama, anewplant 35 Itinerary of John Jeffrey 57 Name of the Camas plant 61 Index. 285 Page Coville, F. v., and John Leiberg : New plants from Mt. Mazama 169 Crangoiiyx ix Crateromys 259 Cratogeoniys 251 Craurothrix 259 Cricetodipus. 252 Cricetodon 255 Cricetoniys 259 Cricetulu's 255 Cricetus 255 Cronius 166 Cryptochiriis 161 Cryptoniys 245 Ctenodactylus 262, 263 Ctenoniys 262, 263 Cuandu 250 Cuniculus 249, 254, 25S Cutia 24S Cuvieriniys 269 Cyanotis scilloides 65 Cycaileolilea bibbiiisi 15 foittaiiieitiia 13 gouclteriaiia 14 mcsjeeaiia 12 niarylandica 9 tysoiilaiia 11 Cycas 9 Cycloxaiitliops 164 Cycloxanthus 164 Cyniopolia caronii 93 sica 97 Cynomys 69 Dactyloniys 262, 263 Dasygyiiis 164 Dasytnys 259 Dasynotus 252 Dasyprocta 248 Dawson, C. F. : Dissemination of dis- eases by insects viii Decticadapis 265 Decticns 255 Deileniys 255 Oelpliiiiiiini vlridesceiis 39 De Schweinitz, E. A.: Generation and use of Formaldehyde ix Dendrobius 262, 263 Dendromys 256 Deomys 256 Dewey, L. H.: Migration of weeds x Diabroticus 246 Dicardia 250 Dicotyles 174 Dicceiophorus 262, 263 Dicolpomys 262, 263 Dicrostonyx 258 Dicrostonyx hudsonius 237 torquatus 23S Dilocarcinus multidentatus :65 Dinomys 249 Diocartherium 247 Dioxippe 164 Diplostoma 251 DipodilUis 256 Dipodorays 252 Dipodops 252 Dipoides 269 Dipus 249 Discolomys 262. 263 Doclea IS9 Dolichotis 247 Dorippe dorsipes 163 quadridens 163 Dorynchus 167 Dorvnchus thomsoni 162 Page Draba hyperborea vii Droniia rnmphii 160 Drymomys 255 Dwight, ].. Jr.: A shearwater new to North America ix, 69 Echiinys 262, 263 Echinomys 263 Echinoprocta 250 Echinosciurus 266 Echinothrix 250, 260 Echiothrix 260 Egeria 159 Eligniodontia 255 Elimodon 255 Eliom3-s 252 Eliurus 255 Ellobius 258 Elomys 260 Enchoniys 263 Endecaplenra 256 Entoptychus 252 Eocardia 250 Komys 255 Eosciurus 266 Eothenomys 258 Eoxerus 266 Epiblema 248 Epimys 260 Episesarraa 89, i5i Eremiomys 258 Erethizon 251 Ericara 232 Erioara salniouea 232 Ericerodes 164 Ericerus 164 Eriocheir 167 Eriochirus 167 iCriomys 24S Erlplildes 164 Erythrosciurus 266 Etinisa 167 Ethusa mascarone americana 109 ciliatifrons 109 lata 109 mascarone 109 niicropthalma 109 pubescens 109 tentiipes 109, no Eucardiodon 247 Eucastor 246 Enchsetomys 266 Euchoreutes 249 Eucritus 253 Eulagos 254 Euniys 255 Eumysops 262, 263 Euneom3's 255 Eupetaurus 266 Euphilus 248 Euryotis 261 Eurypanopeus 165 Eurytium 165 Eutamias 266 Eutamias afifinis 207 alpinus 207 speciosus callipeplus 202 dorsalis 210 speciosus frater 202 hindsi 196 speciosus inyoeiisis 202, 20S merriami 197 minimus 207 to-\viisei»di oclirogeiiys.. 195, 206 oreocetes 207 palnierl 208 286 Tlie Biological Society of Washington. Page ICutamias pictus 190 quadriinaculatus 203 quadrivittatus 209 senex 196 speciosus 202 townsendi 195 clorsalis titalieusis 210 Kiixaiitliopsis 166 Euxanthus 159, 166 Evermann, B. W.: Catfishes of Louis- iaua X Evotomys 113, 25S Evotomys brevicaudus 129 caiiforiiicus 71, 133 carolineiisis 130 dawsoni 121 fuscodorsalis 122 gapperi galei 126 gapperi 122 idahoensis 131 gapperi loiiiigi 125 mazaiua 71, 132 iiivarins 136 obsciiriis 72, 133 occidentalis 72, 134 gapperi ochraceus 124 proteus 137, 239 pygniaeus 134 gapperi rhoadsi 125 rutilus 118 gapperi saturatus 12S iiiigava 130, 239 wrawgeli 120 F Fabia 166 Earuiiculus 266 Felis concolor 219 liippolestes 219 liippolestes olyinpiis 220 Fiber 258 Fiber niacrodoii 143 obsciirus 237 zibethici:s 143, 237 Fossor 245 Funambulus 266 Funisciurus 266 G Galea 247 Galloway, B. T. : Effects of environ- ment on host and parasite in plant diseases x Gecarcinus i5i Gecaicoidea 161 Gelasimus 154 Genyscoelus 243, 248 Geomys 251 Georychus 245 Geoscinrus 266 Gerbillus 256 Gergovioniys 269 Gill, Theo.: Insufficiency of the order Bunotheria x Characters of Molinpe anil Ranzaniinae xii Gill, Theo., and C. H. Townsend: Di- ajjnoses of deep-sea fishes ix New fishes from Bering Sea... 231 Glareolns 258 Glis 252 Golunda 260 Goneplat 167 Goneplax 167 Gouiopsis 159 Page Goniosoma 161 Graphimys 262, 263 Graphinrus 252 Grapsillus 165 Grapsus 159 Greene, E. ly.: Development of the idea of a genus viii Exhibition of Viola emargi- nata and V. heterophylla ix Grypheas viii GuerUnguetus 266 GuilHuomys 262, 263 Gundi 264 Gymnomys 260 Gymnoptychus 251 Gymnuromys 255 Gyriabnis 248 Gj-rignophus 262, 26,^ H Habrocoma 264 Habrothrix 255 Hallreetus leucoceplialiis alas- caiius 143 leucocephalus 145 Halimus aries 157 auritus 158 Hallomys 255 Halticus 249 Haltomys 249 Hamster 243, 235 Hapalomjs 260 Hapaloiiotus 164 Hapalotis 260 Haplodon 245 Haplostropha 269 Hedj'mys 250 Helamys 265 Heligmodontia 255 Heliomys 260 Heliophobius 245 Heliosciuriis 266 Heliscomys 251 Hemiotomys 258 Hendecapleura 256 Herbstia 165 Hesperomys 255 Heterocephalus 245 Heterogeomys 251 Heteromys 252 Heterosciurus 266 Hill, R. T., and T. W.Vaughan: Lower Cretaceous Grypheas of Texas viii Hill, R. T.: Antillean faunas x Hippoglossoides roljiistus 234 Hodomys 261, 277 Holm, Theo.: Exhibition of Fuch's ' Histoire des Plantes ' and ' Flora Danica ' vii The grass embryo ix Holochilomys....j 255 Holochilus 255 Holometopus 90, 92, 161 Houtia 264 Howard, I,. O.: Parasites of shade- tree insects viii • Exhibition of Belostoma co- lossicum X Hyastenus 158 Hydrochaerus 247 Hydrolagus 254 Hydromys 257 Hyperacrins 141, 258 Hypocoelus 159, 164 llypoeolpiis 164 Hypogeomys 255 Hypopeltarium 165 Index. 287 Page Hypiidaeus 258 Hystricomys 269 Hystricops 251 H\'stricotheriuin 253 Hystrix 253 Ichthj'omys 255 Ictidoiiiys 190, 267 Idiiirus .J 245 luachus cornutus 159 dorynchus 162 lons:irostris 155 phalangiiim 162 ludri 173 Ischyromys 253 IsodeIta..r .• 258 Isodon 262, 264 Isoniys 260 Isoptychus 269 Isothrix 262, 264 Issidioroniys 269 Jaculus 249 Judd, S. D. : Sexual dimorphism in Crustacea ix Antennal circulation in Cran- gonyx ix Protective adaptation of in- sects xii Juniperus californica utahensis 210 Kaempferia 165 Kannabaleomys 262, 264 Kerodon 247 Kinkajou 174 Kraussia 167 Kraussina 167 Lagidium 248 Lagodus 262 Lagomys 262, 267 Lagopsis 254, 262 Lagos 254 Lagostomus 248 Lagot h eriu m 254 Lagotis 248, 265 Lagurus 25S Lambrus pisoides 162 Lamprodon 253 Laria 267 Lasiomys 260, 262,264 I^asiopodomys 258 Lasiuromys 262, 264 Leggada 260 Leiberg, J. B. : Delphinium virides- cens and Sambucus leiosperma... 39 Leiberg, J. B., and F. V. Coville ; Two new plants from Mt. Mazama 169 Leimacomys 256 Leithia 267 I.emmomys 258 Lemmus 258 Lemniscomys 260 Lemotrys hyacinthina 65 Leptodius 161 Leptomylus 246 lyCptopodia phalaugium 155 Page Leptopodia tenuirostris 155 Leptopus 159 Lepus 25,4 X,epus americanus 236 arizona; 147 bailey i 148 nuttalli 148 Leuciscus 166 Leucocarcinns 166 Leucosia nucleus 160 Lieiicositles 160 Ijeurocyclus 164 Liniacomys 256 Limnolagus 254 Linsanga 173 Liocarciuus 155 I.ipura 267 Ivispognathus furcillatus 162 thonisoni 162 I^ithomys 255 I,ithoscaptus 161 Lomomys 262. 264 Loncheres 262, 264 Lonchophorus 262, 264 Lophactaea 159 Lophiomys 254, 260 Lophozozymus 167 Lophuromys 260 Lotus americanus xi Loxomylus 246 I.oxoryuchus 167 Lucas, F. A.: Exhibition of fur-seal skulls vii Mortality among fur-seals vii Fossil bison of North America xi Lucas, F. A., andC. W. Stiles : A para- site of the fur-seal xi- Lupa forceps 155 smythianus 150 trispinosa 151 Lupea exasperata 150 l.iipella 155 Lj'ciscus cagottis 27 Iiycodes coiicolor 233 digitatiis 232 Lynx canadensis 48 ruffus fioridanus 49 glSas 50 ruffus 49 subsolauiis 49 M Mactloualdia alia 232 loiiga 232 Macrocheira 165 Macrocolus 252 Macrogeomys 251 Macropodia longirostris 155 rostrata 162 Macrotolagus 254 Macroxus 267 Macriirus dorsalis 233 firinisqiiaiitis 234 lepttiriis 233 111 aj^ It II s 234 siibi>rliitalis 234 Maia phalaugium 155 taurus 157 Maja 159 Jlalacomys 260 Malacosoma 164 Malacothrix 256 Mara •. 247 Marcuinomys 262 ]>Iariiiosa iiinriua mexicana 44 oaxacse : 43 Marmota 267 288 The Biological Society of Washington. Page Marunsionij's 262 Massoutiera 262, 264 Mastaconiys 260 Mastonotus 262, 264 Medajus 159 Megaloiuys 255 Megainys 248 Melissa" 166 Meniscomys 267 Merioues 249. 257 Merriam, C. Hart : Tlie Pribilof hair seal viii New method of weighing species and subspecies x Life zones ot Olympic Mts xi Revision of the coyotes 19 Two new murine opossums.... 43 • ■ Fhenacomys preblei, a new vole " 45 Two new red-backed mice 71 The subgenus Chilotus 73 Two new moles loi Three new jumping mice 103 New muskrat 143 New cottontail rabbit 147 New fur-seal 175 New bat 179 New Bas.sariscus 1S5 The genus Kutamias 189 Eight new pocket gophers 213 New mountain sheep 217 Two new pumas 219 Five new rodents 221 New flying squirrel 225 Five new shrews 227 New elk 271 New genus and species of ro- dent 277 Mesomys 262, 264 Microcavia 247 Microdipodops 253 Microlagus 254 Micromys 260 Microsciurus 267 Microtus 25S Microtus aitcliisoiii 141 a r V a 1 i s 6 S liairdi 74 californicns 221 caitlcuucliis 67 enixus 239 fertilis 141 ka 222 mogollonensis 68 nanus 68 Oregon i 74 pennsylvanicus 239 ratticeps 222 serpens 75 sitkeitsis 221 uualascensis 222 Micrurus 258 Mictomys 238, 258 Miller, 'Gerrit S., Jr. : New Oregon vole 67 New bat 139 New vole from Kashmir 141 Mi.sotliermus 258 Mitsukuri. Prof.: Science in Japan ... xi Mixodectes 269 Monax 267 Morenia 262, 264 Morris, H. L.: I'xhibition of sections., xi Motter, M. G.: Underground zoology., xi Murinus.. 260 Mus 260 Mus rutilus 118 Muscardinus 252 Musculus 260 Page Mussascus 258 Myarion 255 Mylagaulus 246 Mynomes 258 Mj'ocastor 25S, 2t)2, 264 Myodes 258 Myolagns 262 Myolemmns 258 Mj'opotamus 262, 264 Myoscalops 245 Myospalax 262 Mj'otalpa 262 Mycftherium , 255 Myoxomys 255 Myoxus 252 Mysateles 262, 264 Mysops 253 My.stromys 255 N Nannomys 260 Nannosciurns 267 Naxia serpuli'era , 157 Naxioides 157 Necromys 255 NectoiuN's 255 Nelomys 262, 264 Nelson, K. W.: New birds from .Me>c;- ico vii ]VeI.s(>iiia 261, 277 IVelsuitia iieotoni xloii 277 Nemausa 166 Nematonurus 234 Neodon 258 Neoepiblema 248 Neofiber 25S Neomys 255 Neoprocavia 247 Neoreomys 262, 264 Neorhynchus 164 Neosciurus 267 Neotoma 261 Neotoma desertorum 278 Neotomys 255 Neptuuus 155 Neptunus marginatus 149 Nerium oleander vii Nesokerodon 269 Nesokia 260 Nesomys 255 Notiomys 255 Notio.sorex crawfordi 227 evotis 228 gigas 227 Notogastropus 163 Notomys , 260 Nyctocleptes 268 Nyctomys 255 Oberhotser, H. C. : American golden warbl e rs ix Ochetodon 253 Ochetomys 259 Ochotona 262 Octodon 262, 264 (Edocephalys 253 CEthra 167 Officers iii, xii Olenopsis 262, 264 Omegodus 269 Ommatostergus 26S Ondatra 259, 262, 264 Onychomys 256 Onychura , , , 251 Index. 289 Page Ophthalmias 157 Ophthalmias cervicornis 157 Orchiomys 269 Oreinomys 261 Oreoniysl 261, 253 Oromy's 247 Orthogeoraj'S 251 Orthomyctera 247 Orthomys 262, 264 Orthostoma dentata 165 Orj-cteroiuys 256, 264 Orycterus..' 245 Oryctolagus '. 254 Oryctomys 251 Oryzomys 256 Osteopera 248 Othonia 161 Otocolobus 267 Otognosis 253 Otoniys 256. 261 Otosperniophilus 267 Ovisdalli 217 iielsoni 21 8 stonei 217 Oxymycterus 256 Paca 248 PachyuroiU3'S 257 Paciculus 261 Pied lima 163 Pagurus 160 Palseocastor 246 Palaeocavia 247 Palaeolagus 254 Palaeoniys 246, 269 Palseosciurus 267 Palaiotrogus 270 Palaiijema 269 Palicus 93, 165 Palicus acutifron.s 94 alteriialiis 94, 95 augustiis 94, 97 halianiensis 94, 98 cristatipes 93 cursor 95 dentatus 94 depressus 94, 97 dilatata 95 faxoiii 94, 96 fragilis 95 gracilipes 94 gracilis 95 grauulatus 93 Istlimiiis 94, 97 obesu-s 94 sica 94, 97 tuberculatus 94 zonatus 94 Palmer, T. S.: Nomenclature of four genera of mammals 173 Names of rodents 241 Palmer, Wm.: Type (?) of a new-old species ix Palmista 267 Paludicola 259 Panolax 254 Panopeus 165 Pappogeomys 251 Paradoxomj's 270 Paramys 253 Paranomys 262, 264 Parasciurus 267 Parasesarma 90 Paraxerus 267 Parthenope 159, 160 Pectinator 262, 264 Page Pedetes 265 Pedomys 259 Pelamys 256 Pellegrina 262, 264 Pelocarcinus 161 Pelomys 260 Peltariou 165 Pericera 157 Perimys 248 Perisesarma 89 Perodipus 253 Perognathus 253 Peromyscus 223. 256, 261 Peromyscus californicus 223, 278 macrorhinus 223 sitkeiisis 223 Perrieromys 269 Petaurista 267 Petromus 262, 264 Phaiomys 259 Phalaugium esculentuni 65 quamash 64 Phalangipus 159 Phanomys 250 Phenacomys 77, 259 Phenacomys celatus 84 intermedins 79 latimanus 83 longicaudus 85 oramontis 80 orophilus 80 preblei 45, 82 truei 80 ungava 84, 239 Philyra 160 Phlceom\s 261 Phractoniys 254 Phtoramys 262, 264 Phugatherium 247 Phycodes 164 Phvllomvs 262, 265 Phyllotis' 256 Piaropus crassipes x Pika 243, 262 Pinem^-s 259 Pinus Jeffrey i 57 monophylla 210 ponderosa scopulorum 210 Pisa 161 Pisa aurita 157 Pitho 161 Pitj-mys 259 Pithanotomys 262, 265 Pithecheir 260 Pithecochirus 260 Plagiodontia 262, 265 Planes clypeatus 162 Platacanthomys 252 Plataeomys 262, 265 Platjcercomys 249 Platygeomys 251 Plat^odon 262 Platyonichus 158 Platypodia 158 Platypodia granulosus 159 Platypyga 248 Platythrix 262, 265 Plectrochcerus 251 Plesiarctorays 267 Plesispermophilus 267 Pleurolicus 253 Plexochoerus 247 Pliolagostomus 248 Podohuenia 165 Podophthalmu.s 167 Pcecilomys 262, 265 Pcephagomy.s 262, 265 Pogonomj-s 260 Pollard, C. I,.: Type in botany viii 290 The Biological Society of Washington. Page Pollard, C. L.: A publication problem, xi Portuninus latipes 159 Portunus 155, 160 Portunus pelagicus 160 Potamarchus 248 Potamys 262, 265 Potos 174 Praotheriuni 254 Praticola 259 Prea 247 Procardia 250 Procardia theriuni 247 Procavia 247 Prolagus 262 Prolagostoniiis 248 Prosopisj 111 i flora xi Protechiinys 269 Protechyiius 270 Protoptychus 270 Protoxerus 267 Psanunomys 257, 259 Psaninioryctes 262, 265 Pseuderiphia 164 Pseudocononij's 260 Pseudojnys 260 Pseudoneoreomys 262, 265 Pseudosciurus 265 Pseudostonia 251 Pseudotomus 25^ Psoralia tenuiflora xi Pteroniys 267 Pterotix 267 Ptyssophorus 261 Puccinia graminis aveuae viii graniinis tritici viii Puffinusassimilis ix, 69 auduboni 70 elegans 70 obscurus 70 subalaris 70 Putorius cicognani 240 Pygeretinus 249 Pyria 164 Pyromaia 167 Quamasia cusickii 64 esculenta 64, 65 howellii 65 hyacinthina 65 leichtlinii 63 quaiuash 64 Raia ol>tiisa 231 iitterrupta 232 rosispiuis 231 Raplioiiotus 166 Rathbun, M. J.: American Sesarmse... 89 American species of Ethnsa... log New species of Cancer and note on Sesarma iii African crabs of genus Calli- nectes 149 Nomenclature of Brachj'ura... 153 Rattus 261 Ratufa 267 Reithrodon 256 Reithrodontomys 256 Rheithrosciurus 267 Rhinosciurus 267 Rhipidomys 256 Rhithrodon 256 Rhithrosciurus 267 Rhizomys 268 Page Rhodia 165 RUogecsa inliiutilla 139 tumida 139 Rhombomys 257 Rhynchomys 261 Richardson, Harriet : New species of Sphoeronia 105 New genus and species of Sphccromida; 181 Rithrodon 256 Romerolagus 254 Roosevelt, Theo. : Remarks x Rukaia 268 Ruscinomys 262, 265 s Saccomys 253 Saccophorus 251 Saccostomus 261 Saimiri 174 Salacia 164 Sambucus callicarpa 41 leiosperma 40 nielanocarpH 41 pubens 41 Scapaiiits alpiiiiis 102 californicus loi townsendi loi triiel 102 Scapteromys 256 Scarturus 249 Scavia 247 Scilla angusta 65 esculenta 65 fraseri 65 Schistomys 250 Schizodon 262, 265 Sciamys 251 Scirteta 249 Scirtetes 249 Scirtomys 249 Scirtopoda 249 Sciuravus 253 Sciurodon 265 Sciuroides 265 Sciuromys 253 Sciuropterus 225, 268 Sciuropterus alpinus 225 alpinus fuliginosus 225 alplmis klaniathensis 225 Sciurus 146. 268 Sciurus hudsonicus californicus... 146, 282 douglasi 282 fremonti 146 hud.sonicus 240 ineariisi 146 mogollonensis 146 orariiis 281 Scleromys 262, 265 Scotaeumys 248 Sesarma sequatorialis 112 africana .'. 89 americana 90 angusta gi angustipes 90 barbimana 90 beuedicti 90 bidentata 89 bromeliarum 90 cinerea 90 crassipes 90 curacaoensis 89 guerini 91 Iiaitseiii 91, 92 miersii 90, 91 miniata 91 mulleri 90 Index. 291 Page Sesarma occideutalis 90 recta 90 reticulata 89 ricordi 91 roberti 90 rubripes 90 sesarma 90 stiiiipsoui 90 sulcata 90 Sigmodon 256 Signiodontoni ys 256 Sigmogomphius 246 Siniia sciurea 174 Simotes 259 Simpson, C.T.: Classification of Unios. ix Sincetherus 251 Siphneus 262 Sisyphe 164 Sisyphus 164 Sitocodiuni esculentum 65 Sitomys 256 Sminihus 249, 250 Smith, H. F.: Disease of cruciferous plants X Exhibition of a new hypoder- mic syringe xi Bacterial diseases of plants xi Sorex caudatus 229 gudniaiii 229 macrodon 228 oreopolus 228 personatus 240 salviul 229 sclalerl 228 stizodon 229 veutralis 229 Spalacomys 261 Spalacopus 262, 265 Spalax 268 Spanioniys 262. 265 Spermophilopsis 26S Spermophilus 268 Spermosciurus 268 Sphasramj-s 248 Sphseroma 182 Sphseroma destructor 105 vastator 106 Splieuoniei'icles 164 Sphenomerus 164 Sphiggomys 24S Sphigguriis 251 Sphodromjs 248 Steatomys 256 Steiromys 251 Steneofiber 246 Steneotherium 246 Stenocionops cervicornis 157 Stenopus 159 Stenorynchus •. 167 Stenorynchus phalangium 158 seticoruis 158 Stereodectes 268 Stichomvs 262, 265 Stiles, C' W.: The honorary Ph. D xfi International committee on nomenclature xi Stiles, C. \V., and F. A. Lucas : A par- asite of the fur-seal xi Strata 247 Strophostephanos 248 Sus sethiopicus 174 taja(;u 174 Swingle, W. T.: Kxhibition of algse... vii Syllophodus 253 Sylvicola 259 Sylvilagus 254 Synaptomys 259 Synaptomys innuitus 23S Synetheres 251 65— Biol Soc. Wash., Vol. XI, 1897 Page Tachyoryctes 26S Tajniodus 269 Talpoides 243, 268 Taniias 268 Taniias asiaticus 189 dorsalis 210 macrorhabdotes 203 quadrimaculatiis 203 Tamiasciurus 268 Tapeti 254 Tapirus americanus 174 Tatera 257 Tatu novemcincta 174 Tatusia 173 Tayassu patira 174 pecari 174 laxyinys 253 Tecticeps 181 Tectlceps alasceiisis 182 Tenomys 261 Tenotis 268 Teonoma 261 Terricola 259 Tetramerodon 259 Tetraodon 161 Tetrastylus 248 Thelphusa fluviatilis 161 Theridomys 269 Tliersaudriis 164 Thia 166 Thomasomys 256 Thoniomys 213, 251 Tlioniomys alpiiiiis 216 annularis 214 bulbivorus 213 fnlvus 214, 216 laticeps 215 leiitocloii 215 inazaina 214 monticolus 214 uasicus 216 iievadensls 213 operarius 215 quadrat IIS 214 Thrichomys 262, 265 Thrinacodus 262, 265 Thrj^onomys 262, 265 Tillomys 253 Titanomys 262 Tourteau 160 Townsend, C. H.: Alaskan live mam- moth story viii Distribution and migration of the fur-seal viii New eagle and new squirrel... 145 Townsend, C. H., and Theo. Gill : Diagnoses of deep-sea fishes ix New fishes from Bering sea... 231 Trechomys 269 Tretoniys 261 Triaulacodus 262, 265 Tribodon 262, 265 Tricardia 250 Trichia 166 Trichys 253 Tricium 254 Trilophomys 261 Trinodontoniys 256 Trogontherium 246 Tucanus 251 Tylomys 256 Tylonyx 259 Tympauoinerus 164 Typhlodon 268 Typhlomys 252 Typhlorj'ctes 245 Tj'sonia marylandica 9 292 The Biological Society of Washington. u Page Uca una '54 Vcldes 154 Ucides cordatus i54 Unios V' Uroinys ^°' V Vandeleuria ••••;•■• ^^' Vaughan, T. W.: Eoceue corals oi the United States 'x Vaughan, T.W., and R. T. Hill: Lower Cretaceous Grj'pheas of Texas viu Vesperinius 256 Vesperomys 256 Vespertilio pallidus i79 Vesperugo parvulus i39 Viola emarginata \^ heterophylla ix w Waite, M. B.: Pear blight ix New peach and plum disease., xi Ward, Lester F.: Kxhibition of Pro- sopis juliflora, P,soralea tenui- flora, and Lotus aniericanus xi New species of Cycadeoidea, viii, 1-17 White, David : Type specimens in paleontology '^]\] A new I,vcopodineous cone.... vin Exhibition of eroded pebbles., x Page White David : Exhibition of carbon- iferous ferns ^i X Xaiva ocellata 158 Xanthlas 105 Xantho ^°^ Xanthodes i°5 Xanthodius ■■••• ^°l Xenoniys 261,. 27b Xeromys 257 Xerospermophilus 2ba Xerus 268 Y Yerbua 250 z ZalasUts i^^ Zalophus 17O Zapus 103, 249. 250 Zapiis l»u«lsiniinsalascei»sis 223 hudsonius 103, 223, 237 ti-iiiotaliis moiilanus 104 pacificus 104 teiiellus '03 trinotatus 223 Zosimus '^7 Zozymus '°7 Zygodontomys ; 256 Zygogeoniys 251