Skip to main content

Full text of "Bulletin - United States National Museum"

See other formats


Bs 
Bat 
Nei ee 
sat Stith Festi HY oahh ae 
OG: 
PS UNAM aA 
A i Ai e Rea ee 0 es ‘i 
NRA UA Sioa a tet a tt 
nS Ne eA CAAtteattct Hi 
f Risa Nea Han WUAUSIAROSRLIA Can tS 
SAT aa Aa 
SAU Ore 
CEA AN Der 


SF 
i 
3 


d Ried 
Beet) Py Ie? is } Wane 


aaa 
SUSI 
aa pues a 
, sa nt 


iy 2 


* a 
OH) 
aaa! . Re 
iA ask 
He Aina 
Rinna aN 
fsthes 


SURO 


SALSA NO 
RAO 


a) 
Tien 
Nea 


pete th 
roa 

pid fs AY 

pent fat trot at te) 


yay x 
RSNA Ce 
NR 


Avy 


Ng as Rien 
it ee a Fea : 
Reatetre ae es 


ts 
bv} ais 




















SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 
UNITED. STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 
Bulletin 62 





oa 


_ CATALOGUE OF THE TYPE-SPECIMENS OF 


iv 


E MAMMALS IN THE UNITED STATES 
' ‘NATIONAL MUSEUM, INCLUDING THE 
- 

: 





E r BIOLOGICAL SURVEY COLLECTION 
es 

oi, MARCUS WARD LYON, Jr. 

‘ Assistant Curator, Division of Mammals, U.S. National Museum 

Mee os AND 

7 

E WILFRED HUDSON OSGOOD 

= Assistant, Bureau of Biological Survey, U.S. Department of Agriculture 

‘i \ 
B 

* 

.. 

ss 

a WASHINGTON 

Pe, GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 


ys Ie 
Boe 
‘ 

i 











SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 
UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 
Bulletin 62 


eet ALOGUE OF THE TYPE-SPECIMENS OF 
fe VE AE OeEN PE UNITED SPATES 
NATIONAL MUSEUM, INCLUDING THE 
BIOLOGICAL SURVEY COLLECTION 


BY 
MARCUS WARD LYON, JR. 
Assistant Curator, Division of Mammals, U. S. National Museum 


AND 


WILFRED HUDSON OSGOOD 


Assistant, Bureau of Biological Survey, U. S. Department of Agriculture 





W ASHINGTON 
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 


1909 





ADVERTISEMENT. 


The scientific publications of the National Museum consist of two 
series—the Bulletin and the Proceedings. 

The Bulletin, publication of which was begun in 1875, is a series 
of more or less extensive works intended to illustrate the collections 
of the U. S. National Museum and, with the exception noted below, 
is issued separately. These bulletins are monographic in scope 
and are devoted principally to the discussion of large zoological and 
botanical groups, faunas and floras, bibliographies of eminent natural- 
ists, reports of expeditions, etc. They are usually of octavo size, 
although a quarto form, known as the Special Bulletin, has been 
adopted in a few instances in which a larger page was deemed indis- 
pensable. 

This work forms No. 62 of the Bulletin series, 

Since 1902 the volumes of the series known as ** Contributions from 
the National Herbarium,” and containing papers relating to the botan- 
ical collections of the Museum, have been published as bulletins. 

The Proceedings, the first volume of which was issued in 1878, are 
intended as a medium of publication of brief original papers based 
on the collections of the National Museum, and setting forth newly 
acquired facts in biology, anthropology, and geology derived there- 
from, or containing descriptions of new forms and revisions of limited 
groups. A volume is issued annually, or oftener, for distribution 
to libraries and scientific establishments, and in view of the impor- 
tance of the more prompt dissemination of new facts a limited edition 
of each paper is printed in pamphlet form in advance. 

RicHARD RATHBUN, 
Assistant Secretary, Smithsonian Institution, 
In Charge of the United States National Museum. 
Wasnineton, U.S. A., January 15, 1909. 
Ii 





PREFACE. 


This bulletin is the first of a series of catalogues of type-speci- 
mens of recent animals which the U. S$. National Museum intends to 
publish as rapidly as circumstances will permit. The desirability of 
formally designating a particular specimen to represent a species or 
subspecies is an idea of comparatively recent origin; and although it 
has gained general acceptance among zoologists, there are still some 
who doubt its importance. Though there are perhaps some valid 
arguments against the practice on theoretical grounds, there can be 
no doubt that it puts an end to uncertainties with which earlier sys- 
tematists were often confronted. 

The practice was not in vogue generally when the National Museum 
was established, and many specimens which according to present views 
ought to have been specially treasured were not cared for more than 
others, while the methods of preparing skins of mammals were at the 
same time very crude. It has resulted from these circumstances that 
the type-specimens of species described many years ago are not in as 
good condition as they should be. Considering the earlier point of 
view, however, and the vicissitudes through which the collections have 
passed in the course of a half century, it is fortunate, I think, that the 
type-specimens have not fared worse. The type-specimens of the 
more recently described species of mammals, both in the regular series 
and in the collection of the Biological Survey, are with few exceptions 
perfect or nearly so and very accurately and thoroughly labeled. 

The National Museum has in recent years fostered the depositing of 
type-specimens of species of animals of all classes, and in this has had 
the hearty cooperation of numerous American zoologists who con- 
sider it a matter of importance to have these standards, as they may 
be called, permanently preserved in the national collection. 

FREDERICK W. TRUE, 
Head Curator Departinent of Biology. 


Vv 





ae ee oe ae 


INTRODUCTION, 


This catalogue includes all type-specimens of mammals known to be 
in the U. S. National Museum on July 1, 1908. It embraces, besides 
the general collection in the Division of Mammals, the large collection 
of American mammals made by the Bureau of Biological Survey of 
the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The latter collection is kept 
in a special hall of the Museum and is under the direct charge of the 
chief of the Biological Survey. In the preparation of this catalogue, 
one author has represented the Division of Mammals and the other the 
Biological Survey, and, though each is responsible only for the facts 
concerning the types in the collection with which he is officially con- 
nected, the entire manuscript and proof have passed through the 
hands of both authors. The joint authorship has had correspond- 
ingly the joint direction of Dr. F. W. True, head curator of biology 
and curator of mammals, U. S. National Museum, and Dr. C. Hart 
Merriam, chief of the Bureau of Biological Survey, U.S. Department 
of Agriculture. Dr. True has in addition contributed all the facts 
concerning the types of cetaceans and has read the entire proof. It 
should be said also that this catalogue was begun in the Division 
of Mammals eight years ago, under the direction of Mr. Gerrit S. 
Miller, jr., assistant curator of mammals. 

The list includes types (or holotypes) and cotypes, and lectotypes 
and chirotypes, as defined by Thomas (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1893, 
pp. 241-242) and Schuchert (Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., 53, Pt. 1, pp. 7-18). 
Appended to the main list of the types now in the Museum is a smaller 
one, comprising those which, according to the records, should be in 
the national collection, but which have been lost or destroyed by 
various accidents. 

The name of the species, or subspecies, is given as it occurs in the 
original description, followed by a reference to the place and date of 
its publication. This is followed, when necessary owing to changes 
made by subsequent authors, by the name now currently used for the 
species or subspecies. The current name is preceded by the sign of 
equality (=) and followed by a citation of the authority for its use, if 
such has been found. 

The citations are followed by: (1) Museum catalogue number. (2) 
Nature of specimen, whether skin and skull, or skull only, or skin only, 


VIL 


Vill INTRODUCTION, 


or skeleton, or specimen preserved inalcohol. (8) Age and sex of speci- 
men; Omission of the sex indicates that itis not known. (4) Date when 
collected; omission of this date indicates that itis not known. (5) Name 
of person by whom collected, or from whom received, or from whom 
purchased, if collector is not known. (6) Original number of speci- 
men, usually the number in the collector’s field catalogue. In the case 
of certain of the Biological Survey specimens, the original number is 
followed by the letter x, which indicates that the specimen is recorded 
in the ** X Catalogue” of the Biological Survey, a book in which is 
catalogued material received from miscellaneous sources—that is, 
specimens purchased, acquired by exchange, or received from or col- 
lected by persons who are not on the regular staff of the Biological 
Survey. (7) Date when specimen was catalogued, except in the case of 
Biological Survey specimens, most of which were catalogued shortly 
after the date of collection. In the case of many of the National 
Museum specimens, the date when catalogued gives the only clue as 
to the probable time when collected. 

The condition of the specimen at the present time is then briefly 
stated.¢ 

Finally, the reasons are given for considering any specimen a type, 
unless it has been clearly designated as a type by number by the author 
in the original description. In many early descriptions it is difficult 
to determine whether any individual specimen has formed the principal 
basis of the description. In cases where no type was indicated by the 
author, preference has been given to the specimens which have been 
figured, or to those which seem to be more minutely described, or 
measured, than others of the original series. The views of subsequent 
writers also have been considered in the selection of the type. In 
some cases it was necessary to choose a number of specimens as cotypes 
of a species. In a few cases the evidence for considering specimens 
types is very unsatisfactory. However, even if not types in the 
present meaning of the word, they are at least old, original specimens 
of much historic value. These difficulties relate mainly to older 
specimens in the collection contained in the Division of Mammals. 

Since a single type-specimen sometimes bas more than one catalogue 
number, a few words about cataloguing specimens seem desirable. Two 
systems have been used: First, a ‘*double entry” system, in which all 
the skulls were entered in one catalogue, and all skins and alcoholics 
in another; and inthe usual case of a single individual represented by 
both skin and skull, cross references are given in each catalogue. The 
number of a specimen is indicated by a fraction; thus, No. $353 ona 


“A few of the type-specimens are among material that has been lent to specialists 
for study and have been described while in their hands. Some ot these have not 
yet been returned and it is obviously impossible to make any statement as to their 
condition, but on the whole it is presumed to be good. 





ste 


INTRODUCTION, IX 


skin means skin No. 1163, to which belongs skull No. 2045; 324% on 
a skull means skull No. 2045, to which belongs skin No. 1163. This 
cumbersome system was abandoned at No. 50000 and a ‘‘single entry” 
system was adopted in which each individual is given. one number 
regardless whether preserved as askin, skull, or alcoholic. Beginning 
with No. 50001, therefore, there are no separate entries for skins and 
skulls,.one number being used for the entire specimen, except in the 
case of skins and skeletons of the same individual, when the skeleton 
usually bears a number in the catalogue of the Division of Com- 
parative Anatomy. 

So far as possible the type-specimens, with exception of the cetace- 
ans, haye been taken out of the general study series and placed in sep- 
arate storage cases, plainly labeled on the outside ‘‘ Types.” A few 
types, however, are on exhibition among the mounted mammals, or 
mounted skeletons. 

The orders, families, and genera are arranged in the usual sequence, 
beginning with the marsupials and ending with the primates. A few 
subgenera, however, such as Micromys, Arvicola, Alticola, Pitymys, 
Puma, Lynchailurus, have recently been raised to generic rank 
by certain authors in papers in which the natural groups containing 
such genera are not completely revised. Owing to this lack of 
general revision as well as the absence of such genera in the current 
checklists, it has not been deemed advisable to make use of them 
in this catalogue. It should be observed that the names are given in 
this list just as they occur in the original descriptions. Frequently 
the generic term in common use when the species was first described 
is quite different from the generic designation of to-day, so that it 
looks a little peculiar to see such names as Cariacus clavatus, Dor- 
celaphus crooki, etc., arranged under the genus Odocotleus; or Llas- 
mognathus bairdii, under the generic name Zapirel/a, etc. In such 
cases, however, the specific name is placed with the current generic 
designation, but in less conspicuous type than that of the original 
name, immediately following the original citation. Under each genus, 
the species and subspecies are arranged alphabetically. A complete 
index will be found at the end of the list. 

Marcus Warp Lyon, JR. 
Witrrep Hupson Oscoop. 


HRRATA., 


Page 35, line 25, for orizibe read orizabe. 

Page 48, line 13 from bottom, for panamintimus read panamintinus. 

Page 144, after line 18, insert = Lophuromys aquilus (True). See Thomas, Proe. 
Zool. Soc. London, 1896, p. 795. 

Page 156, after line 22, insert genus Lophuromys and entire account of Mus aquilus 
True, p. 144. 

Page 231, line 13 from bottom, for horus read horrizus. 

Page 234, line 4 from bottom, for Netirothrichus read Netirotrichus. 

x 


CATALOGUE OF THE TYPE-SPECIMENS OF MAMMALS 
IN THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM, 
- INCLUDING -THE BIOLOGICAL 
SURVEY COLLECTION. 


Order MARSUPIALIA. 
Family DIDELPHYID. 
Genus PiLDEWP HES: 


Didelphis yucatanensis cozumele Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 101-102, July 19, 1901. 


108498. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cozumel Island, Yueatan, 
‘Mexico. April 16, 1901. Collected by FE. W. Nelson and FE. A. 
‘Goldman. Original number 14700. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of 
three right lower premolars. 


Didelphis richmondi Allen. Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV, pp. 175-176, pl. 24, fig. 8, Jume 15, 1901. 


$3126 Skin and skull. Adult female. Greytown, Nicaragua. Feb- 
ruary 10, 1892 (not February 7, as in original description). 
Collected by Dr. C. W. Richmond. Original number 16. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of 
one right upper premolar, two left lower premolars, and two lower incisors. 


Didelphis marsupialis tabascensis Allen. Biological Survey coll. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist:, XIV, pp. 173-174, pl. 23, figs. 1-2, 6;:pl. 24, 
' fig. 2, June 15, 1901. : 
=Didelphis mes-americana tabascensis (Allen). See Allen, op. cit., XVI, p 
257, August 18, 1902. 


100512. Skin andskull. Adult male. Teapa, Tabasco, Mexico. 
April 7, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 14118. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of 
two left upper and one left lower premolars, and four upper incisors. 
45336—08——1* I 


2 DIDELPHIS—-MARMOSA. 


Didelphis marsupialis texensis Allen. Jiological Survey collection. 
p 2s A 


Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV, pp. 172-178, June 15, 1901. 


—=Didelphis mes-americana texensis (Allen). See Allen, op. cit., XVI, p. 
256, August 18, 1902. 
$3433.) Skin and skull. Adult male. Brownsville, Texas. April 13, 
1892. Collected by F. B. Armstrong. Original number 12. 


Well-made skin in good condition: skull perfect, except for absence of 
occipital condyles. 


Didelphis yucatanensis Allen. Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV, pp. 178-179, June 15, 1901. 

108299 (not 100299, as in original description). Skin and skull. 
Adult male. Chichenitza, Yucatan, Mexico. February 1, 1901 
(not January 29, 1901, as in original description). Collected by 
E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 1468. 


Well-made skin in good condition, with a small bare spot on right shoul- 
der; skull perfect, except for absence of one right upper premolar and three 
left lower premolars. 


Genus MARMOSA. 


Marmosa insularis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 14-15, January 27, 1898. 
89215. Skin and skull. Adult male. Maria Madre Island, Tres 


Marias Islands, Mexico.. May 16, 1897. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 11028. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect, except for slightly broken 
audital bullze and small perforation in brain case. 
Marmosa murina mexicana Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 44, March 16, 1897. 
71526, Skin and skull. Immature male. Juquila, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
February 28, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 7571. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Marmosa oaxace Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 48-44, March 16, 1897. 
68240. Skin and skull. Adult female. Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico. 


August 14, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 6571. 


Well-made skin in good condition, except for a bare spot on the rump; 
skull perfect, 


METACHIRUS—CABASSOUS—TATU—MY RMECOPHAGA. 3 


- 


Genus METACHIRUS. 


Metachirus fuscogriseus pallidus Allen. 


Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV 


, pp. 215-217, July 3, 1901. 
58158. Skin and skull. Adult male. Orizaba, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
January 24, 1894 (not June 24, 1894, as in original description) 


Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 
5740. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Order EDENTATA. 
Family DASYPODIDZ. 
Genus CABASSOUS. 


Tatoua (Ziphila) centralis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XIII, p. 4, figs. 1, 
=Cabassous centralis (Miller). 
p. 72, September 28, 1899. 


2, January 31, 1899. 
See Palmer, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, 


i463. Skin and skull. Adult female. Chamelicon, Honduras. 
January 8, 1891. Collected by Erich Wittkiigel. 
ber 8. Catalogued May 23, 1891. 


avs 


Original num- 


Formerly mounted; now a well-made skin in good condition 


scales missing frem carapace. Skull 
about the bulls. 


, hine or ten 
nearly perfect; somewhat injured 
All the teeth in upper jaws lost except first left premolar ; 
all in the lower jaw present except the first left premolar 


Genus’ TATU. 


Tatu novemcinctum texanum Bailey s1iological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, pp. 52-56, figs. 5-7, October 24, 1905. 


3. Skin and skull. Adult male. Brownsville, Texas. June 10, 


2 (not 1902 as in original description). Collected by F. B. 
Armstrong. Original number 4. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


35 
543 
1892 


Family MYRMECOPHAGID. 
Genus MYRMECOPHAGA. 
Myrmecophaga centralis Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXI, No. 1496, p. 570, pl. 14, figs. 1, 3, November 
14, 1906. 
15963. Skull (no skin). Young adult. 
1876. Collected by José C. Zeledon. 
logued June 10. 1878. 


Pacuare, Costa Rica. June, 
Original number 86. Cata- 


Skull perfect; no record of a skin, 


4 BALZ/ NOPTERA—KOGIA. 


Order CETE. 
Family BALAANID ZK. 
Genus BALAANOPTERA. 


Balznoptera davidsoni Scammon. 
Proc. California Acad. Sci., IV, p. 269, printed in advance, October 4, 1872; 
Truk, Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, XXXIIT, pp. 91 and 293, 
pl. 25, fig. b> pl. 23 ies = and pl. 26, tgs ae 


12177. Skull. Adult female. Admiralty Inlet, Puget Sound, Wash- 
ington. October, 1870. Collected by Capt. C. M. Scammon. 
Catalogued February 6, 1872. 

Skull in good condition. 
Type not designated by number. See True, op. cit., p. 91. 


Family PHYSETERID. 


Genus KOGIA. 
Kogia floweri Gill. 
Amer. Nat., IV, p. 738; fig. 167, p. 736, and fig. 172, p. 744, 187i. 


8016. Mandible and water-color sketch of entire animal (the ‘* por- 
trait’ mentioned by Dr. T. N. Gill). Off Mazatlan, Sinaloa, 
Mexico. 1868. Collected by Col. A. J. Grayson, U.S. A. Cata- 
logued in 1868. 


Posterior end of mandible broken and a few teeth lacking. Water-color 
sketch (188 by 52 mm.) in good condition. 

Type not designated by number. In the original description it is said to be 
based on ‘‘jaw and portrait.’’ 


Kogia goodei True. 


3ull. U. S. Nat. Mus. No. 27. Great International Fisheries Exhibition, Lon- 

don, 1883. United States of America. H. Catalogue of the Aquatic Mammals 

exhibited by the U. 8. National Museum, p. 630, table, and p. 641, list. Nomen 
nudum. 

= Kogia breviceps (Blainville). See True, Report U.S. Fish Commission for 1883. 

Suggestions to Keepers U. 8. Life-Saving Stations, etc., relative to collecting 


and preserving specimens of Whales and Porpoises, pl. 8, fig. 22. 


$3483. Cast of entire animal, and skeleton. Adult female. Spring 


Lake, New Jersey. Received in the flesh from H. S. Howland, 
April 27, 1883. Original number of cast 40. Catalogued April 
27, 1883. 


Cast in good condition; in storage. 

Skeleton in good condition; on exhibition. 

No description of this species has been published. The name occurs in the 
table and list cited above. Two specimens are mentioned, the above and one 
from Florida, represented by the mandible and by photographs. 


ZIPHIUS—-MESOPLODON—BERARDIUS——-PHOCAINA. 5 


Family ZIPHIID 2. 
Genus ZIPHIUS. 
Ziphius grebnitzkii Stejneger. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., VI, p. 77, June 22, 1883. 


90993. Skull. Bering Island. Autumn of 1882. Collected by Dr. 
L. Stejneger. Original number 1521. 


Catalogued November 24, 
1883. 


Type designated by Dr. L. Stejneger’s original number 1521=Museum No. 
20993. 


Hyperodon semijunctus Cope. 


Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1865, p. 280, ordered published December 26, 1865. 


Hyperoodon semijunctus Cope. See Cope, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1869, 
p: dl. 


=Ziphius cavirostris G. Cuvier. See True, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., VIII, p. 585. 


21975. Skeleton. Young female. Charleston Harbor, South Caro- 
lina. March, 1861. Collected by Dr. G. E. Manigault. Cata- 
logued July 15, 1885. 


Skeleton in fair condition, nearly complete. 
Type not designated by number. 


Described while in possession of the 
Charleston Museum. 


Since then acquired by the U. S. National Museum. 


Genus MESOPLODON. 
Mesoplodon stejnegeri True. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., VIII, p. 584, pl. 25, October 19, 1885. 
21112. Cranium. Young. Bering Island. 1883. 
L. Stejneger. Catalogued February 2, 1884. 


Tympanic and malar bones lacking, pterygoids imperfect. 
Description based on one specimen, mentioned by number. 


Collected by Dr. 


Genus BERARDIUS. 


Berardius bairdii Stejneger. See page 287. 


Family DELPHINID 2. 


Genus PHOCAINA. 
Phocena dalli True. 


Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., VIII, p. 95, pls. 
Mus., No. 36, p. 123, 1889. 


21762. Skull. Adult male. Strait west of Adakh Island, Aleutian 
Group, Alaska. August 13, 1873. Collected by Dr. W. H. Dall. 
Original number 1554. Catalogued April 23, L885. 


as 


2-5, May 20, 1885; Bull. U. S. Nat. 


Skull in good condition, but earbones, malars, and upper teeth lacking and 
one pterygoid broken, 


6 PHOCENA—PSEUDORCA. 


Type not originally designated by number. On page 98 of the original 
description measurements are given of “the type skull of Phocwna Dalli.’’ 
On» page 125, Bulletin U. 8. National Museum, No. 36, the same measurements 
are given and the type there indicated as No. 21762. 


Phocena lineata Cope. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1876, p. 134, ordered published June 29, 1876. 

= ?Phoczena phocena (Linneus). See True, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 

118, and also pp. 117, 119, and 120, 1889. 
$51. Cast of entire animal, and skull. Hudson River, New York. 
Received at the U. S. National Museum, February 22, 1876, from 
John Wallace. Cast (no. 19) catalogued January 20, 1876; skull, 
April 22, 1879. 


Cast and skull in good condition. 

‘‘Represented by a single specimen which was taken in the harbor of New 
York not many months ago, and sent to the Smithsonian Institution where the 
skeleton is now preserved ”’ ‘ Cope). 


Skeleton lost. See True, op. cit., p. 117. 
Type not designated by number. Cope refers to but one specimen, the above. 


+5 


Phoczena vomerina Gill. Cotypes. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1865, p. 178, ordered published September 26, 


1865. 
= Phocena phocena (Linnzeus). See True, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 118. 
1889. 


4149. Rostrum and part of brain-case. Adult. Puget Sound. Col- 
lected by Dr. C. B. Kennerly. Catalogued July,1860. 
A little has been cut off the skull behind the orbits. Malars, pterygoids, and 
teeth lacking. 
446) Skin and skull. Young. San Francisco, California. Collected 


by Dr. William Stimpson. Catalogued April 20, 1861. 


Cotypes not designated by number. The two above specimens are the only 
ones in the collection having the data given by Dr. T. N. Gill. 


Genus PSEUDORCA. 


Orca destructor Cope. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 293, ordered published October 30, 1866. 
=Pseudorca crassidens (Owen). See True, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 36, 


p. 143, 1889. 


3679. Beak and mandible. Pacific Ocean, off Paita, Peru. Received 
from Col. E. Jewett (see Smithsonian Report, 1860, p. 80). 


In good condition. 
Description based upon one specimen, designated by number. 


GLOBICEPHALUS——-GRAMPUS—SAGMATIAS—LAGENORHYNCHUS. 7 
Genus GLOBICEPHALUS. 


Globiocephalus scammonii Cope. 


Proc. Acad Nat. Sci. Phila., p. 21, 1869; Dall in Seammon’s Marine Mammals, 
1874, p. 299. 

=Globicephalus scammoni (Cope). See True, Bull. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, 
1889, p. 139. 


9074. Skull. ‘*Coast of Lower California in latitude 31°, land 10 
miles distant. December 14, 1862.” (Scammon, Marine Mammals, 
L874, p. 86.) Collected by Capt. C. M. Scammon. Catalogued 
October 25, 1869. 

In good condition. 

For considering this specimen the type, see True, op. cit., p. 189 and p. 140. 

Two mandibles, Nos. 9075 and 9076, in the National Museum formed part of 
the original material. They may be considered as paratypes. 


Genus GRAMPUS. 


Grampus stearnsii Dall. 
Proc. California Acad. Sei., V, p. 13, printed in advance January 29, 1873. 


—Grampus griseus (Cuvier). See True, Bull U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 125, 1889. 


13021. Mandible. Monterey, California. Collected by Capt. C. M. 
Scammon. Catalogued in 1873. 
‘Two Jaws of this animal are in my hands for examination.’’ (Dall in Seam- 
mon’s Marine Mammals, 1874, p. 299. ) 
For considering this specimen the type, see True, op. cit., p. 130. 


Genus SAGMATIAS. 


Sagmatias amblodon Cope. 


Proe. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 1866, p. 294, ordered published October 30, 1866; 
True, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 106, 1889. 


3887. Skull. Old adult. ‘‘Caught at sea.” Locality unknown. 
(See Cope and True, /oc. cit.) Collected by the ship Vincennes, 
of the United States Exploring Expedition. Catalogued June 20, 
1860. 

Skull in good condition, but one tympanic bone lacking and the other broken, 
malars lacking and one pterygoid broken. 

Type not designated by number. There was but one specimen taken by the 
ship Vincennes, locality not known, but probably between Cape Horn and Lima, 
Peru, or Australia, or New Zealand. This specimen is No. 3887. See True, 
op. cit., p. 106, table. 


Genus LAGENORHYNCHUS. 


Lagenorhynchus gubernator Cope. Cotypes. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1876, p. 138, ordered published June 20, 1876. 


=Lagenorhynchus acutus Gray. See True, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, 1889, 
p- 83. 


8 LAGENORHYNCHUS. 


12305 and 12306. Plaster casts (No. 2) made and colored from a fresh 
specimen. Cope remarks: ‘*This delphinoid was taken by the 
U.S. Fish Commission at near the same locality as the last” [i. e., 
near Portland, Maine. ‘*The last,” Z. perspicillatus, was really 
from Cape Cod, Massachusetts, but Z. gubernator was from Casco 
Bay, near Portland, Maine. F. W. True]. 

Casts in good condition. 
Cotypes not designated by numbers. 


Delphinus longidens Cope. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 295, ordered published October, 1866. 


=Lagenorhynchus obliquidens Gill. See True, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, 
p. 99, 1889. 


3886. Skull. Young adult. Locality unknown. See True, op. c7t., 
p. 99. Collected by the United States Exploring Expedition. 
Catalogued June 20, 1860. 

Skull considerably broken; the malars, earbones, a portion of the pterygoids, 
and most of the teeth absent. 
Type not designated by number. Cope had only one specimen, No. 3886. 


Lagenorhynchus obliquidens Gill. Cotypes. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1865, p. 177, ordered published September 26, 1865; 
True, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 96, 1889. 


1961, 1962, and 1963. Skulls. Pacific Ocean, near San Francisco, Cal- 
ifornia. ‘*Obtained at San Francisco, California.” (Gill, oe. ev.) 
Collected by Lieut. W. P. Trowbridge, U. S. A. Catalogued 
October 24, 1855. 

Skulls in good condition, but earbones, all but one malar, and many teeth 
lacking. 

No type designated by Dr. T. N. Gill in the original description. For consider- 
ing these specimens cotypes, see True, op. cit., p. 98. 


Phocena pectoralis Peale. 


U.S. Explor. Exped., VIII, Mamm. and Ornith., p. 32, pl. 6, fig. 1, 1848. 
=Lagenorhynchus electra Gray. See True, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 100, 
1889. 

4108. Mandible. Adult. Hilo Bay, Hawaii. Collected by U. S. 
Exploring Expedition. No. 32, Peale’s list of specimens, /oc. c7t., 
p-. 305. Catalogued June 26, 1860. 

Mandible in good condition; teeth much worn. 
Type not designated in the original description, but see True, op. cit., p. 101. 


Lagenorhynchus perspicillatus Cope. Cotypes. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1876, p. 136, pl. 4, ordered published June 20, 1876. 
=Lagenorhynchus acutus Gray. See True, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 85, 1889. 


‘‘This species is represented in the collections of the Smithsonian Institution 
by numerous crania, some skeletons and a colored cast of the natural size, taken 
by the United States Commission of Fisheries, near Portland, Maine’’ (Cope). 


LISSODELPHIS—-DELPHINUS—TU RSIOPS—-PRODELPHINUS. 9 


“The foregoing locality is, | believe, incorrect. It should be Woods Hole, 
Mass., or else Cape Cod. I think cast, No. 129389, Woods Hole, Mass., (original 
No. 3), and the whole series of skulls and mandibles, Nos. 14228 to 14526, and 
probably also Nos. 14335 and 14362 to 14373, are to be regarded as cotypes. 
Two or three of these skulls were missing when the collection was checked up 
in 1905. No. 14335 is marked ‘Skeleton without a head,’ but it is on exhibi- 
tion and there is a skull on it now. This seems to be the only skeleton in 
the lot.”” F. W. True. 

Genus LISSODELPHIS. 


Delphinapterus borealis Peale. See page 287. 


Genus DELPHINUS. 


Delphinus albimanus Peale. 
U.S. Explor. Exped., VIII, Mamm. and Ornith., p. 33, pl. 7, fig. 1, 1848. 

=Delphinus delphis Linnzeus. See True, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 45, 1889. 
3. Mounted skin and jaw. Female. Off the coast of Chile, lat. 
27° 16’ S., long. 75° 30' W. Collected by U.S. ship Peacock. 
No. 31, Peale’s list of specimens, op. cit., p. 305. Catalogued June 
26, 1860. For further information, see True, op. cét., p. 55. 

Mounted specimen is in fair condition for a cetacean skin; the natural color 
has practically disappeared. 


3743 
410 


Delphinus albirostratus Peale. See page 287. 
Delphinus bairdii Dall. See page 287. 


Genus DURSLOPS: 
Tursiops gillii Dall. 
Proce. California Acad. Sci., V, p. 13, printed in advance, January 29, 1873; 
Scammon’s Marine Mammals, 1874, p. 288; True, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, 
p. 43, 1889. 

13022. Mandible (no other portion of specimen known to describer) 
‘and outline of animal drawn by Captain Scammon.” Young 
adult. Monterey, California. Collected by Capt. C. M. Scammon. 

Mandible in good condition; one tooth lacking. 


Outline not found. 
Type not designated by number. For regarding this specimen as the type, 


see True, op. cit., p. 43, footnote. 


Genus PRODELPHINUS. 
Delphinus lateralis Peale. See page 288. 


Delphinus plagiodon Cope. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 296, ordered published October 30, 1886. 
=Prodelphinus plagiodon (Cope). See True, Bull. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 66, 
1889. 
3884. Skull. Youngish. Locality unknown. Received from J. 
Varden. Catalogued June 20, 1860. 


Skull in good condition; earbones and two teeth lacking, pterygoids incomplete. 
Species based on one specimen, No. 3884, mentioned in the original description. 


10 OVIS. 


Order UNGULATA 
Family BOVID.%. 
Genus OVIS. 


Ovis canadensis auduboni Merriam. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 31, April 5, 1901. 


oye. Skin(lost)and skull. Youngadult male. ‘‘ Upper Missouri.” 
Probably collected in the Badlands of South Dakota in 1855 by Dr. 
F. V. Hayden. Skin of head catalogued June 21, 1856; skull cata- 
logued April 27, 1887. 
Skull and horns, No. 22610, in good condition. Catalogue calls for skin of 
the head, No. 1520, which can not be found. 


Ovis montana dalli Nelson. Cotypes. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., VII, p. 12, June 3, 1884. 


=Ovis dalli (Nelson). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., IX, p. 112, April 
8, 1897. 

In the original description, Mr. Nelson says: ‘‘The types of the new race are 
two specimens brought me by Mr. L. N. McQuesten, a fur trader living at Fort 
Reliance, on the Upper Yukon River near the point where it crosses the British 
boundary line. These specimens were killed by the Indians on some mountains 
south of Fort Yukon and on the west bank of the river.’’ They were taken in 
the winter of 1879-80. The two cotypes are not designated in the original de- 
scription by number, but the two specimens that Mr. Nelson had at the time are. 


13265. Skin. Adult female. 
In fair condition. The catalogues call for a lower jaw No. 20787, now lost. 
Original number 334. ‘ 


$3266) Skin and skull. Adult male. 

Skin in fair condition; skull perfect, except slight cutting about foramen mag- 
num. Original number 333. 

The skins were catalogued January 5, 1881; the skull and lower jaw Septem- 
ber 8, 1882. 

Both specimens were mounted by Ward’s Natural Science Establishment, of 
Rochester, N. Y., and were on exhibition for many years in the Museum. In 
April, 1902, these specimens were made into study skins. Each was found 
to contain a wooden skull to which horns were fastened. These wooden skulls 
with the attached horns are still in the skins. The horns fastened to the wooden 
skull of the male skin are slightly larger than the horns belonging to the skull of 
the same specimen. As the horns of the skull fit the horn-cores it is probable 
that the horns now on the skin do not naturally belong there, and the true horns 
of the cotype are those found with the skull. This skull was lost for many years, 
but was found in the collection January 12, 1905, by Mr. Walter L. Hahn and 
recognized as a long lost cotype. 


Ovis canadensis gaillardi Mearns. 
Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 56, Pt. 1, p. 240, fig. 36, April 13, 1907. 


OVIS—CEPH ALOPHUS—REDUNCA. we 


59906. Skin and skull. Immature female. Gila Mountains, between 
Tinajas Atlas and the Mexican boundary line, in Yuma County, 
Arizona. February 21,-1894. Collected by Dr. KE. A. Mearns, 
U.S. A. Original number 3029. Catalogued April 13, 1894. 

Flat folded skin in good condition; skull somewhat damaged, right horn and 
part of horn-core knocked off and lost, mandible broken into three pieces. The 
first permanent molars are in place above, the second molars are just appearing 
above the alveoli. 

Ovis mexicanus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 30, April 5, 1901. 


99342. Skin and skull. Adult male. Lake Santa Maria, Chihuahua, 
Mexico. September 16, 1899. Collected by E. W. Nelson and . 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 13974. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for three broken 
ineisors. 
Ovis nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 218, July 15, 1897. 


23434. Skin and skull. Adult female. Grapevine Mountains, near 
lat. 837° N., California-Nevada boundary line. June 4, 1891. Coll- 
lected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 942. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except broken left mandibu- 
lar ramus. 


Genus CEPHALOPHUS. 


Cephalophus spadix True. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XIII, No. 814, p. 227, September 16, 1890. 


43262. Skin and skull. Adult male. In high altitudes, Mount Kili- 
manjaro, German East Africa. 1889-90. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 21. Catalogued June 24, 1890. 

Skin in good condition, mounted and now on exhibition; skull perfect. 
No type specified, but the entire description is based upon one specimen, the 
above, designated by number. 


Genus REDUNCA. 


Cervicapra chanleri Rothschild. 
Novitates Zoologicee, II, p. 53, February, 1895. 


=Redunca chanleri (Rothschild). See Trouessart, Suppl. Catalogus Mammalium, 
p. 722, 1904. 


e456, Skinandskeleton, both mountedandonexhibition. Adult male. 
On the slopes of the Jambine Mountains, about 45 miles north- 
northeast of Mount Kenia, British East Africa. (See Sclater and 
Thomus, Book of Antelopes, I], p. 183, March, 1897.) 1893.  Col- 
lected by Hon. William Astor Chanler. Catalogued April 5, 1895. 


12 ANTILOCAPRA—ODOCOILEUS. 


Both skin and skeleton are in good condition. 

The specimen was mounted in London by Rowland Ward, Ltd., and while in 
that establishment was described by Hon. Walter Rothschild, who specifically 
designated it as the type, although it was not in the collection of the U. 8. 
National Museum at that time. 


Genus ANTILOCAPRA. 


Antilocapra americana mexicana Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 31-32, April 5, 1901. 


98742. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Sierra en Media, Chi- 
huahua, Mexico. October 4, 1899. Collected by E. W. Nelson 
and E. A. Goldman. Original number 13989. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Family CERVID/4. 
Genus ODOCOILEUS. 


Cervus macrotis californicus Caton. See page 288. 


Odocoileus hemionus canus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 560, November 29, 1901. 


99361. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sierra en Media, Chihuahua, 
Mexico. October 7, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 13996. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except broken incisors. 


Odocoileus cerrosensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 101-102, April 30, 1898. 


80782. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cerros Island, Lower Cali- 
fornia, Mexico. August 9, 1896. Collected by A. W. Anthony. 
Original number 113. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken left audital 
bulla. 


Cariacus clavatus True. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XI, p. 417, July 5, 1889. Preoecupied by Cervus clavatus. 
Hamilton Smith (Griffith’s Cuvier, Animal Kingdom, V, p. 315, 1827). 


=Odocoileus truei Merriam. Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 103, April 30, 1898. 


39933. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Open pine forests on the 
Segovia River, about 50 miles from the sea, eastern Honduras. 
1887, probably in July or August. Collected by C. H. Townsend. 
Skin catalogued December 15, 1887; skull May 13, 1898. 

Specimen formerly mounted, but since taken down and made into a modern 
study skin; in good condition. Skull that of a young adult male, with spike 


ODOCOILEUS. 13 


antlers. It is slightly injured about the pterygoids, and only small proximal 
portions of the premaxillze remain. All the lower incisors and canines are lost 
and the tip of the right coronoid process is missing. 

No type designated. The greater part of the description is based upon num- 
ber 16075 in table on page 425, loc. cit. This is the specimen which Doctor 
True states he considered most typical at the time he described the species and 
on which had been placed the red type label. It is also the specimen which 
Mr. Gerrit 8. Miller, jr., regarded as the type and measured, but did not desig- 
nate by number. See Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 37, footnote, April 25, 
1901. 


Odocoileus costaricensis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 35, April 25, 1901. 


11385) Skin and skull. Young adult male. Talamanca, between the 
coast and the foot of the Cordilleras, eastern Costa Rica. Latter 
part of 1872 or early in 1873. Collected by José C. Zeledon. 
Received from Prof. W. M. Gabb. Original number 46. Cata- 
logued in 1873. 

Specimen has been remade into a modern study skin in good condition. The 


skull is perfect, except for loss of lower left incisors and canine and first and 
second right incisors, and the right upper and lower premolars. 


Dorcelaphus crooki Mearns. 
Preliminary diagnoses of new mammals of the genera Mephitis, Dorcelaphus, 
and Dicotyles from the Mexican border of the United States, p. 2, February 
11, 1897. (Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1129, p. 468, Decem- 
ber 24, 1897.) 
=Odocoileus crooki (Mearns). See Thompson, Forest and Stream, LI, p. 286, 
October 8, 1898. 


29373, Skull and parts of skin. Adult female. Summit of Dog 


5 
x 


Mountains, Grant County, New Mexico. June 9,1892. Collected 
by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. and F. X. Holzner. Original num- 
ber 1873.. International Boundary Commission. Catalogued No- 
vember 15, 1892. 

Skull perfect. The following parts of the skin are present and in good condi- 
tion: Skin of head, tail, two pieces of body skin, one about 360 by 200 mm., 
another about 160 by 70 mm., and fore leg and hind leg. 


Dorcelaphus hemionus eremicus Mearns. 


Preliminary diagnoses of new mammals of the genera Mephitis, Dorcelaphus, 
and Dicotyles from the Mexican border of the United States, p. 4, February 
11, 1897. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus.,. XX, No. 1129, p. 470, 
December 24, 1897.) 
=Odocoileus hemionus eremicus (Mearns). See Thompson, Forest and Stream, 
LI, p. 286, October 8, 1898. 


63403. Skin (no skull). Adult male. Sierra Seri, near the Gulf of 
California, opposite Tiburon Island, in the most arid portion of 
Sonora, Mexico. December, 1895. Collected by Dr. W J McGee. 
Catalogued May 4, 1896. 


14 ODOCOILEUS. 


This skin is represented by a rug, well-made and well preserved, and also by 
a few small fragments, trimmings from the skin, before it was made into a rug. 
Until March 29, 1902, the skin was owned by Dr. Anita N. McGee, of Wash- 
ington, D. C., while the small scraps of skin were in the National Museum from 
the time it was catalogued, May 4, 1896. On March 29, 1902, the skin made up 
asa rug came into the possession of the Museum. 

No type was designated. Doctor Mearns specified three individuals in the 
original description, namely, skin no. 63403, and two pairs of antlers, nos. 59910 
and 60855. The description is based primarily on the skin, and the antlers are 
mentioned rather incidentally at the end of the description, prefaced by this 
statement: ‘‘It appears to be a larger animal than the mule deer of the Eastern 
Desert Tract, and unless the specimens brought home by our party are abnor- 
mal, its horns are heavier,’’ ete., which seems to indicate that the antlers form 
but a minor part of the description. 


Cervus lewisii Peale. See page 288. 


Odocoileus nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 103-104, April 30, 1898. 


76201. Skin and skull. Two-year-old male. San Cristobal, Chiapas, 
Mexico. October 1, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 8524. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Odocoileus columbianus scaphiotus Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 101, April 30, 1898. 

65162. Skin and skull. Adult male. Laguna Ranch, Gabilan Range, 
California. April 24, 1894. Collected by J. E. McLellan. Origi- 
nal number 797. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Odocoileus columbianus sitkensis Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 100-101, April 30, 1898. 


74383. Skin and skull. Immature female. Sitka, Alaska. August 
8, 1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 4767. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except slight perforations of 
palate and audital bullee; left supraorbital border slightly broken; left paroccipi- 
tal process broken. 


Dorcelaphus texanus Mearns. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 23, January 27, 1898. 
—=Odocoileus texanus (Mearns). See Thompson, Forest and Stream, LI, p.268, 
October 8, 1898. 

84794. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Clark, Kinney County, 
Texas. December 25, 1897. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, 
U.S. A. Original number 4288. International Boundary Com- 
mission. Catalogued August 22, 1898. 

Skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect. Antlers sawed off, but present; 


most of the right lower incisiform teeth broken off to the alveoli. 
Type designated by the original number. 


ODOCOILEUS—-MAZAMA-— CERVUS. 15 


Odocoileus thomasi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 102-103, April 30, 1898. 


T7866. Skin and skull. Adult male. Huehuetan, Chiapas, Mexico. 
February 22, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 9359, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus MAZAMA. 


Mazama pandora Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 105-106, July 19, 1901. 


108273. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tunkas, Yucatan, Mexico. 
February 15,1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 14544. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with repaired fractures of left maxil- 
lary and zygomata; anterior part of walls of orbits, left side of palate, pterygoids, 
and most of vomer absent; last left upper molar missing; otherwise perfect. 


Genus CERVUS. 


Cervus merriami Nelson. 


3ull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XVI, p. 7, January 16, 1902. 


111639. Skin and skull. Adult male. Head of Black River, White 
Mountains, Arizona. August, 1886. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Catalogued July 11, 1901. 


The specimen was in the National Museum for many years without having 
been entered in the catalogues. The skin had data attached, but the skull was 
without data and it was not known to belong with the skin until the summer of 
1901. In the spring of 1901 the antlers were sawed off the skull. As both ant- 
lers and skull were without number or other data, they were thought to be of 
little value, and no special care was taken of them with the result that the main 
part of the skull became misplaced. In the summer of 1901 the antlers, in 
the velvet, were recognized by Mr. Nelson as belonging to the skin which he 
had collected fifteen years before. A search was made for the skull, but only 
the lower jaw could be found. Mr. Nelson described the species without the 
complete specimen. (Cranial characters were obtained, however, from a skull 
inthe American Museum of Natural History, New York City.) In September, 
1902, the missing and main part of the skull was found in one of the Museum’s 
storage sheds, where the antlers were originally discovered. 

The skin is a tanned pelt, in fair condition, worn summer pelage. The antlers, 
in velvet, are nearly perfect; one tip is slightly injured. The main part of the 
skull is perfect. The lower jaw is injured as follows: The crowns of all the 
incisors and lower canines are broken off and the ascending ramus of the right 
half of the mandible is broken away. 

The skull and antlers are at present hung on the wall of the office of the divi- 
sion of mammals. 


Cervus nannodes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 28-25, February 2, 1905. 


16 CERVUS—ALCE—MUNTIACUS 





TRAGULUS. 


135042. Skin and skull. Two-year-old male. Buttonwillow, Kern 
County, California. November 12, 1904. Collected by Dr. C. 
Hart Merriam and E. W. Nelson. Original number 16832. 
(Ew: 


Skin tanned and in good condition; skull perfect, except fractured second 
right upper molar. 
Cervus roosevelti Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 272-275, December 17, 1897. 


91579. Skinandskull. Adultmale. Mount Elaine, Olympic Moun- 
tains, Washington. October 4,1897. Collected by H. Emmet and 
C. Emmet. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of occip- 
ital condyles and broken paroccipital processes; first and second left upper pre- 
molars, third left lower premolar, first left lower molar, and five iacisors imper- 
fect; right coronoid absent; antlers perfect, severed from skull at base. 


Genus ALCE. 

Alces gigas Miller. 

Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 57, May 29, 1899. 
=Alce americanus gigas (Miller). See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, No. 24, p. 29, 
November 23, 1904. - 

86166. Skin and skull. Adult male. North side Tustumena Lake, 
Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. September, 1898. Collected by Dall 
DeWeese. Original number i6. Catalogued January 20, 1899. 


The skin is a complete tanned hide, folded and in good condition. The skull 
is in good condition except that the pterygoids were chopped off by the collec- 
tor. The skull, with antlers attached, is hung on the wall in the office of the 
Division of Mammals. 


Genus MUNTIACUS. 


Muntiacus bancanus Lyon. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 582, December 18, 1906. 
124726. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tanjong Bedaan, Island of 
Banka, east of Sumatra. June 7, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 3296. Catalogued November 30, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition, skull perfect. 
Family TRAGULID. 
Genus LRAGwLws. 
Tragulus amcenus Miller. 
Proc. U, 8. Nat. Mus., X XVI, No. 1317, p. 439, February 3, 1903. 


114563. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Mansalar, off Tapanuli 
Bay, west coast of Sumatra. March 8, 1902. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 1632. Catalogued September 
3, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


TRAGULUS. 17 


Tragulus bancanus Lyon. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 576, December 18, 1906. 
124714. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tanjong Tedong, island of 
Banka, east of Sumatra. May 31, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 3283. Catalogued November 30, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus batuanus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 2, November 6, 1903. 

121695. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, off 
west coast of Sumatra. February 5, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. 
L. Abbott. Original number 2226. Catalogued August 1, 1903. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Type designated as number 121697 an error in cataloguing for 121695, as seen 
on reference to the original numbers. 
Tragulus billitonus Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 578, December 18, 1906. 

124929. Skinandskull. Adult male. Tanjong Batu, Billiton Island, 
east of Sumatra. July 20, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 3524. Catalogued December 5, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except right upper canine 
broken off at alveolus. 
Tragulus borneanus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 174, August 6, 1902. 

49205) Skin and skull. Adult male. Banks of Suanlamba River, 
British North Borneo. January 18, 1888. Collected by C. F. 
Adams. Original number K I=154. Catalogued December 5, 
1890. 

Skin in fair condition; formerly mounted and on exhibition; the original color 
much injured by pickling fluid and exposure to light; skull perfect. 
When this species was described, the skin could not be found. At that time 
it was mounted and in storage. In April, 1907, it was made into a study skin. 
Tragulus brevipes Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1817, p. 448, February 3, 1903. 

114326. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Bangkaru, Banjak 
Islands. January 20, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1443. Catalogued August 28, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus bunguranensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 1138, March 26, 1901. 

104604. Skin and skull. Adalt male.  Bunguran Island, Natuna 
Islands. July 9,1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 547. Catalogued December 15, 1900. 

Well made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
45336—08——2 


18 TRAGULUS. 


Tragulus canescens Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 185, December 21, 1900. 

83509. Skin and skull. Adult female. Trong (or Tarang), lower 
Siam. September 7, 1896. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued April 24, 1897. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except for loss of right upper 
canine. 
Tragulus carimatz Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1481, p. 55, July 23, 1906. 

125062. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Telok Pai, Karimata 
Island, off west coast of Borneo. August 25, 1904. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 3651. Catalogued December 
8, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull periect. 


Tragulus flavicollis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 33, March 19, 1903. 
115505. Skin and skull. Immature female. Pulo Sugi, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. August 24, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 1957. Catalogued December 27, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus focalinus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 35, March 19, 1903. 
120574. Skin and skull. Adult female. Near Buitenzorg, Java. 
October or November, 1902. Received from B. S. Rairden, U.S. 
consul at Batavia. Catalogued January 25, 1903. 


Well made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect; all the incisiform 
teeth lost except left lower canine. 


Tragulus formosus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 34, March 19, 1905. 

115511. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Bintang, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. August 19, 1902. ollected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 1907. Catalogued December 27, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except right upper canine 
and left incisiform teeth slightly chipped. 
Tragulus jugularis Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 440, February 3, 1903. 

114574. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Mansalar, off Tapanuli 
Bay, west coast of Sumatra. March 8, 1902. Collected by Dr. 
W.L. Abbott. Original number 1627. Catalogued September 3, 
1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


TRAGULUS. 19 


Tragulus lampensis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 42, March 19, 1903. 

104429. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Lampee or Sullivan 
Island, Mergui Archipelago. February 4, 1900. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 299. Catalogued November 
6, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus lancavensis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., X VI, p. 41, March 19, 1903. 
104412. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Lankawi, off west coast 
of Malay Peninsula (about 75 miles north of Penang). December 
7, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 132. 
Catalogued November 6, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus luteicollis Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 579, December 18, 1906. 
124733. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tanjong Bedaan, island of 
Banka, east of Sumatra. June 12, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 3311. Catalogued November 30, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus lutescens Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 32, March 19, 1903. 
115507. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Sugi Bawa, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. September 2, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2011. Catalogued December 27, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus natune Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 38, March 19, 1803. 

104614. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bunguran Island, Natuna 
Islands. July 9, 1900. Collected by’ Dr. W. L. Abbott. Orig- 
inal number 555. Catalogued December 15, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus nigricollis Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 145, June 11, 1902. 
113121. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sinkep Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. September 6, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1292. Catalogued January 30, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


20 TRAGULUS. 


Tragulus nigrocinctus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 250, September 11, 1906. 
122863. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Kundur, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. June 21, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2531. Catalogued January 21, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus pallidus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., ITI, p. 116, March 26, 1901. 

104616. Skinand skull. Adult female. Pulo Laut, Natuna Islands. 
August 11, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 625. Catalogued December 15, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except slight damage in left 
temporal region. 


Tragulus perflavus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X X XI, No. 1485, p. 251, September 11, 1906. 
142125. Skin and skull. Adult female. Semimba Bay, Batam Island, 
Rhio-Linga Archipelago. September 21, 1905. Collected by C. 
Boden Kloss. Original number 28. Catalogued January 8, 1906. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus pretiellus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 253, September 11, 1906. 
122994. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Bakong, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. July 18, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2648. Catalogued January 23, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus pretiosus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 144, June 11, 1902. 

113031. Skin and skull. Adult male. Linga Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. August 27, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1238. Catalogued January 25, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except points of upper canines 
broken and a small shot hole in base of nasals. 


Tragulus ravulus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XVI, p. 41, March 19, 1903. 

104417. Skinand skull. Adult female. Pulo Adang, Butang Islands, 
off west coast of Malay Peninsula. December 16, 1899. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 161. Catalogued Novem- 
ber 6, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Type designated by number 104717, which is an error for 104417. 


TRAGULUS. 91 


Tragulus ravus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 173, August 6, 1902. 

83506. Skin and skull. Immature female. Trong (or Tarang), lower 
Siam. September 6, 1896. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Cat- 
alogued April 24, 1897. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of small right 
upper canine. Milk molars in place, much worn; last permanent molars not up. 


Tragulus rubeus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 40, March 19, 1903. 

115522. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Bintang, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. August 20, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1914. Catalogued December 27, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus rufulus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 227, August 20, 1900. 

101767. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Tioman Island, off 
southeast coast of Malay Peninsula. September 30, 1899. Col- 
lected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 20, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of both upper 
canines. 


Tragulus russeus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 444, February 3, 1903. 

114837. Skinand skull. Adult male. Pulo Tuangku, Banjak Islands, 
off west coast of Sumatra. February 5, 1902. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 1518. Catalogued August 28, 
1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus russulus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 3, November 6, 1903. 
121701. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, off 
west coastof Sumatra. February 8, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2249.  Catalogued August 1, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tragulus subrufus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, p. 39, March 19, 1903. 
113119. Skin and skull. Adult female. Sinkep Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. September 5,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1285. Catalogued January 30, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except left upper canine lost. 


22 TRAGULUS—SUS. 


Tragulus umbrinus Miller. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 191, December 21, 1900. 


104414. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Lankawi, off west coast’ 
of Malay Peninsula. December 7, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 134. Catalogued November 6, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition, except for a break about the left carpal 
joint; skull perfect. 


Tragulus virgicollis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 37, March 19, 1903. 
—=Tragulus hosei Bonhote. See Lyon, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XX XIII, No. 1577, 
p. 549, December 24, 1907. 
83941. Skinand skull. Adult male. Altitude of 3,000 feet on Mount 
Dulit, Sarawak, Borneo. June, 1895. Collected by Ernest Hose 
and Charles Hose. Catalogued December 7, 1897. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect, left coronoid process 
of mandible broken off, all incisiform teeth lost except left lower canine. 


Family SUID. 


Genus SUS. 
Sus babi Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXX, No. 1466, p. 752, plates 60, 61, June 13, 1906. 
H4283. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Babi (an island about 
half way between Simalur and Pulo Bangkuru, the outermost of 
the Banjak group), west coast of Sumatra. January 14, 1902. 
Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 1413. Cata- 
logued August 27, 1902. 


Flat, folded skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Sus jubatulus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXX, No. 1466, p. 746, June 13, 1906. 

123918. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Terutau (also written 
Trotau and Trotto), off west coast of Malay Peninsula. Novem- 
ber 11, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 
2859. Catalogued July 22, 1904. 


Flat, folded skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sus jubatus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXX, No. 1466, p. 745, pls. 55, 56, 58, 59, June 13, 1906. 
83518. Skinand skull. Adultmale. Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. 
1896. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number “B.” 
Catalogued April 28, 1897. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


SUS. 23 


Sus mimus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXX, No. 1466, p. 753, June 13, 1906. 
114178. Skin andskull. Adult male. Simalur Island, west coast of 


Sumatra. November 25, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1353. Catalogued August 26, 1902. 


Flat, folded skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sus natunensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 117, Mareh 26, 1901. 
104856. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Laut, Natuna Islands. 


August 6, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original num- 
ber 609. Catalogued December 20, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sus niadensis Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXX, No. 1466, p. 751, pls. 62-64, June 12, 1906. 
141167. Skin and skull. Adult female. Nias Island, off west coast 


of Sumatra. March 30, 1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 4155. Catalogued July 20, 1905. 


Flat, folded skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sus nicobaricus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 755, May 28, 1902. 
111794. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Great Nicobar Island, 
Nicobar Islands. March 13, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Ab- 
bott. Original number 930. Catalogued August 14, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sus oi Miller. 

Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 51, March 5, 1902. 

113150. Skin and skull. Adult male. Banks of the Indragiri 
River, about 30 miles above the mouth, eastern Sumatra. Sep- 
tember 20, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 1319. Catalogued February 3, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sus peninsularis Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXX, No. 1466, p. 749, pl. 57, June 13, 1906. 
142470. Skull only. Adult female. Near foot of Gunong Pulai, 
southwestern Johere. 1905. Collected by C. Boden Kloss. 
Catalogued January 26, 1906. 


Skull perfect, except loss of four upper incisors and tip of left paroccipital 
process. 


24 SUS—TAYASSU. 


Sus rhionis Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat Mus., XXX, No. 1466, p. 749, pls. 60, 61, 64, June 13, 1906. 
122928. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Pulo Ungar, Rhio- 
Linga Archipelago. June 26, 1908. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2555. Catalogued January 22, 1904. 


Flat, folded skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Family TAYASSUIDZ. 
Genus TAYASSU. 


Tayassu angulatus crassus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 124, July 19, 1901. 
=Tayassu angulatum crassum Merriam. See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soe. 
Nat. Hist., XX XI, p. 66, 1903. 
92960. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Metlaltoyuca, Puebla, 
Mexico. February 1, 1898. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 12127. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except for absence of right 
outer upper and lower incisors; left postglenoid process broken. 


Tayassu angulatus humeralis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 122-123, July 19, 1901. 
=Tayassu angulatum humerale Merriam. See Millerand Rehn, Proce. Bost. Soe. 
Nat. Hist., XX XI, p. 66, 1903. 
$3575. Skinandskull. Adult male (not female, as in original desecrip- 
tion). Armeria, Colima, Mexico. February 26, 1892. Collected 
by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 1947. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except for several small punc- 
tures in audital bullee. 


Tayassu nanus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 102, July 19, 1901. 
108516. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cozumel Island, Yucatan, 
Mexico. April 7, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 14664. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tayassu albirostris ringens Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 121-122, July 19, 1901. 
=Tayassu pecari ringens (Merriam). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
XVI, p. 166, July 19, 1902. 
108279. Skin and skull. Adult female. Apazote, near Yohaltun, 
Campeche, Mexico. January 1,1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson 
and E, A. Goldman. Original number 14383. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


TAY ASSU-—TAPIRELLA. 25 


Dicotyles angulatus sonoriensis Mearns. 


Preliminary diagnoses of new mammals of the genera Mephitis, Dorcelaphus, 
and Dicotyles, from the Mexican border of the United States, p. 3, February 
11, 1897. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1129, p. 469, Decem- 
ber 24, 1897.) 
=Tayassu angulatum sonoriense (Mearns). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. 
Soc. Nat. Hist., XXX, p. 12, 1901. 


g¢657. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Bernardino River, Sonora, 
Mexico, near monument No. 77, Mexican boundary line. Septem- 
ber 8, 1892. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A., and F. X. 
Holzner. Originai number 2099. International Boundary Com- 
mission.. Catalogued December 13, 1892. 


Poorly-made skin (laid out on side) in good condition; skull perfect, except 
for loss of angular process of right half of mandible. 


Tayassu angulatus yucatanensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 123. July 19, 1901. 


=Tayassu angulatum yucatanense Merriam. See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. 
Soc. Nat. Hist., XX XI, p. 66, 1903. 


108282. Skin and skull. Youngadult male. Tunkas, Yucatan, Mex- 
ico. February 12, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 14534. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
outer upper incisor and slight puncture of right audital bulla; left parietal shightly 
cracked. 


Family TAPIRID. 
Genus TAPIRELLA. 


Elasmognathus bairdii Gill. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1865, p. 183, presented at meeting of October 10, 
1865. 
=Tapirella bairdii (Gill). See Elliot, Land and Sea Mammals of Middle Amer- 
ica and West Indies, Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., IV, p. 87, 1904. 


6019. Skull, no skin. Isthmus of Panama. Collected by Dr. W. 5. 
White. Catalogued April 9, 1863. 


Skull in good condition, except that it has been cut in two longitudinally and 
that the following teeth are lost: The two middle upper incisors, the second left 
upper premolar, the first left upper molar, the third right upper premolar, and 
the third right lower incisor. 

Dr. T. N. Gill designated no type-specimen. The description is based upon 
two skulls, adult and young, collected on the Isthmus of Panama by Dr. W. 8. 
White. Two such specimens exist in the National Museum, entered in the 
catalogue April 9, 1863. The adult is here regarded asthe type. In the original 


26 TAPIRELLA—DEN DROHYRAX. 


description, Dr. Gill speaks of the vomer and the nasal septum, both of which 
are wanting in the younger specimen, and it is reasonable to assume that the 
remainder of the description is based upon the older and more perfect skull. 


Elasmognathus dowii Gill. 


Amer. Jour. Sci. and Arts, 2d Ser., L, p. 142, 1870. 


=Tapirella dowii (Gill). See Elliot, Land and Sea Mammals Middle America and 
West Indies, Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., IV, p. 88, 1904. 


11278. Skull, no skin. Nearly adult. Guatemala. Collected by 
Capt. J. M. Dow. Original number 1. Catalogued July 19, 1870. 


Skull nearly perfect, but vomer lost, and the following teeth are missing: 
The two first upper premolars and the two first lower premolars; all the upper 
incisors and canines, except the third right incisor. The last four molars are 
not yet level with the alveoli. 

Type not designated by number. The original description refers to four adults 
and one young in the Smithsonian collection, all obtained by Capt. John M. 
Dow. These five specimens are found to be numbers 11278-9, 11280-1-2, bear- 
ing original numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. The title of Dr. Gill’s article is ‘‘A new 
species of Tapir, from Guatemala.’’? It happens that but one of five specimens 
came from Guatemala, namely, the first, no. 11278, and that one shows the 
reduced fused nasals emphasized in the description better than any of the others. 
This specimen is plainly marked ‘‘Guatemala”’ in old lettering on the skull; 
the other four are marked “Salvador, C. A.’’ In the catalogue, number 11278 
was first entered as ‘‘Salvador, C. Am.,’’ but the ‘‘Salvador’’ has a line drawn 
through it and ‘‘Guatemala’’ written above. The other four are marked ‘‘Sal- 
yador.”’ In view of the above facts, Cat. No. 11278 must be regarded as the type. 


Family PROCAVIIDZ. 
Genus DENDROHYRAX. 


Dendrohyrax validus True. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XIII, No. 814, p. 228, September 16, 1890. 


18286. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Kilimanjaro, German 
East Africa. June 17, 1888. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 8. Catalogued June 24, 1890. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for the following inju- 
ries to teeth: Two middle lower incisors broken off at alveoli, also first lower left 
premolar, both upper incisors, first three upper premolars right side, and first 
two upper premolars left side all broken or worn off to the alveoli. 

No type designated. Five specimens are listed by number, of which 4435} is 
here chosen as the type because, first, it heads the list; second, it is the only one 
of which a table of skull measurements is given; third, it is the only specimen 
coming from Mount Kilimanjaro, the other four coming from Taveta, and the 
title of the paper reads, ‘‘ Description of two new species of mammals from Mt. 
Kilimanjaro, East Africa.’’ 

The designation of the skull number 25796 in the original description is due to 
an error made in the cataloguing. It has been corrected to 34721. 


LEPUS. 2Y 
Order GLIRES 
Family .LEPORID. 
Genus LEPUS. 


Lepus merriami altamire Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 109-110, May 18, 1904. 
93691. Skinandskull. Adult male. Alta Mira, Tamaulipas, Mexico. 
May 16, 1898. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 12365. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of second 
right upper molar, broken postorbital processes, and two perforations of the 
brain case. 


Lepus asellus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 380, October 5, 1899. 
geeee. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Luis Potosi, Mexico. 
October 22, 1891. Collected by P. L. Jouy. Original number 
270. Catalogued May 22, 1893. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for some pieces broken 
out of ascending ramus of left half of mandible. 


Lepus bairdi Hayden. Cotype. 
Amer. Nat., III, p. 115, May, 1869. 
=Lepus americanus bairdi (Hayden). See True, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., VII, 
p- 601, 1885. ; 
No type designated. The description is based upon specimens 
collected in the Columbia Valley, Wind River Mountains, near 
Fremonts Peak, long. 110°, lat. 48°, Fremont County, Wyoming, 
in the first part of June, 1860, by Dr. F. V. Hayden. 
The specimens, excluding three marked young in the catalogue, 
are as follows: 
secor- Male. June 2, 1860. Original number 62. Made over into 
fairly good study skin, March, 1902. Posterior and basal parts of 
brain case broken away and both ascending parts of mandible more 
or less injured. 
$344. June 2, 1860. Original number 63. Neither skin nor skull 
can be found. 
4264. Skin without skull. June 4, 1860. Original number 90. 
Skin can not be found. 
Catalogued November, 1860, except skull no. 38001, catalogued 
March 22, 1902. 


Lepus arcticus canus Preble. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 22, pp. 59-61, October 31, 1902. 


106860. Skin and skull. Immature male. Barren grounds near Hub- 
bart Point, about 75 miles north of Fort Churchill, Keewatin, 


28 LEPUS. 


Canada. August 17, 1900. Collected by E. A. Preble. Original 
number 3347. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with right side of maxillary injured; 
ends of nasals (about one-third) broken away; right condyle imperfect and lower 
side of right mandibular ramus injured. 


Lepus americanus dalli Merriam. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 29, March 14, 1900. 
$343. Skin and skull. Adult male. Nulato, Alaska. January 27, 
1867. Collected by Dr. W. H. Dall. Original number 584. West- 
ern Union Company’s Overland International Telegraph Expedi- 
tion. Catalogued January 15, 1868. 
Unfilled skin in winter pelage, in rather poor condition; skull perfect. 


Type designated by the skull number. Skin was not known to exist at time of 
publication of description. 


Lepus festinus Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 108-109, May 18, 1904. 
53490. Skinand skull. Adult male. Irolo, Hidalgo, Mexico. March 
31, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Orig- 
inal number 4522. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Lepus gaillardi Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X VIII, No. 1081, p. 560, June 24, 1896. 

72474. Skinandskull. Adult male. West fork of the Playas Valley, 
near monument No. 63, Mexican boundary line. June 17, 1892. 
Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A., and F. X. Holzner. 
Original number 1885. International Boundary Commission. 
Catalogued November 5, 1892. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; pelage somewhat worn. Skull has lost the 
left bulla and the outer anterior margin of the nasals are somewhat broken, as 
is also the condyloid process of the left half of mandible. 


Lepus texianus griseus Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X VIII, No. 1081, p. 562, June 24, 1896. 
jé{os- Okin and skull. Adult female. Fort Hancock, El Paso 
County, Texas. June 22,1893. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, 
U.S. A. Original number 2353. International Boundary Com- 
mission. Catalogued July 29, 1893. 


Well-made skin in good condition, but made up lying on the side instead of 
belly; skull perfect. 


Lepus klamathensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 16, pp. 100-101, October 28, 1899. 


LEPUS. 29 


92248. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. Fort Klamath,Oregon. Janu- 
ary 25,1898. Collected by B. L. Cunningham. Original number 
1191x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight injury to 
upper border of foramen magnum and angle of left mandibular ramus. 
Lepus labradorius Miller. Cotypes. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 39, May 29, 1899. 

14149. Skin. Adult. Fort Chimo, Ungava, Labrador. September 
28,1882. Collected by Lucien M. Turner. Original number 1180. 
This skin should have a skull, 37138, which can not be found. 
Skin catalogued February 2, 1884; skull, April, 1896. 

Skin is well made and in good condition, pelage somewhat worn. 
23132. Skull only. Adult. Same place and collector as above. 
Original number 2326. Catalogued January 12, 1889. 
Except for loss of the two left upper incisors, the skull is perfect. 
Both cotypes are designated by number. There is a typographical error in 
the skull number. It should be 23132 instead of 32132. 
Lepus americanus macfarlani Merriam. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 30, March 14, 1900. 

figs. Skin (lost) and skull. Adult male. Fort Anderson, Macken- 
zie, Canada. March, 1863. Collected by R. MacFarlane. Origi- 
nal number 319. Skull catalogued May 6, 1875; skin in 1864 or 
1865. 

Angular process of right half of mandible somewhat broken, and posterior 


edge of left half of mandible more or less injured; otherwise, skull in good con- 
dition. Catalogue calls for skin no. 7111, which can not now be found. 


Lepus californicus magdalene Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 81, July 22, 1907. 

146168. Skin and skull. Adult male. Magdalena Island, Lower 
California, Mexico. November 26, 1905. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 186338. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
post-orbital process. 
Lepus merriami Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 2, March 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., X VIII, No. 
1075, p. 444, May 23, 1896.) 

83797. Skinand skull. Adultfemale. Fort Clark, Kinney County, 
Texas. April 6, 1893. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. 
Original number 2317. International Boundary Commission. 
Catalogued September 11, 1897. 

Skin well-made and preserved, but made up on its side instead of belly; skull 
perfect, except for loss of the last upper molar on each side. 
Type designated by the collector’s original number, 


30 LEPUS. 


Lepus othus Merriam. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., Il, p. 28, March 14, 1900. 

15883. Skull, no skin. Adult. St. Michael, Alaska. February, 
1877. Collected by Lucien M. Turner. Original number 1418, 
Catalogued December 11, L877. 

Left half of mandible is lost and a small piece is out of the condyloid process 
of the right half; the last right and left upper molars missing; otherwise, skull 
in good condition. 

Lepus poadromus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 29, March 14, 1900. 

98068. Skin and skull. Adult. Stepovak Bay, Alaska Peninsula, 
Alaska. July 8, 1899. Collected by C. Palache. Original num- 
ber 2207 (Dr. A. K. Fisher). 

Well-made skin in good condition, except for absence of left hind foot; skull 
perfect, except for broken left zygoma. 


Lepus saliens Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, pp. 39-40, October 6, 1900. 
98956. Skinand skull. Adult male. Caribou, Yukon, Canada. June 
26, 1899. Collected by W. H. Osgood. Original number 504. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with numerous small shot perfora- 
tions; right zygoma broken; anterior portion of vault of cranium, left mandibular 
condyle, and left lower incisor missing. 


Lepus campestris sierre Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 1382-133, July 14, 1904. ; 
67863. Skin and skull. Adult female. Hope Valley, Alpine County, 
California. September 9, 1894. Collected by F. Stephens. Origi- 
nal number 1889. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull, posterior portion of brain case, in- 
cluding audital bullee and basioccipital, missing; right mandibular ramus broken 
in front of molar series. 


Lepus tularensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 136-137, July 14, 1904. 
126334. Skin and skull. Adult female. Alila, Tulare County, Cali- 
fornia. October 25,1900. Collected by L. J. Goldman. Original 
number 496. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Lepus varronis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 97, June 27, 1901. 

105832. Skin and skull. Adult male. Heinzenberg, Canton of 
Graubiinden, Switzerland. December 5, 1900. Collected by 
Ernst H. Zollikofer. Original number 196. Catalogued June 5, 
1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


LEPUS—SYLVILAGUS. 31 


Lepus texianus wallawalla Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 137, July 14, 1904. 


£3233 (not 37333 as in original description). Skin and skull. Adult 
female. Touchet, Washington. September 18, 1890. Collected 
by C. P. Streator. Original number 271. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
supraorbital processes. 


Lepus washingtoni Baird. 
Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 333; this paper was favorably reported for 
publication, April 24, 1855. 
1223. Skull. Adult. Steilacoom, Washington. April 1, 1854. Col- 
lected by Dr. George Suckley. Catalogued November 9, 1854. 
All four occipitals, the interparietal, tympanic, and mastoid bones of the skull 
are wanting, and the ascending rami of the mandible are more or less broken on 
the posterior edge. Otherwise the skull is in good condition. There should be 
askin, no. 280, which can not now be found. 
Type not designated by number, but by comparing the measurements of the 


original description with those in the table on page 585 of Baird’s Mammals of 
North America it is seen that No. 25°; must be regarded as the type. 


Genus SYEVILAGUS: 


Lepus sylvaticus arizone Allen. 
Monographs of North American Rodentia, p. 349, August, 1877. 

=Sylvilagus arizone (Allen). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV,. 
No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 

8439. Skin of adult male. No record of skull. Beales Springs, 50 
miles west of Fort Whipple, Yavapai County, Arizona. Septem- 
ber 8, 1865. Collected by Dr. Elliott Coues. Original number 
1563. Catalogued February 16, 1866. 

A flat, poorly preserved skin; one hind leg missing; the other detached from 
the skin. 

Type not explicitly designated by number, but on comparing Doctor Allen’s 
remarks, p. 332, loc. cit., with the list of specimens in Table 39, p. 340, it is readily 
seen that 8439 is the type. 


Lepus audubonii Baird. See page 288. 


Lepus baileyi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 148, June 9, 1897. 

=Sylvilagus baileyi (Merriam). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, 

No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 

56016. Skinandskull. Adult female. Spring Creek, Bighorn Basin, 
Wyoming. September 17, 1893. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Mer- 
riam and V. Bailey. Original number 4372. 

Well-made skin, in good condition; skull lacking right zygoma and left audital 
bulla; right mandibular ramus broken. 


$2 SYLVILAGUS. 


Lepus floridanus caniclunis Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 388, October 5, 1899. 
=Sylvilagus floridanus chapmani (Allen). 


63137. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Clark, Kinney County, 
Texas. December 27, 1892. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, 
U.S. A. Original number 2172. International Boundary Com- 
mission. Catalogued January 25, 1896. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect; left bulla and left 
last upper molar missing, a small piece out of the left ascending mandibular 
ramus. 

Sylvilagus auduboni cedrophilus Nelson. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 83, July 22, 1907. 


148287. Skinand skull. Adult female. Cactus Flat, 20 miles north 
of Cliff, New Mexico. November 6, 1906. Collected by V. Bailey. 
Original number 8595. 


rd 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for two perforations in 
vault of cranium. 


Lepus floridanus chiapensis Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, pp. 106-107, May 18, 1904. 
=Sylvilagus floridanus chiapensis (Nelson). 
75953. Skinand skull. Adult female. San Cristobal, Chiapas, Mex- 
ico. September 28, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 8483. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sylvilagus cognatus Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 82, July 22, 1907. ; 
136569. Skin and skull. Adult. Tajique, near summit of Manzano 
Mountains, New Mexico. Altitude 10,000 feet. February, 1905. 
Collected by A. Rea. Original number 5331x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Lepus floridanus connectens Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 105-106, May 18, 1904. 
=Sylvilagus floridanus connectens (Nelson). 
63660. Skin and skull. Adult male. Chichicaxtle, Vera Cruz, 
Mexico. February 15, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
EK. A. Goldman. Original number 5849. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Sylvilagus bachmani exiguus Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 84, July 22, 1907. 


139607, Skin and skull. Adultmale. Yubay, 30 miles southeast of 
Calamahue, Lower California, Mexico. September 19, 1905. 


SYLVILAGUS. oe 


Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 
18153. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken angle of 
right mandibular ramus. 


Lepus brasiliensis gabbi Allen. Cotypes. 
Monographs North American Rodentia, p. 349, August, 1877. 


=Sylvilagus gabbi( Allen). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1456, 
p. 836, June 15, 1904. 


41331. Skin and skull. Adult male. Talamanca, Costa Rica. Late 
in 1872 or carly in 1873. Received from Prof. W. M. Gabb.  Col- 
lected by J. C. Zeledon. Original number 18. Skin catalogued 
1873; skull, October 20, 1899. 

Specimen has been made over into a modern study skin, in good condition 


and state of preservation. The skull is perfect, except for some chips out of the 
ascending ramus of the left half of the mandible. 


11372. Skin with skull inside; all data as above except original 
number, which is 19. Catalogued 1873. 
As Dr. J. A. Allen states, this specimen is quite immature and on the whole is 
a wretched-looking object. It has never been made up into a modern study skin. 
Dr. Allen based this species on three specimens, all designated by number 
on page 350, Monographs North American Rodentia. One of them, 8140, comes 
from Chiriqui, and the other two numbers, 11371 and 11372, from Talamanca, 
Costa Rica. No type or cotypes were designated. In order to avoid two type 
localities for a single species, the two specimens from Talamanca are considered 
as cotypes and the Chiriqui specimen as a paratype. This course seems perfectly 
justifiable, as two-thirds of the specimens upon which the description was based 
came from Talamanca, and the species is named in honor of the collector or, 
rather, donor, and both of the Talamanca specimens came from Prof. Gabb, while 
the Chiriqui specimen was collected by Fred Hicks. 


Lepus arizonze goldmani Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 107-108, May 28, 1904. 


=Sylvilagus arizonz goldmani (Nelson). 


96812. Skin and skull. Adult female (not male, as in original 
description). Culiacan, Sinaloa, Mexico. March 20, 1899. Col- 
lected by E. A. Goldman. Original number 13588. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Lepus graysoni Allen. 
Monographs of North American Rodentia, p. 347, August, 1877. 
=Sylvilagus graysoni (Allen). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, 
No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 

8318. Skin, with skull inside. Adult female. Tres Marias Islands, 
Mexico, probably Maria Madre Island (see Nelson, North Amer. 
Fauna, No. 14, p. 16, April 29, 1899). Collected during ** Explora- 

45336—08——3* 


34 SYLVILAGUS. 


tions in N. W. Mexico, Col. A. J. Grayson.” Original number 
135. Catalogued November 15, 1865. 
Wretched skin, in poor condition, with a skull inside. 
Type not explicitly designated by number, but by comparing Dr. Allen’s 
remarks on page 347 with the table on page 348 it is seen that 8318 is the type. 
The specimen is also labeled ‘“‘ Lepus Graysoni type’’ in Dr. Allen’s hand- 
writing. 


Lepus sylvaticus holzneri Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X VIII, No. 1081, p. 554, June 24, 1896. 
—Sylvilagus floridanus holzneri(Mearns). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., 
XLV, No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 

58937. Skin and skull. Adult female. In the Douglas Spruce zone, 
near the summit of the Huachuca Mountains, southern Arizona. — 
August 29, 1893. Collected by Frank X. Holzner. Original num- 
ber 989. International Boundary Commission. Catalogued De- 
cember 16, 1893. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Lepus insonus Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 103-104, May 18, 1904. 
=Sylvilagus insonus (Nelson). 


126878. Skin and skull. Adult female. Omilteme, Guerrero, Mex- 
ico. May 20, 1903. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 16466, 


Well-made skin in good condition, except for a small bare spot on the back; 
skull perfect. 


Lepus arizone major Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X VIII, No. 1081, p. 557, June 24, 1896. 
=Sylvilagus arizone major (Mearns). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., 
XLV, No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 

38122, Skin and skull. Adult male. Calabasas, Pima County, Ari- 
zona. October 23,1889. Collected by Dr. L. Stejneger. Original 
number 3053. Catalogued January 30, 1890. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that right half of 
mandible has been broken vertically in two at middle of tooth row. 


Sylvilagus mansuetus Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 83-84, July 22, 1907. 

79041. Skinand skull. Adult female (not male, as in original deserip- 
tion). San Jose Island, Lower California, Mexico. August 2, 
1895. Collected by J. E. McLellan. Original number 1444. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except mandible, of which 
only the anterior part of left ramus, including teeth, is present. 


SYLVILAGUS. 35 


Lepus margarite Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 97, April 30, 1898. : 
=Sylvilagus margarite (Miller). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, 
No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 
63217. Skin and skull. Adult male. Margarita Island, Venezuela. 
July 1,1895. Collected by Maj. Wirt Robinson, U.S. A. Original 
number 369. Catalogued March 25, 1896. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Lepus arizoneze minor Mearns. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., X VIII, No. 1081, p. 557, June 24, 1896. 

=Sylvilagus arizonz Pere: ns). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, 

No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 
$104. Skinand skull. Adult male. El Paso, Texas. February 6, 
1892. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. ae ,and F. X. Holzner. 
eel number 1418. International Boundary Commission. 
Skin catalogued April 28, 1892; skull, June 23, 1896. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of last left 
lower molar and the left lower incisor broken off to the alveolus. 


ao 


Sylvilagus auduboni neomexicanus Nelson. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 83, July 22, 1907. 
118477. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Sumner, New Mexico. 
September 23, 1902. Collected by J. H. Gaut. Original number 
506. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Lepus orizibe Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, pp. 143-144, December 29, 1893. 
=Sylvilagus orizabe (Merriam). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, 
No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 

53318. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Orizaba (altitude 
1,500 feet), Puebla, Mexico. April 24,1893. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson. Original number 4730. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of poste- 
rior portions of both mandibular rami, including the last right lower molar. 
Lepus verecrucis pacificus Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 

Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 104-195, May 18, 1904. 

=Sylvilagus cunicularius pacificus (Nelson). 

70622. Skin and skull. Adult male. Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico. 
January 9, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and EK. A. Goldman. 
Original number 7340, 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for large shot periora- 
tion through the maxillaries beneath the base of the nasals and slight injury to 
right supraorbital border, 


36 SYLVILAGUS. 


Sylvilagus floridanus restrictus Nelson. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 82, July 22, 1907. 
$3433. Skin and skull. Adult male. Zapotlan, Jalisco, Mexico. 
April 25, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
2576. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except mandible, of which 
only three fragments, including all the teeth, are present. 


Lepus sylvaticus rigidus Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X VIII, No. 1081, p. 555, footnote, June 24, 1896. 
=Sylvilagus floridanus rigidus (Mearns). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., 

XLV, No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 

$9334. Skin and skull. Adult male. Carrizalillo Mountains, near 
Monument No. 31, Mexican boundary line, Grant County, New 
Mexico. April 21,1892. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A., 
and F. X. Holzner. Original number 1680. International Bound- 
ary Commission. Catalogued July 29, 1892. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull has right bulla and exoccipital miss- 
ing and both zygomatic processes of the squamosals broken, last right upper 
molar missing; mandible considerably broken, the right half posteriorly and 
the left half anteriorly. 


Lepus pinetis robustus Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, pp. 159-160, October 24, 1905. 
=—Sylvilagus pinetis robustus (Bailey). 


$3382. Skin and skull. Adult female. Davis Mountains, Texas. 


a) 
Altitude 6,000 feet. January 6, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. 
Original number 873. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of posterior 
portions of mandibular rami. 


Lepus floridanus sanctidiegi Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 389, October 5, 1899. 
=Sylvilagus floridanus sanctidiegi (Miller). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. 
Coll., XLV, No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 

60668. Skin and skull. Adult female. Monument number 258 
(Pacific Ocean), Mexican boundary line, San Diego County, Cali- 
fornia. July 10,1894. Collected by Dr. EK. A. Mearns, U.S. A. 
Original number 3783. International Boundary Commission. Cat- 
alogued November 3, 1894. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that there is a chip 
out of right angular process. 


Sylvilagus floridanus similis Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol, Soc. Wash., XX, p. 82, July 22, 1907. 


SYLVILAGUS. 37 


. 69517. Skinand skull. Adult male. Valentine, Nebraska. Novem. 

| ber 10, 1894. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 4442. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
supraorbital process; angles of mandible each with two perforations. 


Lepus simplicicanus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 81, April 25, 1902. 
=Sylvilagus floridanus chapmani (Allen). 
$308. Skinand skull. Adult female. Brownsville,Texas. October 
19, 1891. Collected by F. B. Armstrong. Purchased from C. K. 
Worthen. Original number 1402. Catalogued November 17, 1893. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for some slight injury 
about left angular process of mandible. 


oolto 


Lepus floridanus subcinctus Miller. 
Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 386, October 5, 1899. 


=Sylvilagus floridanus subcinctus (Miller). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. 
Coll., XLV, No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 


$9435. Skin and skull. Adult female. Hacienda El Molino, near 
Negrete, Michoacan, Mexico. June 15, 1892. Collected by P. L. 
Jouy. Original number 415. Catalogued October 3, 1892. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Lepus trowbridgii Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 333, this paper was favorably reported for 
publication April 24, 1855. 
=Sylvilagus bachmani (Waterhouse). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., 
XLV, No. 1456, p. 336, June 15, 1904. 


#e'z'5- Skull (skin lost). Monterey, California. 1853. Collected by 
Lieut. W. P. Trowbridge, U. S. A. Skin catalogued December 5, 
1854; skull November 29, 1854. The entry in the skull catalogue 
reads, *‘ Monterey? Cal. Perhaps San Diego.” 

Skull considerably damaged; posterior and inferior parts of brain-case want- 
ing, and most of right side of skull posterior to rostrum broken away. Posterior 
part of right half of mandible also broken. One loose bulla is present. There 
should be a skin, No. 310, which can not now be found. 

No type designated. By referring to Mammals of North America, pages 610- 
612, it is seen that most of the description is based upon No. 310; moreover, the 
measurements of 310 agree more nearly with those given in the original descrip- 
tion. For these reasons No. 4°’; is here chosen as the type. 


Lepus truei Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., ITI, p. 192, December 10, 1890. 


=Sylvilagus truei(Allen). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1456, 
p. 336, June 15, 1904. 


38 SYLVILAGUS. 


gfv7;. Skinand skull. Adult. Mirador, Vera Cruz, Mexico. Col- 
lected by Dr. C. Sartorius. Original mark ‘‘e.” Skin catalogued 
April, 1863; skull, November 27, 1890. 

Skin in poor condition, laid out flat on side. A good deal of the epidermis 
has slipped from the feet. Skull formerly in the skin, and all the posterior parts 
are more or less damaged by the preservative used on the skin. The posterior 
parts of the brain-case and the posterior edges of the ascending rami of the 
mandible, especially of the right half, are lacking. 

Type designated by number ;%%).’;. A large series of skulls in the Museum 


25953" 


collection in the twenty-five thousands, was misnumbered and the skull of the 
present specimen, along with others, had to be renumbered, and is now 34878, 
instead of 25953. 
Lepus bachmani ubericolor Miller. 

Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 383, October 5, 1899. 

=Sylvilagus bachmani ubericolor (Miller). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., 

XLV, No. 1456, p. 337, June 15, 1904. 

19964) Skinand skull. Adult male. Beaverton, Oregon. February 
ie 1890. Collected by A. W. Anthony. Original number 1226, 
Catalogued March 16, 1892. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of right half 
of mandible. 


Sylvilagus auduboni vallicola Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 82-83, July 22, 1907. 


$4233, Skin and skull. Adult female. San Emigdio Ranch, Kern 
County, California. October 22,1891. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 1353. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull-perfect, except for absence of last two 
right and left upper molars. 


Sylvilagus auduboni warreni Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 83, July 22, 1907. 


148632. Skinand skull. Adultfemale. Coventry,Colorado. Janu- 
ary 4, 1907. Collected by C. H. Smith. Original number 6312x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except mandible, which con- 
sists of three fragments, one including both incisors, another the left molar 
series, and the third the condyle and angular process. 


Lepus floridanus yucatanicus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 384, October 5, 1899. 
=Sylvilagus floridanus yucatanicus (Miller). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. 
Coll., XLV. No. 1456, p. 337, June 15, 1904. 

41444. Skin and skull. Adult female. Merida, Yucatan, Mexico. 
February 22, 1865. Collected by Dr. A. Schott. Original num- 
ber 207. Comision Cientifica de Yucatan, José Salazar Llarregui. 
Skin catalogued in 1873; skull, June 13, 1899. 


BRACHY LAGUS—ROMEROLAGUS—OCHOTONA. 39 


Specimen recently made over into a modern study skin, well-preserved; skull 
quite complete, the tympanic, mastoid, and exoccipital bones of the right side 
broken away, and the angle of the right half of the mandible broken. 


Genus BRACHYLAGUS. 


Lepus idahoensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 75-78, 2 figs., July 30, 1891. 


=Brachylagus idahoensis (Merriam). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., 
XLV, No. 1456, p. 337, June 15, 1904. 


ic 


4044. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pahsimeroi Valley, Custer 
pointy. Idaho. September 16, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey and 
Dr. B. H. Dutcher, U.S. A. Original number 1816. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a perforation in 
each audital bulla. 


Genus ROMEROLAGUS. 


Romerolagus nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, pp. 173-174, fig. 33, Dec. 29, 1896. 


5T9L9. Ss and skull. Adult male. Mount Popocatepetl, Mexico. 
January 6, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last left 
upper molar; angle of left mandibular ramus broken. 


Family OCHOTONIDA. 
Genus OCHOTONA. 


Ochotona cansus Lyon. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., L, No. 1726, p. 136, pl. 15, figs. 1-8, July 9, 1907. 


144030. Skin and skull. Adult male. Taocheo, Province of Kansu, 
China. June 8, 1906. Collected by W. W. Simpson. Original 
number 13. Catalogued March 6, 1907. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Lagomys collaris Nelson. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, p. 117, December 21, 1893. 


=Ochotona collaris (Nelson). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, p. 648, 1897. 


44384, Skin and skull. Adult. Near the head of the Tanana River, 
about 200 miles south of Fort Yukon, Alaska. Summer of 1880. 
Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number164. Skin catalogued 
June 11, 1884; skull, November 2, 1893. 

Skin fairly well preserved, but badly made up; no wire in legs. Posterior and 
hasal portions of the left half of the cranium and most of the ascending ramus 
of the left half of the mandible lacking; otherwise skull complete. 


40 ERETHIZON—TRICHYS— ATHERUROS. 


Family ERETHIZONTID. 
Genus ERETHIZON. 


Erethizon epixanthum couesi Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1121, p. 723, July 30, 1897. 
#844. Skin and skull. Not quite adult. Fort Whipple, Arizona. 
Jolleeted by Dr. Elliott Coues. Catalogued February 19, 1865. 
Skin well preserved, but poorly made up; skull has lost both malar bones 
and the last upper and last lower molar of the right side: otherwise complete. 
Erethizon epixanthum myops Merriam. 
Proc. Wash., Acad. Sci., II, p. 27, March 14, 1900. 
59140. Skin and skull. Old adult female. Portage Bay, Alaska. 
September, 1893. Collected by C. H. Townsend, U. 5S. Bureau of 
Fisheries steamer A/hatross. Catalogued January 30, 1894. 


Well-made skin in good condition, rather greasy; skull nearly perfect; upper 
incisors broken off to the alveoli; lower jaw can not be found. 


Family HYSTRICID. 
Genus), selwiGibioes. 


Trichys macrotis Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 469, February 3, 1903. 


114488. Skinand skull. Adultfemale. Tapanuli Bay, northwestern 
Sumatra. February 20, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1555. Catalogued September 2, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus ATH ERUR US: 


Atherurus terutaus Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XII, No. 1552, p. 587, pls. 54-56, fig. 2, June 29, 1907. 


123971. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Terutau (also written 
Trotau and Trotto), about 15 geographic miles west of the Malay 
Peninsula, where the 100th meridian east of Greenwich cuts the 
coast of the Malay Peninsula. April 12, 1904. Collected by Dr. 
W.L. Abbott. Original number 3223. Catalogued July 23, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Atherura zygomatica Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 42, pl. 2, fig. 4, November 6, 1903¢ 
=Atherurus zygomaticus Miller. See Lyon, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXXII, No. 
1552, p. 587, June 29, 1907. 
112429. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. Pulo Aor, off coast of Johore. 
June 6, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 
1009. Catalogued November 12, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


THECURUS—CAPROMYS—PROECHIMYS—CTENOMYS. 41 
Genus THECURUS. 


Thecurus sumatre Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXII, No. 1552, p. 583, pls. 54-56, fig. 1, and pl. 57, 
figs. 2, 9, 10, June 29, 1907. 
143432. Skin and skull. Adult male. Aru Bay, east coast of Su- 
matra. January 17, 1906. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 4637. Catalogued June 23, 1906. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Family OCTODONTIDZ. 


Genus CAPROM YS. 


Capromys prehensilis gundlachi Chapman. 
3ull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV, p. 317, pl. 39, November 12, 1901. 


103905. Skin and skull. Adult male. Nueva Gerona, Isle of Pines, 
Cuba. July 4, 1900. Collected by William Palmer and J. H. 
Riley. Original number 505. Catalogued October 15, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Capromys brachyurus thoracatus True. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XI, p. 469, September 3, 1889. 
—=Capromys thoracatus (True). See Chapman, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
XXI, p. 321, November 12, 1901. 
$5894. Skin and skull. Adult male. Little Swan Island, Caribbean 
Sea. March 6, 1887. Collected by C. H. Townsend. Catalogued 
June 26, 1887. 
Skin well preserved, but not well made up; skull perfect. 
Type not designated by number, but of the two original specimens Dr. True 
has personally selected the above as the type and placed a red label upon it. 


Genus PROECHIMYS. 


Proechimys guairz Thomas. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 27, April 2, 1901. 

102731. Skinand skull. Adult male. La Guaira, Venezuela. July 
8,1900. Collected by Major Wirt Robinson, U.S. A. and Dr. M. 
W. Lyon, jr. Original number 81. Catalogued September 19, 
1900. 

Fairly well-made skin in fair condition; skull perfect. 


Genus CTENOMYS. 


Ctenomys robustus Allen. 


Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, p. 185, May 9, 1903. Preoccupied by Cteno- 
mys robustus Philippi (An. Mus. Nac. Chile, Zool. entr. 13, p. 11, 1896.) 
=Ctenomys osgoodi Allen. Princeton Exped. Patagonia, I11, Mamm., p. 191, 

1905. 


42 CTENOM YS—SICISTA—ZAPUS. 


84149, Skin and skull. Adult male. Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, near 
the Cordilleras, Patagonia. February 20,1897. Collected by O. A. 
Peterson. Original number 485, Catalogued March 15, 1898. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Type designated as No. 84194, an error for 84149. No. 84194 is a specimen of 
C. sericeus. The measurements of No. 84149 agree with thosé given by Dr. J. 


A. Allen as belonging to the type, and the specimen itself bears Dr. Allen’s type 
label. 


Ctenomys sericeus Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, p. 187, May 9, 1903. 


84189. Skin and skull. Adult male, upper Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, 
Cordilleras, Patagonia. February 5, 1897. Collected by O. A. 
Peterson. Original number 331. Catalogued March 16, 1898. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect; last right upper molar 
lost; right external auditory meatus and posterior portion of left bulla slightly 
injured. 

Type designated as No. 84191, which is an error for No. 84189. The measure- 
ments of the skin and skull ascribed by Dr. Allen to the type are those of 
84189, and do not agree with those of 84191, asmaller individual. To indicate 
further that No. 84189 is the type, Dr. Allen has tied to the specimen the 
standard red type label of the American Museum of Natural History, with the 
italicized words crossed out and the words ‘‘U. S. Nat.’’ added, as well as the 
name Clenomys sericeus Allen. 


Family ZAPODID. 
Genus SICISTA. 


Sminthus flavus True. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X VII, No. 1004, p. 341, November 15, 1894. 
=Sicista flava (True). See Allen, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 185, Decem- 
ber 12, 1901. ; 
01409 Skinandskull. Adult male. Central Kashmir, at 11,000 feet. 
5503 i ’ 9 
July 21, 1891. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued May 
9, 1892. 
Skin well preserved, but poorly made up; no wires in legs or tail; skull per- 
fect, except for loss of angular process of left half of mandible and someslight 
damage to the right bulla. 


eine 


Genus ZAPUS. 


Zapus hudsonius alascensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 223, July 15, 1897. 
73584. Skinandskull. Adult male. Yakutat, Alaska. July 5,1895. 
Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 4660. ° 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


mn _ 


ZAPUS. 43 


Zapus hudsonius campestris Preble. Biological Survey collection. 
oD wv 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 15, pp. 20-21, August 8, 1899. 


65872. Skin and skull. Adult male. Bear Lodge Mountains, Wyo- 
ming. June 12,1894. Collected by Dr. B. H. Dutcher, U.S. A. 
Original number 600. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Zapus major Preble. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 15, pp. 24-25, August 8, 1899. 


79983. Skin and skull. Adult female. Warner Mountains, Oregon. 
August 4, 1896. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and V. Bailey. 
Original number 5720. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight perforation 
in palate. 


Zapus princeps minor Preble. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 15, p. 23, August 8, 1899. 


73673. Skin andskull. Adultfemale. Wingard, near Carlton House, 
Saskatchewan, Canada. July 23, 1895. Collected by J. A. Lor- 
ing. Original number 3123. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Zapus trinotatus montanus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 104, April 26, 1897. 
=Zapus montanus (Merriam). See Preble, North Amer. Fauna, No. 15, p. 28, 
August 8, 1899. 
79863. Skin and skull. Adult female. Crater Lake, Mount Mazama, 
Oregon. August 21, 1896 (not August 19, as in original descrip- 
tion). Collected by E. A. Preble. Original number 1388. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Zapus nevadensis Preble. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 15, pp. 25-26, August 8, 1899. 

94185. Skin and skull. Adult female. Ruby Mountains, Nevada. 
June 21, 1898. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 6581. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Zapus princeps oregonus Preble. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 15, p. 24, August 8, 1899. 

78156. Skinand skull. Adult male. Elgin, Blue Mountains, Oregon. 

May 29, 1896. Collected by E. A. Preble. Original number 959. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


44 ZAPUS—HETEROMYS. 


Zapus pacificus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 104, April 26, 1897. 

80445. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Prospect, Rogue River 
Valley, Oregon. August 29, 1896. Collected by E. A. Preble. 
Original number 1454. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Zapus (Napzozapus) insignis roanensis Preble. Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 15, pp. 35-36, August 8, 1899. 

66283. Skin and skull. Adult male. Magnetic City, base of Roan 
Mountain, North Carolina. May 22, 1894. Collected by A. G. 
Wetherby. Original number 5. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Zapus tenellus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 

_ Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 103, April 26, 1897. 

66932. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. Kamloops, British Columbia. 
August 25, 1894. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 
4196. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight perforation 
of brain case. 


Family HETEROMYID2. 
Genus HETEROMYS. 


Heteromys annectens Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 43, March 5, 1902. 

71510. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pluma, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
March 18, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 7674. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of entire 
right upper molariform series. 
Heteromys goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 41-42, March 5, 1902. 

77576. Skin and skull. Adult male. Chicharras, Chiapas, Mexico. 
February 7, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 9244, 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Heteromys griseus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 42, March 5, 1902. 

76062. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mountains near Tonala, Chia- 
pas, Mexico. August 15, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 8339. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


HETEROMYS—LIOMYS. 45 





Heteromys goldmani lepturus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 42, March 5, 1902. 


73382. Skinand skull. Adult male. Mountainsnear Santo Domingo, 
Oaxaca, Mexico. June 20, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 8120. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
zygoma and right upper molariform series. 


Heteromys (Xylomys) nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 48-44, March 5, 1902. 
77920. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pinabete, Chiapas, Mexico. 
February 11, #896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 9281. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus LIOMYS. 


Liomys canus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 44-45, March 5, 1902. 


96259. Skin and skull. Adult male. Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico. 
September 21, 1898. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 13036. ; 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Liomys crispus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 49, March 5, 1902. 


75105. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tonala, Chiapas, Mexico. 
August 7, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 8283. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of jugals. 


Liomys heterothrix Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 50, March 5, 1902. 


90161. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Pedro Sula, Honduras. 
July 16,1897. Collected by J. C. Ingersoll. Original number 
884 x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Liomys pictus isthmius Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XV, p. 46, March 5, 1902. 


73367. Skinandskull. Adult male. Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
April 28, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 7796. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


46 LIOMYS. 


Liomys torridus minor Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XV, p. 45, March 5, 1902. 

70301. Skinandskull. Adult female. Huajuapam, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
November 18, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 7061. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Liomys obscurus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 48, March 5, 1902. 
108563. Skinand skull. Adult female. Carrizal, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
May 12, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 14714. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Liomys orbitalis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 48-49, March 5, 1902. 
65452. Skinand skull. Adult female. Catemaco, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
April 29, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 6129. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of ptery- 
goids and adjoining parts of palate. 


Liomys parviceps Goldman. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 82, March 21, 1904. 


126477. Skin and skull. Adult female. La Salada, Michoacan, Mex- 
ico. March 19, 1903. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 16194. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Liomys phzura Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 48, March 5, 1902. 
71500. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pinotepa, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
February 21, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 7553. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last left 
lower molar. 


Liomys plantinarensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection, 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., SW p. 46, March 5, 1902. 
$3328. Skin and skull. Adult female. Plantinar, Jalisco, Mexico. 
April 4, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 2383. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
jugal. 


LIOMYS. 47 


Liomys pictus rostratus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 46, March 5, 1902. 

71488. Skin and skull. Adult male. Ometepec, Guerrero, Mexico. 
February 14, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 7447. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except slightly broken nasals; 
five upper and three lower cheek teeth missing. 


Liomys crispus setosus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 49, March 5, 1902. 

T7588. Skinand skull. Adult female. Huehuetan, Chiapas, Mexico. 
February 22, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 9364. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken supra- 
occipital; last two lower molars on each side missing. 


Liomys sonorana Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 47, March 5, 1902. 

96252. Skinand skull. Adult male. Alamos, Sonora, Mexico. De- 
cember 19, 1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original number 
13299. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last 
upper molar on each side. 


Liomys texensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 44, March 5, 1902. 

58670. Skin and skull. Adult female. Brownsville, Texas. Feb- 
ruary 19, 1894. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original number 
1672. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Liomys torridus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 45, March 5, 1902. 
69645. Skin and skull. Adult female. Cuicatlan, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
October 14, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 6904, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Liomys verecrucis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 47, March 5, 1902. 

65457. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Andres Tuxtla, Vera 
Cruz, Mexico. May 7, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 6174. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


48 PEROGNATHUS. 


Genus PEROGNATHUS. 


Perognathus penicillatus ammophilus Osgood. _ Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 20-21, February 23, 1907. 
146859. Skin and skull. Adult male. Margarita Island, Lower 
California, Mexico. November 29, 1905. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 18655. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus amplus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, pp. 32-33, pl. 1, fig. 2, September 20, 1900. 
34626 Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Verde, Yavapai County, 
Arizona. June 26, 1892. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original 
number 272. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus penicillatus angustirostris Osgood. Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 47, September 20, 1900. 
73881. Skin and skull. Adult male. Carrizo Creek, Colorado 
Desert, California. March 31, 1895. Collected by A. W. An- 
thony. Original number 22. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus anthonyi Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, pp. 56-57, September 20, 1900. 
81058. Skin and skull. Adult female. South Bay, Cerros Island, 
Lower California, Mexico. July 29, 1896. Collected by A. W. 
Anthony. Original number 71. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
jugal. 


Perognathus panamintimus arenicola Stephens. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 153, June 13, 1900. 

99828. Skinandskull. Adult male. San Felipe Narrows, San Diego 
County, California. April 11, 1892. Collected by F. Stephens. 
Original number 2056 (2622x). 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of angular 
process of left mandibular ramus. 
Perognathus artus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 55, September 20, 1900. 
96298. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. Batopilas, Chihuahua, Mexico. 


October 6, 1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original number 
13090. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


PEROGNATHUS. 49 


Perognathus baileyi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, pp. 262-263, fig. 1, September 27, 1894. 
. Skin and skull. Adult female. Magdalena, Sonora, Mexico. 
ae 8, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 
33. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


one 
S> 53 ai 


Perognathus bimaculatus Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 1, p. 12, October 25, 1889. 


=Perognathus flavus bimaculatus (Merriam). See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, 
No. 18, p. 24, September 20, 1900. 
oy). Skinand skull. Adultmale. Fort Whipple, Yavapai County, 
Arizona. May 21,1865. Collected by Dr. Elliott Coues. ‘* Expls. 
in the Rocky Mts., No. 1499, Dr. Elliott Coues, U. S. A.” Skin 
catalogued February 12, 1866; skull, July 8, 1889. 
Fairly well-made skin in good condition. It was probably first made up with 
the skullinside, which has since been taken out. But little of the skull is present. 


Most of lower jaw, rostrum and upper incisors, each of the upper tooth rows in 
a separate piece, and parts of the parietals are present. 


Perognathus bombycinus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 19-20, February 23, 1907. 


136123. Skin and skull. Adult male. Yuma, Arizona. March 18, 
1905. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original number 16844. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
jugal and injury to right audital bulla. 


Perognathus callistus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 28, September 20, 1900. 


88245. Skinand skull. Youngadult male. Kinney Ranch, near Bit- 
ter Creek, Sweetwater County, Wyoming. May 14, 1897.  Col- 
lected by J. A. Loring. Original number 4122. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus (Chztodipus) intermedius canescens Merriam. 
Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, pp. 267-268, September 27, 1894. 
—Perognathus nelsoni canescens (Merriam). See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, 
No. 18, p. 54, September 20, 1900. 


51016. Skinandskull. Youngadult male. Jaral, Coahuila, Mexico. 
January 14, 1893. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 
2557. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
45336—08——4 


50 PEROGNATHUS. 


Perognathus columbianus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, pp. 263-264, fig. 2, September 27, 1894. 
=Perognathus lordi columbianus (Merriam). See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, 

No. 18, p. 40, September 20, 1900. 
#373). Skin and skull. Young adult male. Pasco, Washington. 
May 9, 1891. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 768. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Perognathus californicus dispar Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, pp. 58-59, September 20, 1900. 


#3458. Skin and skull. Adult male. Carpenteria, Santa Barbara 
County, California. December 19, 1891. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson. Original number 1655. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Perognathus (Chztodipus) eremicus Mearns. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X, p. 300, August 31, 1898. 
=Perognathus penicillatus eremicus (Mearns). See Osgood, North Amer. 
Fauna, No. 18, p. 48, September 20, 1900. 
z4037- Okinand skull. Adultfemale. Fort Hancock, El PasoCounty, 
Texas. June 27, 1893. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. 
Original number 2380. Catalogued July 29, 1893. 
Well-made skin in good condition, but the tail has a break in both proximal 
and distal portions. Skull nearly perfect ; a piece out of supraoccipital ; right 
malar lacking. 


Perognathus fallax Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 1, p. 19, October 25, 1889. 

53¢8%- Skin and skull. Adult male. San Bernardino, California. 
**Reche Canyon, 3 miles southeast of Colton, San Bernardino 
County.” (Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 55.) April 
21, 1887. Collected by F. Stephens. Original number 424. Cat- 
alogued June 17, 1887. 

Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Perognathus flavus Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 332, this paper was favorably reported for 
publication April 24, 1855. 
fis). Fragment of skull (skin lost). El Paso, Texas. 1851. Col- 
lected by J. H. Clark. United States and Mexican Boundary Sur- 
vey. Catalogued May 19, 1853. 
The skull, No. 1130, is represented by the anterior part of the rostrum only. 


The skin can not be found. 
Type not designated by number. Baird says, ‘‘ Collected at El Paso by J. H. 
Clark.’’ By referring to Mammals of North America, p. 425, it is seen that 7455 


is the specimen he must have had in mind, and is consequently the type. 


PEROGNATHUS. 51 


Perognathus fuliginosus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, p. 74, September 4, 1890. 
=Perognathus flavus fuliginosus (Merriam). See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, 
No. 18, p. 25, September 20, 1900. 

49798. Skinand skull. Immature male. Cedar belt, northeast of San 
Fi ‘ancisco Mountain, Arizona. October 4, 1889. Collected by V. 
Bailey. Original number 559. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly complete, but consisting of 
three separate sections; interparietal missing. 
Perognathus merriami gilvus Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, pp. 22-23, September 20, 1900. 
$5939 Skinand skull. Adult male. Eddy (=Carlsbad), New Mexico. 
September 18,1892. Collected by Dr. B. H. Dutcher, U.S. A. 
Original number 329. 


Well-made skin with right hind leg missing; otherwise in good condition; 
skull perfect. 


Perognathus goldmani Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, pp. 54-55, September 20, 1900. 
96673. Skin and skull. Adult female. Sinaloa, Sinaloa, Mexico. 
February 15, 1899. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original num- 
ber 13428. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus hispidus Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 421, 1857. 

sis; Skin and skull. Adult female. Charco Escondido, Tamauli- 
pas, Mexico. 1853. Collected by Lieut. D. N. Couch, U.S. A. 
Catalogued March 15, 1855. 

Badly-made skin with bare patches on the right flank and on the back. Tail 
never skinned out and tip gone. Skull in bad condition. All the upper teeth 
lacking; pterygoid region broken, both zygomata lacking; a large hole in the 
middle of the cranium. Lower jaw almost perfect. This skull apparently con- 
sists of sections of two different specimens glued together. (See Osgood, North 
Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 43, September 20, 1900. ) 

No type designated, but the description is clearly based upon No. 577. 

Perognathus inornatus Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 1, p. 15, October 25, 1889. 

=Perognathus longimembris (Coues). See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, 
p. 33, September 20, 1900. 
94. Tn alcohol, with skull removed. Young adult male. Fresno, 
California. Collected by Gustay Eisen. Alcoholic catalogued 
February 6, 1882; skull, July 3, 1889. 

Specimen generally well preserved, but the color looks changed; some hair 
has slipped from the left side. Exoccipitals of skull missing and the right 


bulla damaged; right half of mandible practically perfect; left half broken in 
two pieces. 


52 PEROGNATHUS. 


Otognosis longimembris Coues. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1875, p. 305, August 31, 1875. 
=Perognathus longimembris (Coues). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 1, 
p- 18, October 25, 1889. 
gives. In alcohol, withskull removed. Female, Fort Tejon, Cafiada 
de las Uvas, Kern County, California. Collected by John Xantus. 
Alcoholic catalogued January, 1872; skull, April 4, 1898. 


Alcoholic in poor condition; it has the appearance of having been completely 
dried at one time. The skull lacks the right malar. There is a large hole in 
the right audital bulla and a small one in the left bulla; otherwise it is perfect. 

The specimen upon which Coues’s provisional O. longimembris is based is des- 
ignated by number. 


Perognathus spinatus magdalene Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 21, February 23, 1907. 

146102. Skin and skull. Adult female. Magdalena Island, Lower 
California, Mexico. November 25, 1905. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 18633. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken zygomata. 


Perognathus parvus magruderensis Osgood. Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 38, September 20, 1900. 


#3427. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Magruder, Nevada. 
June 6, 1891. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 2899 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus apache melanotis Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 27, September 20, 1900. 
97416. Skin and skull. Adult female. Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, 
‘Mexico. May 21, 1899. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original 
number 13750. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except for slight perforation 
in right audital bulla. 


Perognathus flavus mexicanus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, pp. 265-266, fig. 5, September 27, 1894. 

50714. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Tlalpam, Federal Dis- 
trict, Mexico. December 4, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 3978. . 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Perognathus monticola Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 422, 1857. 


— Perognathus parvus (Peale). See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 34, 
September 20, 1900. 


PEROGNATHUS. 53 


#3. Mounted skinand skull. Adult female. ‘*W. of Rocky Mts.” 
(Mus. Cat.) 1853. Collected by Dr. George Suckley. Catalogued 
January 31, 1855. In regard to the locality, the following is 
quoted from Osgood, op. cét., p. 36: ‘*It is also not improbable 
that the type of Baird’s ‘monticola’ was also taken at The Dalles 
[Oregon]. Baird’s queried statement that it came from St. Mary’s 
Mission, Mont., is rendered much more doubtful by the unsue- 
cessful efforts of recent collectors to obtain additional specimens 
from that locality. Dr. Suckley, who collected this type, stopped 
for some time at The Dalles and may have obtained it there.’ 


The skin is badly mounted and in poor condition. It is much bleached and 
the ears are more or less broken, and on the posterior parts of body are two large 
areas without hair. The skull is in better condition, but upper incisors are 
broken off to the alveoli; the posterior parts of the zygomata, left audital bulla, 
and parts about the foramen magnum are broken; lower jaw almost perfect. 

Baird had but one specimen, designated by number. 


Perognathus (Chztodipus) nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, p. 266, fig. 6, September 27, 1894. 
50214. Skin and skull. Old female. Hacienda La Parada, San Luis 
Potosi, Mexico. August 19, 1892. - Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 3207. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus nevadensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, p. 264, fig. 3, September 27, 1894. 

54828. Skinand skull. Adult male. Halleck, Nevada. July 4, 1893. 
Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 4070. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus californicus ochrus Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 128, June 9, 1904. 
130348. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Santiago Springs, 16 
miles southwest of McKittrick, Kern County, California. July 30, 
1903. Collected by L. J. Goldman. Original number 728. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken zygomata. 


Perognathus pacificus Mearns. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X, p. 299, August 31, 1898. 

61022. Skinand skull. Adult female. Edge of Pacific Ocean, at the 
last Mexican boundary monument, No. 258, San Diego County, 
California. July 12,1894. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. 
Original number 3787. International Boundary Commission. 
Catalogued November 17, 184. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


54 PEROGNATHUS. 


Perognathus fallax pallidus Mearns. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 135, August 9, 1901. 


61007. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mountain Spring, halfway 
up the east slope of the Coast Range Mountains near the Mexican 
boundary line, in San Diego County, California. May 16, 1894. 
Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 3520. 
International Boundary Commission. Catalogued November 17, 
S94. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except angular processes of 
mandible slightly chipped. 


Perognathus longimembris panamintinus Merriam. 
Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, p. 265, fig. 4, September 27, 1894. 


Bilin 


=Perognathus panamintinus (Merriam). See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, No. 
18, p. 28, September 20, 1900. 


244$}. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Perognathus Flat, Emi- 
grant Gap, Panamint Mountains, California. April 16,1891. Col- 
lected by V. Bailey. Original number 2675. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Cricetodipus parvus Peale. See page 289. 


Perognathus penecillatus Woodhouse. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 200. Presented at meeting of December 28, 
1852. 
—=Perognathus penicillatus Woodhouse. See Woodhouse, Rep. Exped. Zuni and 
Colorado Rivers, by Capt. L. Sitgreaves, p. 49, pl. 3, 1853. 


ofi°;. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Francisco Mountain, Ari- 


zona. (Probably a few miles to the northeast. See Osgood, North 
Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 45, footnote, September 20, 1900.) 1851. 
Collected by Dr. S. W. Woodhouse on an expedition in command 
of Capt. L. Sitgreave _U.S. A. Skin catalogued April 10, 1857; 
skull, June 4, 1898. 


Skin formerly mounted, fairly well made up, but badly preserved. The hair 
looks worn and bleached and there are a couple of bare spots on the specimen. 
The tail has never been skinned out. Skull in fair condition; both zygomata 
are injured, especially the left, and there are more or less extensive openings in 
the orbital walls. Lower jaw perfect, except some chipping from the angular 
processes. 

Type not designated by number. The original description speaks of a single 
specimen, a male, from San Francisco Mountain, and by referring to Baird’s 
Mammals of North America, p. 419, No. 2676 is seen to be this specimen. It 
should be observed that the measurements given by Baird do not agree well 
with those given by Dr. Woodhouse. 


PEROGNATHUS—MICRODIPODOPS. 55 


Perognathus flavescens perniger Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 127-128, June 9, 1904. 
57725. Skin and skull. Young female. Vermilion, South Dakota. 
August 22, 1889. Collected by G. S. Agersborg. 
Skin in fair condition; abdominal incision not sewed up; skull perfect, except 
for broken zygomata. 


Perognathus pernix rostratus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 51, pl. 1, fig. 8, September 20, 1900. 
95818. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Camoa, Rio Mayo, 
Sonora, Mexico. October 28,1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 13167. 


WelJ-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus penicillatus siccus Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 20, February 23, 1907. 

146890. Skin and skull. Adult male. Ceralbo Island, Lower Cali- 

fornia, Mexico. February 13, 1906. Collected by E. W. Nelson 
and E. A. Goldman. Original number 19131. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus (Chztodipus) stephensi Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, p. 267, fig. 7, September 27, 1894. 


{. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mesquite Valley, northwest 
arm of Death Valley, California. April 6, 1891. Collected by 
F. Stephens. Original number 25s. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perognathus hispidus zacatecz Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, p. 45, September 20, 1900. 

91877. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Valparaiso, Zacatecas, 
Mexico. December 16, 1897. Collected by E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 11968. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus MICRODIPODOPS. 
Microdipodops californicus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 128, July 19, 1901. 

101227. Skinand skull. Young adult male. Sierra Valley, near Vin- 
ton, Plumas County, California. August 7, 1900. Collected by 
Dr. W. K. Fisher. Original number 1596. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight injury to 
lower lip of foramen magnum. 


56 MICRODIPODOPS—DIPODOMYS. 


Microdipodops megacephalus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 116-117, July 30,1891. 


244123. Skinand skull. Adult male. Halleck, Elko County, Nevada. 
October 23, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 2005, 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except for a few perforations 

in right mastoid bulla and broken left zygoma. 


Microdipodops megacephalus oregonus Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 127, July 19, 1901. 


80128. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Lake Alvord, Oregon. 
August 18, 1896. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 
5430. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microdipodops pallidus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 127-128, July 19, 1901. 


93520. Skin and skull. Adult female. Ten miles east of Stillwater, 
Nevada. May 11, 1898. Collected by H. C. Oberholser. Origi- 
nal number 101. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus DIPODOMYS. 


Dipodomys ambiguus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North. Amer. Fauna, No. 4, pp. 42-45, October 8, 1890. 
=Dipodomys merriami ambiguus (Merriam). See Merriam, Science, new ser., 
VII, p. 31, January 7, 1898. 
43147, Skinandskull. Adultmale. El Paso, Texas. December 13, 
1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 782. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Dipodomys merriami atronasus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 113, June 21, 1894. 


50276. Skin and skull. Adult male. Hacienda La Parada, San Luis 
Potosi, Mexico. August 20, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 3229. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacking right audital bulla, basi- 
occipital, and adjacent parts of brain case; zygomata broken. 


Dipodomys californicus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 49, October 8, 1890. 
£8618. Skin and skull. Adult male. Ukiah, California. May 4, 
1889. Collected by Dr. T..S. Palmer. Original number 46. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


DIPODOMYS. 57 


Dipodomys compactus True. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XI, No. 559, p. 160, January 5, 1889. 


68. Skin only (skull lost). Adult female. Padre Island, Texas. 
April 3, 1888. Purchased from C. K. Worthen. Catalogued Au- 
gust 13, 1891. 

Skin rather carelessly made up. Some epidermis has slipped from about the 
nose. A sewed-up cut along the throat looks as if the specimen had been made 
up with a skull inside and that the latter had afterwards been removed. This 
skull can not be found at present. 

Type not designated. The description was based upon one specimen only. 
The data, including three measurements of the above specimen, agree in every 
respect with those given in the original description. 


Dipodomys spectabilis cratodon Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 75, July 22, 1907. 

78953. Skin and skull. Adult male. Chicalote, Aguas Calientes, 
Mexico. July 2, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 9734. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Dipodomys deserti Stephens. ; 
Amer. Nat., X XI, p. 42, pl. 5, January, 1887. 
$628. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mohave River, California. 
June 29, 1886. Collected by F. Stephens. Original number 314. 
Catalogued December 29, 1886. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Type designated by the original number. 


Dipodomys elator Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 109-110, June 21, 1894. 
64802. Skin and skull. Adult male. Henrietta, Texas. April 13, 
1894. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original number 1804. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Dipodomys merriami exilis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 113, June 21, 1894. 
34843. Skinandskull. Youngadultmale. Fresno, California. Sep- 
tember 23, 1891. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 3277. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Dipodomys insularis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 77, July 22, 1907. 
79053. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Jose Island, Lower Cali- 
fornia, Mexico. August 6, 1895. Collected by J. E. McLellan. 
Original number 1457. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except broken tips of nasals. 


58 DIPODOMYS. 


Dipodomys merriami kernensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 77-78, July 22, 1907. 

108884. Skin and skull. Adult male. Onyx, west end of Walker 
Pass, Kern County, California. July 25, 1901. Collected by 
Dr. W. K. Fisher. Original number 2106. 

Well-made skin in good condition, except for a small bare spot in middle of 
back; skull perfect. 


Dipodomys margaritze Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 76-77, July 22, 1907. 

146058. Skinand skull. Youngadult male. Margarita Island, Lower 
California, Mexico. December 1, 1905. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 18711. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Dipodomys mitchelli Mearns. 
Proc. U. §. Nat. Mus., XLX, No. 1121, p. 719, July 30, 1897. 

63188. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tiburon Island, Gulf of Cali- 
fornia. December 23, 1895. Collected by J. W. Mitchell. Origi- 
nal number 8. Catalogued March 16, 1896. 


Well-made skin in good condition; tail has never been skinned out, but is 
braced with wire. Skull lacks both malars; part of the left bulla is broken in 
two. Angular, coronoid, and comdyloid processes of mandible more or less 
broken. 


Dipodomys nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Bio]. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 75-76, July 22, 1907. 
79439. Skin and skull. Adult male. La Ventura, Coahuila, Mexico. 
August 10, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 9998. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Dipodomys merriami nevadensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 111-112, June 21, 1894. 

54552. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pyramid Lake, Nevada. 

June 26, 1893. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 3990. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Dipodomys merriami nitratoides Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 112-113, June 21, 1894. 

54674. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tipton, Tulare County, Cali- 
fornia. June 25, 1893. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original 
number 2978. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last two 
upper molars and broken right mastoid bulla. 


DIPODOMYS—PERODIPUS. 59 


Dipodomys merriami nitratus Merriam. — Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 112, June 21, 1894. 

2§358, Skin and skull. Adult male. Keeler, Inyo County, Califor- 
nia. December 29, 1890. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original 
number 160. , 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Dipodomys ornatus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 110-111, June 21, 1894. 

57990. Skin and skull. Adult female. Berriozabal, Zacatecas, Mex- 
ico. December 29, 1893. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original 
number 5613. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for fractures of mas- 
toid bullze and left audital bulla and absence of last left lower molar. 


Dipodomys perotensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 111, June 21, 1894. 

54285. Skin and skull. Adult female. Perote, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
May 21, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
4840. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with right zygoma and lachrymal 
shelf missing; right mastoid bulla and left audital bulla slightly broken. 


Dipodomys platycephalus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 76, July 22, 1907. 

139882. Skin and skull. Adult male. Calmalli, Lower California, 
Mexico. October 1, 1905. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 18248. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken angular 
prucesses of mandible. 


Dipodomys spectabilis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, pp. 46-48, October 8, 1890. 
bi886) Skin and skull. Adult male. Dos Cabezos, Cochise County, 
Arizona. November 22,1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original 
number 695. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus PERODIPUS. 


Perodipus cabezonez Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 144-145, July 14, 1904. 
54055. Skin and skull. Adult female. Cabezon, Colorado Desert, 
California. May 31,1893. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original 
number 2859. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight perforation 
of right audital bulla. 


60 PERODIPUS. 


Perodipus ordi columbianus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., p. 115, June 21, 1894. 

$o4- Skin and skull. Adult female. Umatilla, Oregon. October 
18, 1890. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 386. 


Well-made skin in good condifion; skull perfect. 


Perodipus goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 143, July 14, 1904. 

118924. Skin and skull. Adult male. Salinas, Monterey County, 
California. September 4, 1902. Collected by L. J. Goldman. 
Original number 431. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right audital 
bulla. 


Perodipus ingens Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 141-142, July 14, 1904. 

128805. Skin and skull. Adult male. Painted Rock, 20 miles south- 
east of Simmler, Carrizo Plain, San Luis Obispo County, Califor- 
nia. August 6, 1903. Collected by L. J. Goldman. Original 
number 777. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perodipus microps levipes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 145, July 14, 1904. 


$i44¢. Skinand skull. Adult male. Perognathus Flat, Emigrant 
Gap, Panamint Mountains, California. April 16,1891. Collected 


by V. Bailey. Original number 2668. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Dipodops longipes Merriam Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 71-73, September 4, 1890. 
= Perodipus longipes (Merriam). See Allen, Abstract Proc. Linn. Soc. N. Y., 
1893-94, p. 29, July 20, 1894. 

733%. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Echo Cliffs, Painted 
Desert, Arizona. September 22, 1889. Collected by Dr. C. Hart 
Merriam. Original number 512. 

Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect, except for absence of basi- 
occipital and supraoccipital; mastoid bullee fractured. 


Perodipus microps Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 145, July 14, 1904. 
$3434. Skin and skull. Adult male. Lone Pine, Owens Valley, 


i 
Inyo County, California. December 22, 1890. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson. Original number 138. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight break in right 
mastoid bulla. 


PERODIPUS. 61 


Dipodomys montanus Baird. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 334, this paper reported favorably for publi- 
cation, April 24, 1855. 


= Perodipus montanus (Baird). See Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 
140-141, July 14, 1904. 
js. Skin and skull. Collected on Pacitic Railroad Survey, near 
38° lat., under Lieut. E. G. Beckwith, U.S. A., by Mr. Kreutz- 
feld in 1853. It was taken in the Rio Grande Valley, near Fort 
Massachusetts, then in New Mexico, at lat. 37° 32’, long. 105° 23’, 
now near the present town of Garland, Costilla County, Colorado. 
Catalogued February 16, 1855. 
Skin badly made up, but well-preserved ; skull with most of the posterior 
portions of the brain-case broken away ; angular processes of mandible chipped. 


Type not designated by number in the original description, but in Baird’s 
Mammals of North America, page 412, a footnote speaks of No. 490 as the type. 


Perodipus morroensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 78-79, July 22, 1907. 

$4526 Skin and skull. Adult female. Morro, San Luis Obispo 
County, California. November 11,1891. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson. Original number 1464. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perodipus panamintinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 114, June 21, 1894. 


e366 Skin and skull. Adult male. Head of Willow Creek, Pana- 
mint Mountains, California. May 12, 1891. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson. Original number 853. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perodipus simulans peninsularis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 79, July 22, 1907. 


139872. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Santo Domingo, Lower 
California, Mexico. September 27, 1905. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 18215. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of 
lachrymals. 


Perodipus perplexus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 79, July 22, 1907. 


#4334. Skin and skull. Adult male. Walker Basin, Kern County, 


California. July 15, 1891. Collected by V. Bailey. Original 
number 3053. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except broken lower incisors 
and slight injuries to palate and basioccipital. 


62 PERODIPUS—THOMOMYS. 


Perodipus streatori simulans Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., p. 144, July 14, 1904. 
$3404. Skin and skull. Adult female. Duizura, San Diego County, 
California. November 24, 1891. Collected by C. H. Marsh. 
Original number 255. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right audital 
bulla and supraoccipital. 


Perodipus streatori Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 113-114, June 21, 1894. 
64310. Skin and skull. Adult female. Carbondale, Amador County, 
California. April 3, 1894. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original 
number 3673. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly broken 
right mastoid bulla. 


Perodipus agilis tularensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 143, July 14, 1904. 
127158. Skin and skull. Adult female. Alila, Tulare County, Cali- 
fornia. June 23, 1903. Collected by L. J. Goldman. Original 
number 563. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of 
lachrymals. 


Perodipus montanus utahensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 143-144, July 14, 1904. 

55115. Skin and skull. Adult male. Ogden, Utah. July 15, 1893. 
Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 4085. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Perodipus venustus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 142, July 14, 1904. 
51852. Skinandskull. Adult male. Santa Cruz, California. March 
12, 1893. Collected by G. B. Badger. Original number 46. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly injured 
palate and pterygoid, and absence of right lachrymal. 
Family GEOMYID®. 
Genus THOMOMYS. 


Thomomys talpoides agrestis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X XI, p. 144, June 9, 1908. 
150725. Skin and skull. Adult female. Medano Ranch, San Luis 
Valley, Colorado. October 29, 1907. Collected by M. Cary. 
Original number 1205. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


THOMOMYS. 63 


Thomomys alpinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 216, July 15, 1897. 
39528. Skinandskull. Adult male. Big Cottonwood Meadows, near 
Mount Whitney, California. Altitude 10,000 feet. August 6, 
1891. Collected by Dr. B. H. Dutcher, U.S. A. Original num- 
ber 167. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a perforation in 
the supraoccipital. 


Thomomys angularis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XI, p. 214, July 15, 1897. 
58123. Skin and skull. Adult male. Los Banos, Merced County, 
California. January 1, 1894. Collected by J. E. McLellan. 
Original number 418. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomysalpinus awahnee Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X XI, pp. 146-147, June 9, 1908. 

133076. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. Yosemite Valley, California. 

rie 14, 1904. Collected by N. Hollister. Original number 870. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last 
left upper molar. 


Thomomys baileyi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 109, July 19, 1901. 

48255, Skin and skull. Adult female. Sierra Blanca, Texas. De- 
cember 28, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 870. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Thomomys bridgeri Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 113-114, July 19, 1901. 
$8858. Skinandskull. Adultmale. Fort Bridger, Wyoming. May 
27, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 1207. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


one 


Thomomys cabezonz Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 110, July 19, 1901. 

53987. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cabezon, San Gorgonio Pass, 
California. June 3, 1898. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original 
number 2906. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Thomomys clusius Coues. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1875, p. 188, June 15, 1875. 


geen. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bridger Pass, Sweetwater 
County, Wyoming. July 28, 1857.. Collected by Dr. W. A. Ham- 


64 THOMOMYS. 


mond, U.S.A. Originalnumber 88. ‘* Wagon Road to Bridger’s 
Pass, Rocky Mountain,” Lieut. F. T. Bryan, U.S. A. Skin cata- 
logued October 6, 1857; skull, January 5, 1894. 

Well-made skin in good condition. It has evidently been recently made over 
and the skull removed, probably in 1894. The skull has the posterior and 
basal portions of the cranium broken away; the left malar is missing and the 
upper incisors broken off to the alveoli. Both coronoid processes of mandible 
and the left angular process broken. 


Thomomys fuscus fisheri Merriam. — Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 111-112, July 19, 1901. 


101238. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Beckwith, Sierra Val- 
ley, Plumas County, California. August 3, 1900. Collected by . 
Dr. W. K. Fisher. Original number 1547. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
jugal. 


Geomys fulvus Woodhouse. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 201. Presented at meeting of December 28, 
1852. 
_=Thomomys fulvus (Woodhouse). See Baird, Mammals of North America, p. 402, 
1857. 

2674. Mounted skin with no skull. San Francisco Mountain, Ari- 
zona. 1851. Collected by Dr. 8. W. Woodhouse on expedition 
under command of Capt. L. Sitgreaves, U.S. A. Catalogued May, 
1Sote 

Specimen in good shape and condition, especially considering its age and the 
time when it was mounted. It is probably much faded. 

Type not designated by number. Woodhouse speaks of but one specimen, 
giving close measurements, and reference to Baird’s Mammals of North America 
shows the above specimen to be the basis of the description. 


Thomomys clusius fuscus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 69-70, July 30, 1891. 


267. Skin and skull. Adult female. Head of Big Lost River, 
Idaho. September 23, 1890. Collected by Dr. B. H. Dutcher, 
U.S. A. Original number 1847. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for badly broken 
zygomata. 


24 
31 


Thomomys goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 108-109, July 19, 1901. 

58075. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mapimi, Durango, Mexico. 
December 15, 1893. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original 
number 240. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


THOMOMYS. 65 


Thomomys hesperus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 116, July 19, 1901. 


69825. Skinandskull. Adult female. Tillamook, Oregon. Novem- 

ber 9,1894. Collected by J. E. McLellan. Original number 1189. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
upper premolar. 


Thomomys idahoensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 114, July 19, 1901. 


482. Skinandskull. Adult male. Birch Creek, Idaho. August 8, 
1890. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 129. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys fulvus intermedius Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1121, p. 719, July 30, 1897. 


434. Skin and skull. Adult male. Aspen and spruce zone at the 
summit of the Huachuca Mountains, Arizona. Altitude 9,000 feet. 
September 6, 1893. Collected by F. X. Holzner. International 
Boundary Commission. Original number 1013. Catalogued No- 
vember 2, 1893. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacking most of the left zygoma, 
otherwise perfect. 


21 
36 


Thomomys aureus lachuguilla Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 120, June 2, 1902. 


110336. Skinand skull. Adult male. Foothills near El Paso, Texas. 
September 24, 1901. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 
7858. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys laticeps Baird. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 335, this paper was reported favorably for 


publication April 24, 1855. 
fsi’s- Skin and skull. Humboldt Bay, California. Collected by 
Lieut. W. P. Trowbridge, U. S. A. Catalogued February 21, 
1855. 


Badly made skin in rather poor condition; legs sprawling, tail not skinned out. 
A naked patch on left side. It has the appearance of once having been in alco- 
hol. Skull much damaged, but lower jaw almost perfect. Rostral and tooth- 
bearing portions above complete, but the teeth on right side are all broken off. 
Fragments of cranial bones present and adherent to dried-up brain. 

Type not designated by number in the original description, but in Mammals 
of North America it is seen that Baird had but one specimen referred to by 
number. 


45336—05 5 





66° THOMOMYS. 


Thomomys latirostris Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 107, July 19, 1901. 


33293. Skin and skull. Adult male. Little Colorado River, Painted 
Desert, Arizona. September 22, 1899. Collected by V. Bailey. 
Original number 504. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys leucodon Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 215, July 15, 1897. 


$2034. Skin and skull. Adult male. Grants Pass, Rogue River 
Valley, Oregon. December 17, 1891. Collected by C. P. Streator. 
Original number 1394. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys limosus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 116, July 19, 1901. 


89724. Skin and skull. Adult male. White Salmon, gorge of the 
Columbia River, Washington. June 26, 1897. Collected by J. A. 
Loring. Original number 4382. 

Well-made skin with hairs of underparts somewhat matted and soiled; tip 
of tail slightly injured; skull perfect. 


Thomomys mazama Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 214, July 15, 1897. 


80502. Skin and skull. Adult male. Anna Creek, Crater Lake, 
Mount Mazama, Oregon. September 3, 1896. Collected by E. A. 
Preble. Original number 1485. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys melanops Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 21, January 31, 1899. 


90630. Skin and skull. Adult female. Timber line at head of Sole- 
duck River, Olympic Mountains, Washington. August 28, 1897. 
Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 6219. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys mewa Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X XI, p. 146, June 9, 1908. 


133183. Skin and skull. Adult male. Raymond, Madera County, 
California. June 28, 1904. Collected by N. Hollister. Original 
number 908. 


Well-made skin ir. good condition; skull perfect. 


THOMOMYS. 67 


Thomomys myops Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XIV, p. 112, July 19, 1901. 
91066. Skin and skull. Adult female. Conconully, east base Cas- 
cade Mountains, Washington. September 11, 1897. Collected by 
J. A. Loring. Original number 4650. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys nasicus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 216, July 15, 1897. 
79815. Skin and skull. Adult male. Farewell Bend, Des Chutes 
River, Oregon. August 4, 1896. Collected by E. A. Preble. 
Original number 1274. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys leucodon navus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 112, July 19, 1901. 

57791. Skinand skull. Adult male. Red Bluff, California. Decem- 
ber 26, 1893. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 
3462. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of two y 
upper and one lower cheek teeth. 
Thomomys nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 109-110, July 19, 1901. 

96451. Skin and skull. Adult female. Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico. 
September 18, 1898. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 13035, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys nevadensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 213, July 15, 1897. 

$3991 Skin and skull. Young adult male. Austin, Nevada. No- 

vember 11,1890. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 2097. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys niger Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 117, July 19, 1901. 
69407. Skin and skull. Adult male. Seaton, Oregon. October 6, 
1894. Collected by J. E. McLellan. Original number 1147. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken basi- 
occipital and left audital bulla. 
Thomomys clusius ocius Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 114, July 19, 1901. 


$3882. Skin and skull. Adult male.- Fort Bridger, Wyoming. 
May 24, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 1194. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


68 THOMOMYS, 


Thomomys operarius Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 215-216, July 15, 1897. 

25054 Skin and skull. Adult male. Keeler, Inyo County, Cali- 
fornia. November 29,1890. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Origi- 
nal number 1. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken crown of 
last left lower molar. 
fhomomys douglasi oregonus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 115, July 19, 1901. 
56939. Skinand skull. Adult male. Oregon City, Oregon. October 
24, 1893. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 3340. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Thomomys orizabe Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, p. 145, December 29, 1893. 

53616. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Orizaba, Puebla, 
Mexico. Altitude 9,500 feet. April 25, 1893. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson. Original fame: 4744. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Thomomys angularis pascalis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 111, July 19, 1901. 
(28. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fresno, California. March 4, 
1892 (not May 4, 1892, as in original description). Collected by C. 
P. Streator. Original number 1634. 


2 


“1-3 
— 


32 
44" 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Thomomys perditus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 108, July 19, 1901. 

25605. Skinandskull. Adult male. Lampazos, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. 
January 22,1891. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original num- 
ber 512. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right lower 
incisor. 
Thomomys peregrinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, p. 146, December 29, 1895. 

50130. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Salazar, Mexico, 
Mexico. October 24, 1892 (not October 23, 1892, as in original 
description). Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 3668. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Thomomys aureus perpes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 111, July 19, 1901. 

25991. Skin and skull. Adult male. Lone Pine, Owens Valley, 
California. December 23, 1890. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 145. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


THOMOMYS. 69 


Thomomys aureus pervagus Merriam. , Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 110-111, July 19, 1901. 

58293. Skin and skull.- Adult male. Espanola, New Mexico. Jan- 

uary 4, 1894. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original number 1548. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys monticola pinetorum Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 16, p. 97, October 28, 1899. 
95152. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sisson, California. September 
4, 1898. Collected by R. T. Fisher. Original number 173. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
jugal and injury to left audital bulla. 


Thomomys pygmeus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 115, July 19, 1901. 
55271. Skinand skull. Adult male. Montpelier Creek, Idaho. July 
29, 1893. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 4150. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys quadratus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 214-215, July 15, 1897. 

57134. Skin and skull. Adult male. The Dalles, Oregon. Novem- 

ber 2, 1893. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 3359. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys sinaloz Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 108, July 19, 1901. 

96745. Skinand skull. Adult male. Altata, Sinaloa, Mexico. March 
28, 1899. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original number 13607. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
upper molariform series. 


Thomomys fulvus texensis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 119-120, June 2, 1902. 
$7244. Skin and skull. Adult male. Head of Limpia Creek, Davis 
Mountains, Texas. Altitude 5,500 feet. January 7, 1890.  Col- 
lected by V. Bailey. Original number 876. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Thomomys uinta Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 112-113, July 19, 1901. 

624. Skin and skull. Adult male. Uinta Mountains, Utah. Alti- 
tude 10,000 feet. June 6, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. Origi- 
nal number 1262. 


2 
0 


2 
3 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


70 THOMOMYS—GEOMYS. 


Thomomys douglasi yelmensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 21, January 31, 1899. 


$4216) Skin and skull. Adult male. Tenino, Yelm Prairie, Wash- 
ington. October 24,1891. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original 


number 1385. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus GEOMYS. 


Geomys arenarius Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 113, 139-141, pl. 9, fig. 1; pl. 13, fig. 18, January 
31, 1895. 
$8117, Skin and skull. Adult male. El Paso, Texas. December 14, 
1889 (not December 13, 1889, as in original description). Collected 
by V. Bailey. Original number 798. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Geomys breviceps attwateri Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 118, 135-137, pl. 9, fig. 3, January 31, 1895. 

51382. Skin and skull. Adult male. Rockport, Texas. November 
18, 1892. Collected by H. H. Keays. Original number 36. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Geomys breviceps Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 835, reported favorably for publication April 

24, 1855. 

fiis’s. Skinandskull. Adult female. Prairie Mer Rouge, Louisiana. 
1138 =? 
1852. Collected by James Fairie. Skin catalogued May 19, 1853; 
skull May 25, 1853. 

Skin well preserved. It has somewhat the appearance of having been in alco- 
hol at one time; rather badly made up. Skull has a large triangular opening in 
brain case on the right side, involving basal and posterior parts. Mandible 
with left coronoid process broken and the right and left last lower molars lost. 

Type not designated by number, but close measurements are given in the 
original description, which apply to No. 156 only, in the tables given in Baird’s 
Mammals of North America, pages 379 and 380. 

Geomys personatus fallax Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 113, 144-145, pl. 12, fig. 3, January 31, 1895. 
$2031. Skin and skull. Adult male. South side of Nueces Bay, 
Texas. November 30, 1891. Collected by W. Lloyd. Original 

number 949, 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 

Geomys breviceps llanensis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, pp. 129-130, October 24, 1905. 

97086. Skin and skull. Adult male. Llano, Texas. May 15, 1899. 
Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 6912. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


GEOMYS—PAPPOGEOMYS. el 


Geomys bursarius lutescens Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 51, October 8, 1890. 


=Geomys lutescens (Merriam). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, p. 127, 
January 31, 1895. 


- 
‘ 


$§Sa7. Skinand skull. Adult male (not female, as in original descrip- 
tion). Sandhills near Birdwood Creek, Lincoln County, Nebraska. 
May 27,1889. Collected by A. B. Baker. Original number 11. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of one 
upper molar. 


tot 


Geomys tuza mobilensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 113, 119-120, numerous pls. and figs., January 
31; 1895. 
§$3. Skinand skull. Adult male. Mobile Bay, Alabama. April 
26, 1892. Collected by R. J. Thompson. Original number 50. 
. Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
upper and lower molariform series and last left lower molar. 


Geomys personatus True. Cotypes. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XI, No. 699, p. 159, January 5, 1889. 
$7. Skin and skull. Adult male. 

68 Skin and skull. Adult female. 

Padre Island, Cameron County, Texas. April 11,1888. Pur- 
chased from C. K. Worthen. Skins catalogued August 13, 1891; 
skulls February 21, 1902. 

No type designated. Description based equally upon the above two specimens 
indicated by numbers. Well-made skins in good condition. They originally 
had skulls inside, which were taken out in February, 1902. Skulls in poor con- 
dition; the lower jaws are fairly good, but the rest of each skull is represented 
by the rostrum and tooth-bearing parts only. 


Geomys breviceps sagittalis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 113, 134-135, pl. 9, fig. 4, January 31, 1895. 
$3424. Skin and skull. Adult male. Clear Creek, Galveston Bay, 


Texas. March 28,1892. Collected by W. Lloyd. Original num- 
ber 1181. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of one 
upper molar. 


Genus PAPPOGEOM YS. 


Pappogeomys albinasus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 147, 149, January 31, 1895. 


$4378. Skin and skull. Adult female. Atemajac, near Guadalajara, 
Jalisco, Mexico. May 21, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 


Original number 2654. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


72 PAPPOGEOMYS—CRATOGEOMYS. 


Geomys nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, pp. 164-165, September 29, 1892. 


=Pappogeomys bulleri (Thomas). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, p. 
147, January 31, 1895. 


$3233. Skin and skull. Old male. North slope Sierra Nevada de 
Colima, Jalisco, Mexico. April 11, 1892. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson. Original number 2436. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus CRATOGEOMYS. 


Pseudostoma castanops Baird. 
Report Stansbury’s Expedition to Great Salt Lake, p. 313, June, 1852. 


=Cratogeomys castanops (Baird). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, p. 
159, January 31, 1895. 


4ee¢7. Skin and skull. ‘‘Collected by Lieutenant Abert along the 
prairie road to Bent’s Fort,” near the present town of Las Animas, 
Bent County, Colorado, on the Arkansas River. Catalogued June 
18, 1860. 


The specimen formerly mounted has been made over into a modern study 
skin, but it is bleached and is otherwise in very poor condition. Lower jaw 
perfect. All the posterior part of the brain-case is missing, also the left zygoma. 
A large fissure is at base of rostrum, and both upper incisors are broken off at 
the roots. 

Type not designated by number, but Baird, in the Mammals of North America, 
page 385, says there was but one specimen collected by Lieutenant Abert at the 
above locality. 


Geomys clarkii Baird. 


Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 332, this paper was favorably reported 


for publication April 24, 1855. 


—=Cratogeomys castanops (Baird). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, p. 
159, January 31, 1895. 


reza- Skin, skull, and parts of skeleton. Presidio del Norte, on the 
Rio Grande, Chihuahua, Mexico. Collected by J. H. Clark, 
United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, Maj. W. H. Emory, 
U. S. A., commissioner. Skin catalogued February 12, 1852; 
skull, February 15, 1855. 

Skin was formerly mounted, but was made into a modern study skin August, 
1898. It is not in first-class condition and appears much bleached. Skull is in 
better condition, but both nasals are gone; pterygoids are injured and the ascend- 
ing parts of the right half of mandible are broken. Practically all of the skele- 
ton is present, but some bones are in the feet of the skin. 

Type not designated by number in the original description. By referring to 
Baird’s Mammals of North America, page 381, it is seen but two specimens 
came from Presidio del Norte and one of them is a skull only, not mentioned 
in the first description. Moreover, the measurements of No. 6 are exactly 
those given in the original description. 


CRATOGEOMYS. 103 


Cratogeomys estor Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 151, 155-156, pl. 8, figs. 4-5, January 31, 1895. 

54308. Skinand skull. Adult male. Las Vigas, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
June 12, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
5005. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Cratogeomys fulvescens Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 151, 161-162, pl. 12, fig. 2, January 31, 1895. 
58168. Skinand skull. Adult male. Chalchicomula, Puebla, Mexico. 
January 15, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 

man. Original number 5651. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Cratogeomys castanops goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 151, 160-161, January 31, 1895. 

57965. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Cafitas, Zacatecas, 
Mexico. December 24, 1893. Collected by E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 286. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Cratogeomys oreocetes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 151, 156-157, pl. 8, figs. 1-?, January 31, 1895. 
57963. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Mount Popocatepetl, 
Mexico. January 7, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 5647. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
lower molar series. 


Cratogeomys peregrinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 151, 158-159, pl. 8, fig. 8, January 31, 1895. 
57964. Skin and skull. Old female. Mount Iztaccihuatl, Mexico. 
January 9, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 

Original number 5650, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for right lower molar- 
iform teeth, some of which are broken. 


Cratogeomys perotensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 151, 154-155, pl. 8, fig. 6, January 31, 1895. 
54299. Skin and skull. Adult female. Cofre de Perote, Vera Cruz, 
Mexico. May 28, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original 
number 4889. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of crown of 
last left upper molar. 


74 PLATYGEOMYS. 
Genus PLATYGEOMYS. 


Platygeomys tylorhinus angustirostris Merriam. 
Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, pp. 81-82, May 29, 1903. 
125688. Skin and skull. Adult female. Patamban, Michoacan, Mex- 
ico. February 2, 1903. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 15850. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Geomys fumosus Merriam. — Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, pp. 165-166, September 29, 1892. 
=Platygeomys fumosus (Merriam). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, p. 
170, January 31, 1895. 


$3302. Skin and skull. Adult male. Colima, Colima, Mexico. 
March 27, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
De 338. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Geomys gymnurus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., VII, pp. 166-167, September 29, 1892. 
—=Platygeomys gymnurus (Merriam). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No.8, p. 
164, January 31, 1895. 
$3579 Skin and skull. Adult female. Zapotlan, Jalisco, Mexico. 
April 16, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
2460, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Platygeomys neglectus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 68-69, March 22, 1902. 

81218. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cerro de la Calentura, near 
Pinal de Amoles, Queretaro, Mexico. September 14, 1896 (not 
September 4, as in original description). Collected by E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 10142. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Platygeomys planiceps Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 164, 168-170, pl. 13, fig. 3; pl. 14, fig. 9, January 
31, 1895. 


55906. Skin and skull. Adult male. North slope Volcan Toluca, 
Mexico. September 12, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 5466. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except for absence of crown 
of left lower premolar, left coronoid process, and left condyle. 


ORTHOG EOMYS—HETEROG EOMYS—MACROG EOMYS. 10 


Platygeomys tylorhinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 164, 167-168, pl. 13, fig. 1, January 31, 1895. 
51883. Skinand skull. Adult male. Tula, Hidalgo, Mexico. March 
13, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 4442. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except broken tips of 


coronoids. 


Genus ORTHOGEOMYS. 


Orthogeomys latifrons Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, p. 178, pl. 11, figs. 5 and 6, text fig. 64, January 31, 

1895. 

61239. Skin and skull. Adult. Probably from Guatemala. From 
World’s Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893), Exhibit of Guate- 
mala, No. 2. Catalogued November 19, 1894. 

Well-made skin in good condition, except for a little shedding of epidermis 
about the ears. Facial portion of skull, except right zygoma, complete; posterior 
portion of brain-case cut away. Mandible with both coronoid processes broken, 
otherwise complete. 

Type designated by the original number 2. Specimen evidently not entered 
in catalogue at time the description was written. 


Orthogeomys nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 173, 176-178, fig. 63, January 31, 1895. 
66751. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Zempoaltepec, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. July 8, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 6376. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus HETEROGEOMYS. 


Heterogeomys torridus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 180, 183-185, numerous pls. and figs., January 
31, 1895. 

63629. Skin and skull. Adult female. Chichicaxtle, Vera Cruz, 
Mexico. February 15, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Orig- 
inal number 5850. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
upper premolar. 
Genus MACROGEOMYS. 


Macrogeomys costaricensis Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, p. 192, pl. 11, fig. 3; pl. 13, fig. 23; pl. 14, fig. 10, 
January 31, 1895. 
$2241. Skin and skull. Young. Pacuare, Costa Rica. 1876. Col- 
lected by Juan Cooper. Original number 96. Skin catalogued 
June 23, 1878; skull, February 1, 1887. 
Well-made skin in good condition; a little hair gone from the occiput; skull in 
good condition; except right upper incisor broken, also tips of nasals; pterygoids 
somewhat damaged. 





76  MACROGEOMYS—ZYGOGEOMYS—DICROSTONY X—LEMMUS. 


Macrogeomys dolichocephalus Merriam. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, p. 189, pl. 5; pl. 10, fig. 7; pl. 13, fig. 19, January 31, 
IS895. 

65. Skin and skull. Adult male. San José, Costa Rica. Janu- 
ary, 1866. Collected by José C. Zeledon. Explorations in Costa 
Rica under Dr. A. Von Frantzius. Skin catalogued November 6, 
1866; skull, October 31, 1893. 

Skin not very well made up, but apparently in good condition; skull nearly 
perfect, somewhat damaged about pterygoids, and a quadrangular hole is in 
supraoccipital, running up from foramen magnum. 


Genus ZYGOGEOMYS. 


Zygogeomys trichopus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 8, pp. 196-198, pl. 6; pl. 13, fig. 24; pl. 14, fig. 1; pl. 15, 
fig. 10, Tanuary 31, 1895. : 
50107. Skinandskull. Adultmale. Nahuatzin, Michoacan, Mexico. 
October 11, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
B51. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Family MURID/&. 
Genus DICROSTON YX. 
Dicrostonyx unalascensis Merriam. Biological Survey Collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 25, March 14, 1900. 
99622. Skull only. Adult. Unalaska, Alaska. July 8, 1899. Col-_ 
lected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. 
Nearly perfect skull from owl pellet. 
Genus LEMMUS. 


Lemmus minusculus Osgood. + Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 24, pp. 36-37, November 25, 1904. 
119612. Skinand skull. Adultmale. Kakhtul River, near mouth of 
Malchatna River, Alaska. September 1, 1902. Collected by W. H. 
Osgood and A. G. Maddren. Original number 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Myodes nigripes True. 
Diagnoses of New North American Mammals, p. 2, April 26, 1894. (Reprinted 
in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X VII, No. 999, p. 242, November 15, 1894. ) 
=Lemmus nigripes (True). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 12, p. 37, July 
23, 1896. 

59152. Skin and skull. Adult male. St. George Island, Alaska. 
August 18, 1892 (or 1893). Collected by C. H. Townsend, U. 8. 
Bureau of Fisheries steamer A/batross. Catalogued February 5, 
1894. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with part of left zygoma and both 
coronoid processes of mandible absent; otherwise perfect. 


LEMMUS—SYNAPTOMYS. 7 


Lemmus yukonensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 27, March 14, 1900. 
98849. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Charlie Creek, Yukon 
River, Alaska. August 9, 1899. Collected by W. H. Osgood. 
Original number 769. 


Weil-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus SYNAPTOMYSsS. 


Synaptomys (Mictomys) bullatus Preble. | Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 181-182, August 6, 1902. 


110632. Skin and skull. Adult male. Trout Rock, 25 miles south of 
Fort Rae, Great Slave Lake, Mackenzie, Canada. July 17, 1901 
(not August 17, 1901, as in original description). Collected by 
E. A. Preble. Original number 4511. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Synaptomys cooperi Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 558, 1857. 

33$9- Skin and skull. Received from William Cooper, of Hoboken, 
New Jersey. Skin catalogued February 26, 1856; skull, June, 1857. 
Locality unknown. Baird says, **No locality was assigned, but 
the animal is undoubtedly North American, probably from the New 
England States or New York; possibly from Iowa or Minnesota.” 
Dr. C. H. Merriam (Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, 1892, p. 177) 
thinks it not unlikely that the specimen came from southern New 
York or northern New Jersey. 

The specimen is little more than a ball of fur. Head, legs (except one fore- 
leg detached), and tailare lacking. Theskull is in better condition. With the 
exception of the left zygoma the facial parts are complete and perfect, and the 
frontal, parietal, and most of the squamosal of the right side are present. The 
left half of the mandible has the angular and coronoid processes broken away, 
while the right half has the condyloid broken off as well. 

Type designated by number on page 556 of the original description. 


Synaptomys (Mictomys) dalli Merriam. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, p. 62, March 19, 1896. 


49373. Skeleton made from alcoholic specimen No. 10957, no other 
trace of which can now be found. Adult male. Nulato, Alaska. 
February, 1867. Collected by Dr. W. H. Dall. Catalogued Octo- 
ber 22, 1872; skeleton April 28, 1894. 

All of the skeleton is present and in good condition; skull not quite perfect; 


right malar absent; a piece out of the supraoccipital and both coronoid processes 
of mandible more or less broken. 


78 SYNAPTOMYS. 


Synaptomys helaletes gossii Merriam. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, p. 60, March 19, 1896. 

6915. Skull. (No record of a skin.) Adult male. Neosho Falls, 
Kansas. 1866. Collected by B. F. Goss. Catalogued May 4, 
L866. 

Skull perfect, except incisors broken off nearly to the alveoli; both pterygoids 
broken, also tip of right coronoid process of mandible. 


Synaptomys helaletes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, p. 59, fig. 3, March 19, 1896. 
75172. Skin and skull. Adult female. Dismal Swamp, Virginia. 
October 14, 1895. Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original number 
1818. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mictomys innuitus True. 
Diagnoses of New North American Mammals, April 26, 1894, p. 3. (Reprinted 
in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XVII, No. 999, p. 248, November 15, 1894. ) 
=Synaptomys (Mictomys) innuitus (True). See Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., 
X, p. 61, March 19, 1896. 


44538. In alcohol; skull removed. Adult female. Fort Chimo, 
Ungava, Labrador. Spring of 1886. Coliected by L. M. Turner. 
Original number 506. 

Specimen in good state of preservation, but unnecessarily opened up, in order to 
remove the skull; skull in good condition, except right pterygoid broken away, 
hole at the posterior lateral angle of the right parietal, and mandible with both 
angular processes broken away. 

Synaptomys (Mictomys) sphagnicola Preble. Biol. Survey coll. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, pp. 43-45, fig. 3a, May 29, 1899. 


96543. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fabyans, near base of Mount 
Washington, New Hampshire. June 29, 1898. Collected by 
KE. A. Preble. Original number 2402. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Synaptomys (Mictomys) truei Merriam. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, p. 62, March 19, 1896. 


fxoy- Skin only; skull lost. Young adult. Skagit Valley, Washing- 
ton. August 6, 1859. Collected by Dr. C. B. Kennerly. Origi- 
nal number 304. Northwestern Boundary Survey, A. Campbell, 
commander. Skin catalogued February 21, 1860; skull February, 
1872. 
Skin a mere flat pelt glued on a piece of cloth with the left hind leg (the only 
one present) tied to it. In the original description Dr. C. Hart Merriam says 
the skull was in fragments. These can not now be found. 


SYNAPTOMYS—MICROTUS. 79 


Synaptomys (Mictomys) wrangeli Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, p. 63, fig. 5, March 19, 1896. 
74720. Skin and skull. Adult male. Wrangel, Alaska. September 
6,1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 4871. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except for slight injury to end 
of nasals and an irregular perforation of the anterior part of brain case beneath 


the frontals. 
Genus MICROTUS. 


Microtus abbreviatus Miller. 

Proe. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 18, January 31, 1899. 

3949. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Hall Island, Bering 
Sea. September 8, 1885. Collected by C. H. Townsend. Cata- 
logued September 10, 1886. 

Considering its history, the skin is in good condition. It has been remade 
into a modern study skin. Mr. Miller (Joc. cit.) says: ‘‘Mr. Townsend tells me 
that the specimen was preserved dry. It was received at the National Museum 
in September, 1886, and its subsequent history is not known. It was found ina 
bottle of aleohol in October, 1898.’’ Skull not in such good condition as the 
skin; rather damaged, including the lower jaw, on the right-hand side and _ pos- 
teriorly. - 


Microtus acrophilus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 296, August 9, 1899. 
62162. Skinand skull. Adultfemale. On the Ladak side of the Kara 
Korum Pass, altitude 17,000 feet, Kashmir. July 25, 1893. Col- 
lected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued May 16, 1895. 


Well-made skin and in good condition; skull has lost both malars, left ptery- 
goid, and there is a hole in the left half of the basioccipital. 


Microtus oregoni adocetus Merriam. Biological Survey Collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X XI, pp. 145-146, June 9, 1908. 
137995. Skin and skull. Adult male. South Yallobally Mountain, 
California. July 30,1905. Collected by A. 5S. Bunnell. Original 
number 135. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arvicola albicauda True. 
Proc. U. §. Nat. Mus., XVII, No. 976, p. 12, May 8, 1894. 
=Microtus albicauda (True). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 12, p. 54, July 
23, 1896. 

20393. Skin and skull. Adult female. Braldu Valley, Baltistan, 
Kashmir; altitude 11,000 feet. December 19, 1891. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Skin catalogued August 11, 1892; skull, March 
7, 1894. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with left malar missing, left bulla in- 
jured, and right coronoid process of mandible broken, otherwise perfect. 


80 MICROTUS. 


Neofiber alleni True. 
Science, IV, p. 34, July 11, 1884. 


=Microtus alleni (True). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 12, p. 9, July 23, 
1896. 


44965. Skin, viscera in alcohol, and skeleton. Adult male. Geor 
giana, Brevard County, Florida. Collected by William Wittfeld. 
Received in Museum December 24, 1888. Catalogued January 17, 
1884; skeleton June, 1885. 


The whole specimen was originally in alcohol. It was then skinned, mounted, 
and placed on exhibition. The skeleton was prepared and the viscera put in 
alcohol. The mounted specimen has since been taken down and made into a 
study skin which is well made and in good condition except for a small naked 
spot on the right hip and the loss of many toenails. It is much lighter than 
normal, from exposure to light and probably from the effects of alcohol. The 
skeleton is in excellent condition and on exhibition in the Division of Compara- 
tive Anatomy. The viscera, both abdominal and thoracic, are well preserved. 

Type not designated by number in the original description. The above spec- 
imen is said by Dr. F. W. True and F. A. Lucas to be the original specimen, 
which was unique at the time of describing. 


Arvicola (Mynomes) alticolus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 67-69, pl. 5, figs. 1-2; pl. 6, figs. 1-4, September 
4, 1890. 
=Microtus alticolus (Merriam). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., VII, p. 
219, June 29, 1895. 


47615 Skinand skull. Adultfemale. Little Spring, San pan isco 
Mountain, Arizona. July 31, 1889. Collected by Dr. C. Hart 
Merriam and Y. Bailey. Original number 243. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except for perforation in left 
audital bulla and repaired fractures of frontals and parietals. 


Microtus angusticeps Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 86, April 30, 1898. 

h7087. Skinand skull. Adult male. Crescent City, California. June 

16, 1889. Collected by Dr. T. S. Palmer. Original number 151. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arvicola apella Le Conte. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 405, this paper was favorably reported for 
publication October 25, 1853. 
=Microtus pinetorum scalopsoides (Audubon and Bachman). See Batchelder, 
Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., X X VII, p. 187, October, 1896. 


4714. Skin with skull inside. Pennsylvania. One of Major J. E. Le 
Conte’s collection. Catalogued April 13, 1861. 

Skin poorly made up, but well preserved. 

This specimen not designated by number as a type. The specimen bears two 
old labels each marked ‘‘apella,’’ as well as one of Coues’ labels calling it the 
type. In Monographs of North American Rodentia, pages 223 and 224, Coues 
refers to No. 4714 as the type of Arvicolau apella Le Conte. 


MICROTUS. 81° 


Microtus aphorodemus Preble. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 22, pp. 52-53, October 31, 1902. 

106422, Skin and skull. Adult female. West shore Hudson Bay, 
on barren grounds, about 50 miles south of Cape Eskimo, Kee- 
watin, Canada. August 5, 1900. Collected by E. A. Preble. 
Original number 3208. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus montanus arizonensis Bailey. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 88, April 30, 1898. 

4778. Skin and skull. Adult male. Springerville, Arizona. No- 

rember 7, 1890. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 


no 
vo. 


2 
3 


a mle 


_ 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus pinetorum auricularis Bailey. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 90, April 30, 1898. 


$4962 Skinand skull. Adult male. Washington, Mississippi. May 
26, 1892. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 3649. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arvicola austerus Le Conte. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 405, this paper was favorably reported for 
publication October 25, 1853. 
=Microtus ochrogaster (Wagner). See Allen, Buli. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X, 
p. 459, November 10, 1898; Osgood, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 48, April 
18, 1907. 
2249. Skin (no record of a skull). Racine, Wisconsin. Collected by 
Dr. P. R. Hoy. Original number 950. Catalogued February 28, 
1857. 


Poorly made skin, right hind leg nearly detached, but specimen well preserved. 

Type not designated by number. The specimen bears one old label inscribed 
“Arvicola austerus Racine, Wisc.’’ on the obverse, and on the reverse ‘‘ Type of 
species.’’ In the ‘‘Remarks’’ column in the old original catalogue is written 
“Type of Maj. Le Conte.’? On pages 210 and 214 of Monographs of North 
American Rodentia, Coues speaks of 2249 as the type of Arvicola austerus. 


Microtus bairdi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 74-75, April 21, 1897. 
79906. Skin and skull. Adult female. Glacier Peak, Crater Lake, 
Oregon. August 24, 1896. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and 
V. Bailey. Original number 5813. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with badly broken parietals and tips 
of nasals. 


45336—08 





6 


82 MICROTUS. 


Microtus mordax bernardinus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Prac. Biol. Soe. Wash., X XI, p. 145, June 9, 1908. 

150632. Skin and skull. Adult male. Dry Lake, San Bernardmo 
Mountains, California; altitude 9,000 feet, at north base San Gor- 
gonio Peak. August 21,1907. Collected by V. Bailey. Original 
number 8749. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus brachelix Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 290, August 9, 1899. 
63445. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Nagmarg, Kashmir; 
9,000 feet. November 15, 1895. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued June 12, 1896. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull originally much broken, but glued 
together so that it is nearly perfect except about the pterygoids. 


Arvicola breweri Baird. Cotypes. 
Mammals of North America, p. 525, 1857. 
=Microtus breweri (Baird). See Miller, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., XX VII, 

p. 83, June, 1896. 

No particular specimen is designated by Baird as the type and there 
is nothing to show that any one of the six specimens given in his 
list should be taken as such. Consequently all six listed become 
cotypes. They were collected in July, 1856, on Muskeget Island, 
Massachusetts, by Dr. T. M. Brewer. Catalogued May 31, 1857. 
The specimens are as follows: 

2828. Adult male in alcohol; in good condition. 
9829. Adult male in alcohol; can not be found. 
2532. Adult female. Skin and skull. 

‘Skin poorly made, but well preserved, except for two spots devoid of hair on 

side. Skull quite perfect, except pterygoids; right half of mandible lost. 
%$31. Adult male. Skin and skull. 

Skin poorly made, but well preserved. Skull lacks the right tympanic, peri- 

otic, and mastoid bones and the right half of mandible. 
2332. Immature male. Skin and skull. 

Skin can not now be found. Skull present. Both malars and posterior half 
of brain case missing. Two extra molars present, perhaps belonging to the miss- 
ing lower jaws of the two preceding. 

2833. Specimen in alcohol; can not now be found. 


Arvicola californica Peale. 
U.S. Exploring Expedition, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 46, 1848. 
=Microtus californicus (Peale). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, p. 563, 
1897. 
ose. Skin and skull. Vicinity of San Francisco Bay, California. 
Collected by T. R. Peale. U.S. Exploring Expedition from 1838 
to 1842. Skin catalogued 1872; skull, 1860. 


MICROTUS. 83 


Skin poorly made up; tail not skinned out. It looks rather discolored. The 
catalogue entry says ‘‘Dry,’’ but the specimen looks as if it had been in alcohol 
at one time. An old parchment label further bears out this view. Skull in- 
jured about the pterygoids; both bullze, especially the left, and the right zygoma 
somewhat injured. The ascending parts of left half of mandible broken away. 

- Type not designated by number. In the entry of the skin in 1872 (twelve 
years after entry of the skull“) under the remarks column of the catalogue is 
written in the handwriting of the original entry ‘type of californicus.’”’ The 
old parchment label on the specimen is marked ‘‘ Arvicola Californica Peale.” 
One of Dr. Coues’s labels is attached, marked ‘‘ Monograph of American Muri- 
dae. Dr. Elliott Coues, U. S. A., No. 10082. Type ef Arvicola ‘californica.’”’ 
On page 534 of Mammats of North America, Baird speaks of having the origi- 
nal specimen. In the table on page 173, Monographs of North American 
‘Rodentia, Dr. Coues has 10082 marked as the type of ‘“‘californicus.”’ 


Microtus nanus canescens Builey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 87-88, April 30, 1898. 


90577. Skinand skull. Adult male. Conconully, Washington. Sep- 
tember 12,1897. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original number 
4654. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacking entire rostral portion except 
one loose upper incisor; right audital bulla injured; anterior wall of brain case 
perforated; ends of lower incisors broken off. 


Microtus canicaudus Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 67-68, April 21, 1897. 


75841. Skin and skull. Adult male. McCoy, Oregon. December 1, 
1895. Collected by B. J. Bretherton. Original number 219. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
coronoid process. 


Arvicola (Pedomys) cinnamomea Baird. 


Mammals of North America, p. 541, pl. 54, [Specimen No. 1714] (teeth), 1857. 
=Microtus ochrogaster (Wagner). See Osgood, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, 
p. 48, April 18, 1907. 


??iz- Skin (lost) and skull. Adult male. Pembina, North Dakota. 
Collected by C. Cavileer. Original number 23. Catalogued March 
19, L600. 

The skin, number 591, according to a note in the ¢atalogue, was misplaced 
before 1890 and has not been found since. Skull in fair condition; pterygoids 
broken, both malars lacking, and pieces broken off the processes of the mandible. 

Baird had but one specimen, the above, designated by number. 

Bailey, North American Fauna No. 17, page 74, says, ‘‘ Except for a slightly 
abnormal tooth pattern, Baird’s type of cinnamomea is a large specimen of typ- 
ical austerus. I can not believe that it ever came from Pembina.”’ 


4 Bailey (North Amer. Fauna, No. 17, p. 35) thinks the skull is abnormal or never 
came from the same animal as the skin. This lapse of time between the two entries 
substantiates the latter view, 


84 MICROTUS. 


Microtus californicus constrictus Bailey. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 17, pp. 15, 36-37, June 6, 1900. 

98347. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cape Mendocino, California. 
September 6, 1899. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 
T174. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus cricetulus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 294, August 9, 1899. 

84043. Skinandskull. Adult male. Banks of the Tso Kyun, Ladak; 
altitude 16,000 feet. August 11, 1897. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Catalogued March 3, 1898. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arvicola curtata Cope. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1868, p. 2. Presented at meeting of January 21, 1868. 
=Microtus curtatus (Cope). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 12, p. 51, July 
23, 1896. 


49297. Fragments of skull and feet, Collected by Prof. W. M. Gabb 
at Piveun Spring, Mount Magruder, Nevada, near boundary be- 
tween Inyo County, California, and Esmeralda County, Nevada. 
Skin catalogued Geicher 15, 1872; skull, May 5, 1898. 


The following is an inventory of the fragments: (1) Both hind feet, one of 
them with tibia attached; (2) both fore feet, one of them with radius and ulna 
attached, the other radius and ulna present and a portion of each humerus pres- 
ent; (3) a few small, almost unidentifiable fragments of the skull; (4) all the 
upper molars, still attached or glued to a good-sized fragment of the palate, the 
free ends of the incisors in small parts of the premaxillaries; (5) all of the lower 
jaw teeth except the last molar of the left side; the two other molars of that side 
are attached to a piece of the mandible; the incisors rather fragmentary. 

Type not designated by number. In the catalogue, in the handwriting of the 
original entry, the specimen is marked ‘‘Cope’s type.’’? The present specimen 
is indicated as the type by Dr. Coues in Monographs of North American Rodentia, 
pages 215 to 217, where it appears that the specimen was in as bad condition in 
1877 as it is now. One of Dr. Coues’s labels, reading ‘‘ No. 10267, Type of Arvi- 
cola curtata Cope,”’ is still attached to the specimen. 


Microtus dutcheri Bailey. Biological Survey Collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XII, pp. 85-86, April 30, 1898. 
29769. Skin and skull. Adult male. Big Cottonwood Meadows, 
Mount Whitney, California. July 10,1891. Collected by Dr. B. H. 
Dutcher, U.S. A. Original number 69. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arvicola edax Le Conte. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 405, this paper was favorabiy reported for 
nublication October 25, 1853. 
=Microtus edax (LeConte). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., VIII, p. 268, 
December 4, 1896. 


MIOROTUS. 85 


gees. Skin and skull. Collected by J. L. Le Conte in California, 
south of San Francisco. Skin catalogued April 138, 1861; skull, 
April 27, 1897. 

Specimen made intoa modern study skin, in good condition, and skull removed 
in the early part of 1897. The posterior and basal portions of cranium have been 
cut away, including the left upper molar. The posterior parts of the right half 
of mandible are broken away. Upper incisors are broken. 

Type not designated by number. The present specimen seems to be the only 
one in the collection collected in California by Le Conte which is positively 
stated by Baird, page 532 of his Mammals, to be the type. In the table on 
page 178, Monographs of North American Rodentia, Dr. Coues says the present 
specimen, 4721, is the type of edax. 


Microtus elymocetes Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, pp. 71-72, May 1, 1906. 
137323. Skinandskull. Adult male. Montague Island, Prince Wil- 


liam Sound, Alaska. May 12, 1905. Collected by C. Sheldon. 
Original number 8 (5448x). 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arvicola fertilis True. 


Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X VII, No. 976, p. 10, May 8, 1894. 
=Microtus fertilis (True). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 12, p. 55, July 
23, 1896. 
$¢443. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pir Panjal Range, Kashmir; 
altitude 8,500 feet. August 30, 1891. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Catalogued May 9, 1892. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that the bullee and 


pterygoids have been cut away. 


’ 


Microtus abbreviatus fisheri Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 23, March 14, 1900. 
97976. Skin and skull. Adult male. St. Matthew Island, Bering 


Sea. July 15, 1899. Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original 
number 2189. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus fulviventer Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 106, April 30, 1898. 
68250. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, 


Mexico. August 22, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 6601. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of both 
coronoid processes and left angular process of mandible. 


86 MICROTUS. ‘ 


Microtus mexicanus guadalupensis Bailey. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 118-119, June 2, 1902. 
LO919L. Skin and skull. Adult male. Guadalupe Mountains, Texas; 


altitude, 7,800 feet. August 21, 1901. Collected by V. Bailey. 
Original number 7807. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus guatemalensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 108, April 30, 1898. 


T6777. Skinand skull. Adult male. Todos Santos, Huehuetenango, 
Guatemala. December 30, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 8960. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arvicola (Pedomys) haydenii Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 545, 1857. 
=Microtus ochrogaster haydenii (Baird). See Osgood, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., 
XX, p. 48, April 18, 1907. 
fxs. Skin and skull. Adult male. Collected in 1854 by Dr. F. V. 
Hayden at Fort Pierre, then in ‘‘ Nebraska,” now in Stanley 
County, South Dakota. Catalogued May 19, 1855. 
Skin badly made up, legs spreading, tail not skinned out; a small patch on 
each side of body without hair; general condition of pelage good. Skull in good 


condition, but left half of mandible lost. 
This was Baird’s only specimen and was designated by number. 


Microtus innuitus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., Il, pp. 21-22, March 14, 1900. 

99373. Skull only. Adult. St. Lawrence Island, Bering Sea. July 
13, 1899. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. 


Skull obtained from an owl pellet; slightly stained; last left upper molar miss- 
ing; left parietal slightly fractured; left coronoid process and right mandibular 
ramus missing. 


Microtus kadiacensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 222, July 15, 1897. 
= Microtus operarius kadiacensis Merriam. See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, No. 
21, p. 64, September 26, 1901. 
65827. Skinand skull. Young adult female. Kodiak Island, Alaska. 
September 12, 1893. Collected by B. J. Bretherton. Original 
number 213. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except for absence of left 
audital bulia. 


MICROTUS. 87 


Arvicola longirostris Baird. 

Mammals of North America, p. 580, 1857. 
=Microtus montanus (Peale). See Bailey, North Amer. Fauna, No. 17, p. 27, 
June 6, 1900. 

33$$- Mounted skin and fragmentary skull. Adult female. Upper 

Pitt River, California. September, 1855. Collected by Dr. J. S. 
’ I ’ 2 

Newberry. Catalogued January, 1856. 

Mounted specimen in fair condition; a little hair gone from the right side. 
Skull very fragmentary. Both halves of lower jaw complete. Upper teeth 
loose, but all present from each side and in a separate glass tube. A few other 
fragments are in another tube. 

Baird had but one specimen, the above, which he designated by number. 


Microtus ludovicianus Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 17, pp. 74-75, June 6, 1900. 

96624. Skin and skull. Adult male. Towa, Caleasieu Parish, Loui- 
siana. April 7, 1899. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 
6767. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus macfarlani Merriam. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 24, March 14, 1900. 
gqg¢_7- Skin and skull. Fort Anderson, north of Great Bear Lake, 
Mackenzie, Canada. 1865. Collected by R. MacFarlane. Origi- 
nal number 3179. Skin catalogued July, 1868; skull, March 31, 
1898. 
Specimen remade into a modern study skin and the skull removed and cleaned 
in March, 1898. The skin is well preserved and in good condition save for some 


apparent lengthwise stretching. Skull perfect, except for loss of right malar 
and a hole in left audital bulla. 


Arvicola (Mynomes) macropus Merriam. — Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 59-61, pl. 2, figs. 7-8, July 30, 1891. 
=Microtus richardsoni macropus (Merriam). See Bailey, North Amer. Fauna, 
No. 17, p. 61, June 6, 1900. 
22537. Skinand skull. Adult female. Pahsimeroi Mountains, Idaho. 
September 16, 1890. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and V. 
Bailey. Original number 1803. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus macrurus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., p. 353, October 4, 1898. 

66151. Skin and skull. Adult female. Lake Cushman, Olympic 
Mountains, Washington. June 26, 1894. Collected by C. P. 
Streator. Original number 3975. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken frontals and 
right audital bulla. 


88 MICROTUS. 


Microtus miurus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 21, pp. 64-66, September 26, 1901. 


LO7175. Skin and skull. Adult male. Head of Bear Creek, near 
Hope, Turnagain Arm, Cook Inlet, Alaska. September 4, 1900. 
Collected by W. H. Osgood and E. Heller. Original number 1349. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight perforation 
in right frontal. 


Arvicola modesta Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 535, 1857. 

=Microtus pennsylvanicus modestus (Baird). See Bailey, North Amer. Fauna, 

No. 17, p. 20, June 6, 1900. 

?ei;. Skin and skull. Immature. Sawatch Pass, Rocky Mountains, 
near Cochetopa Pass, Saguache County, Colorado. Collected by 
Mr. Kreutzfeldt. Original number 16. Pacific Railroad Survey 
near 38° lat., Lieut. E.G. Beckwith, U. S. A. Catalogued March 
19, 1855. 

Skin very fragmentary and dilapidated. Right fore foot still attached. Two 
other feet loose and also tip of tail. Skull young; ends of nasals and upper 
incisors broken, both malars, all the occipital bones, the interparietal and most 
of the parietals missing. Left half of the mandible has angular and coronoid 
processes broken away; right half, part of angular process and entire coronoid 
missing. 

Of Baird’s two specimens, both designated by numbers, the above is the only 
one that he refers with certainty to modesta. 


Arvicola montana Peale. See page 289. 


Arvicola montosa True. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X VII, No. 976, p. 11, May 8, 1894. 
=Microtus montosus (True). See Miller, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 
293, August 9, 1899. 

20149. Skinandskuli. Half-grownmale. Central Kashmir, altitude 
11,000 feet. October 4, 1891. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued May 9, 1892. 

Well-made skin in good condition, but rather contracted posteriorly; skull 


injured about the pterygoids, a hole in right bulla, and both coronoid processes 
of mandible broken; otherwise perfect. 


Arvicola (Mynomes) mordax Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer, Fauna, No. 5, pp. 61-62, pl. 2, figs. 3-4, July 30, 1891. 
=Microtus mordax (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, p. 564, 
1897. 
24231. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sawtooth Lake, Idaho. Sep- 
tember 29, 1890. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriamand VY. Bailey. 
Original number 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


MICROTUS. 89 


Arvicola (Mynomes) nanus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 62-63, pl. 2, figs. 5-6, July 30, 1891. 
=Microtus nanus (Merriam). See Miller, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 67, 
April 21, 1897. 

23853. Skin and skull. Adult female (not male, as in original 
description). Pahsimeroi Mountains, Idaho, September 16, 1890. 
Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriamand V. Bailey. Original number 
1809. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus pinetorum nemoralis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 89-90, April 30, 1898. 
87246. Skin and skull. Adult female. Stilwell, Boston Mountains, 
Oklahoma. April 7, 1897. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original 
number 3905, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus nevadensis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 86-87, April 30, 1898. 
$934]. Skinand skull. Adult male (not female, as in original descrip- 
tion). Ash Meadows, Nye County, Nevada. March 2,1891. Col- 
lected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 577 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken audital 
bullz and left coronoid process. 


Arvicola occidentalis Peale. 
U. 8. Exploring Expedition, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 45, 1848. 
=Microtus townsendi (Bachman). See Bailey, North Amer. Fauna, No. 17, p. 46, 
June 6, 1900. 
os. Skin and skull. Puget Sound, Washington. U.S. Exploring 
Expedition, 1838 to 1842. Collected by T. R. Peale. Skin cat- 
alogued 1872; skull, 1860. 


| 


Poorly made skin, tail not skinned out. It has somewhat the look of having 
been in alcohol at one time. Some of the hair has slipped from each side, 
especially the right. Skull fairly good for an old specimen; right zygoma miss- 
ing and both bull and both pterygoids broken, coronoid process of right half 
of mandible broken. 

Type not designated by number. In the entry of the skin in 1872 (twelve 
years after the skull was entered in the catalogue) under the remarks column is 
written, in the handwriting of the original entry, ‘‘type of occidentalis.’ On 
page 535 of Mammals of North America, Baird speaks of having -the original 
specimen. One of Doctor Coues’s labels is attached marked ‘‘ Monograph of 
American Muride. Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S. A. No. 10083. Type of Arvicola 
‘occidentalis’ Peale.’”’ In the table on page 173, Monographs of North Ameri- 
can Rodentia, Doctor Coues has 10083 marked as the type of ‘ occidentalis.”’ 


90 MICROTUS. 


Arvicola operarius Nelson. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., VIII, p. 189, December 28, 1893. 


=Microtus operarius (Nelson). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, p. 564, 


1897. 
44333. Skin and skull. Adult. | St. Michael, Alaska. November, 
1879. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 122. Skin 


catalogued June 11, 1884; skull, March 19, 1886. 


Skin well preserved, but poorly made up, and right fore leg missing. Skull 
perfect, except coronoid of left half of mandible broken away, left bulla slightly 
injured. 


Microtus miurus oreas Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 61-62, April 18, 1907. 


148596. Skin and skull. Adult male. Head of Toklat River, Alaskan 
Range, Alaska. August 8, 1906. Collected by C. Sheldon. 
Original number 47 (6289x). 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken left audital 
bulla and two slight perforations in brain case. 


Microtus pamirensis Miller. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 287, August 9, 1899. 


62161. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tagdumbash, Pamir; altitude 
_ 12,000 feet. June 18, 1894. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued May 16, 1895. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with left pterygoid broken and hole 
in right audital bulla; otherwise perfect. 


Arvicola pauperrima Cooper. 
Amer. Nat., II, p. 535, December, 1868. 


Pee pauperrimus (Cooper). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 12, p. 
, July 23, 1896. 


40268. Skin and skull. Adult male, ‘‘(4).” Great Plains of the 
Columbia, near the Snake River, southwestern Washington. 
October 9, 1860. Collected by Dr. J. G. ee Original num- 
ber 126. Skin catalogued October 15, 1872; skull, March 5 ; 18911. 


Skin in poor condition; parts about head and shoulders glued on to a cotton 
filling. Posterior upper parts good for color; all the feet present, also the tail. 
Skull in fragments, viz: (1) The premaxillze and maxille all in one piece, con- 
taining all the upper jaw teeth except the last right and left upper molars; (2) 
the interparietal with attached portions of the parietals; (3) asmall piece of the 
left squamosal; (4) the horizontal parts of each half of the mandible containing 
all the lower jaw teeth, of which the left incisor is broken at the cutting edge. 

Type designated by the original number. 


MIOCROTUS. . 9] 


Arvicola pheus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, pp. 171-172, September 29, 1892. 
=Microtus mexicanus phzus (Merriam). See Bailey, North Amer. Fauna, No. 
17, p. 54, June 6, 1900. 
33605 Skin and skull. Adult female. North slope Sierra Nevada 
de Colima, Jalisco, Mexico; altitude 10,000 feet. April 21, 1892. 
Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 2516. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for injured occipital 
condyles and right audital bulla. 


Microtus unalascensis popofensis Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci,, II, pp. 22-23, March 14, 1900. 

97956. Skinand skull. Adultmale. Popof Island, Shumagin Islands, 
Alaska. July 16, 1899. Collected by W. E. Ritter. Original 
number 2200 (Dr. A. K. Fisher). 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight perforation 
of right audital bulla and a perforation at base of nasals. 


Arvicola (Pitymys) pinetorum quasiater Coues. See page 289. 


Microtus ravidulus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 284, August 9, 1899. 

62159. Skin and skull. Adult female. Okchi, valley of the Aksai; 
altitude 7,000 feet, Eastern Turkestan. November 7, 1893. Col- 
lected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued May 16, 1895. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except some chips out of 
coronoid and angular processes of the mandible. 


Arvicola scalopsoides Audubon and Bachman. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., I, p. 97. Submitted for publication October 5, 
1841. 


=Microtus pinetorum scalopsoides (Audubon and Bachman). See Batchelder, 
Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., X X VII, p. 187, October, 1896. 


10264. Skin with skull inside. Long Island, New York. Collected 
by Major J. E. Le Conte, U.S. A. Catalogued October 15, 1872, 
so that the specimen must have been acquired long after the orig- 
inal description. 

Skin in rather poor condition. It has somewhat the appearance of having 
been made up out of alcohol. The left fore foot and right hind foot are missing. 
On the left side there is a considerable patch without hair. 

Type not designated by number. ‘‘Type of scalopsoides’’ is written in the 
remarks column of the catalogue in the handwriting of the original entry. In 
the table on page 224 of Monographs of North American Rodentia Dr. Coues 
calls this specimen, 10264, ‘‘ Type of ‘scalopsoides’ LeC.’’ The specimen also 
bears one of Coues’s labels reading ‘‘ Monograph of American Muridee, Dr. 
Elliott Coues, U. 8. A., No. 10264. Type of A. ‘scalopsoides’ apud Le Conte 
(= pinetorum) Long Island.’’ 


92 MICROTUS. 


Microtus scirpensis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 17, pp. 15, 38-39, June 6, 1900. 

25939, Skinandskull. Adult female. Amargosa River, Inyo County, 
California. February 26, 1891. Collected by V. Bailey. Origi- 
nal number 2520. 5 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Microtus serpens Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 75, April 21, 1897. 

76303. Skin and skull. Adult. male. Agassiz, British Columbia. 
December 2, 1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original num- 
ber 5068. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight perforation 
in brain case. 


Microtus sitkensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI., p. 221, July 15, 1897. 

73839. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Sitka, Alaska. August 
3, 1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 4745. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arvicola trowbridgii Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 529, 1857. 
=Microtus californicus (Peale). See Bailey, North Amer. Fauna, No. 17, p. 35, 
June 6, 1900. 
;'x’;- Mounted specimen and skull. Monterey, California. Col- 
lected by Lieut. W. P. Trowbridge, U.S. A. Catalogued January 
4, 1855. 
The mounted specimen isa poor-looking object, with patches devoid of hair on 


each side. The skull is in fair condition; both malars, left pterygoid, and right 
last lower molar are missing. 


Microtus tshuktshorum Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 11, January 31, 1899. 
gfe5. In alcohol, skull removed. Adult female. Plover Bay, east- 
ern Siberia. Collected by Lieut. John Davison. Catalogued 
January 12, 1866; skull, November 10, 1893. 
Specimen is fairly well preserved; hair rather loose, and a considerable patch 
on right side devoid of hair; skull perfect. 
Microtus umbrosus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 107, April 30, 1898. 
68480. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Zempoaltepec, Oax- 
aca, Mexico. July 10,1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 6412. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


MICROTUS—ASCHIZOMYS—EVOTOMYS. 93 
Microtus unalascensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proe. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 222, July 15, 1897. 
333. Skinandskull. Immaturefemale. Unalaska, Alaska. August 
13, £891. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight perforation 
in brain case. 


Microtus californicus vallicola Bailey. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 89, April 30, 1898. 

23393. Skin and skull. Adult female. Lone Pine, Inyo County, 
California. December 23, 1890. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 149. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly fractured 
frontals. 


Microtus yakutatensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 22, March 14, 1900. 

98005. Skin and skull. Adult male. North shore Yakutat Bay, 
Alaska. June 19, 1899. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. 
Original number 2101 (Dr. A. K. Fisher). 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus ASCHIZOMYS. 


Aschizomys lemminus Miller. 
= Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 1898, p. 369, October 15, 1898 
37459. Skin and skull and dried body. Adult male. Kelsey Station, 
Plover Bay, Bering Strait, Siberia. Collected by C. W. Baxter, 
Western Union Company’s Overland International Telegraph 
Expedition. Original number 423. Skin catalogued January,, 
1872; skull, April 29, 1897. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except on the left side, 
where the roots of the molars have been purposely exposed. The dried-up 
body is also present. The specimen was originally preserved in aleohol and 
made into a study skin many vears later. 


Genus EVOTOMYS. 


Evotomys alascensis Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, p. 364, October 15, 1898. 
=Evotomys dawsoni Merriam. See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, No. 24, p. 34, 
November 23, 1904. 
$3333. Skinandskull. Adult male. St. Michael, Alaska. October 
26, 1879. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 96. Skin 
catalogued June 11, 1884; skull, March 19, L886. 


tecently remade as a study skin, in good condition; skull perfect, but rather 
poorly cleaned. 


94 EVOTOMYS. 


Evotomys californicus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 26, October 8, 1890. 


41. Skin and skull. Adult male. Eureka, California. June 3, 


O° 


17¢ 
2393 
1889. Collected by Dr. T. S. Palmer. Original number 110. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken tip of left 
nasal. 
Evotomys caurinus Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 21-22, January 27, 1898. 


89460. Skinand skull. Adult male. Lund, Malaspina Inlet, British 
Columbia. July 18, 1897. Collected by E. A. Preble. Original 
number 2147. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Evotomys idahoensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 66-67, pl. 3, figs. 5-6, July 50, 1891. 


24283 Skinandskull. Adult female. Sawtooth Lake, Idaho. Octo- 
ber 4, 1890. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and V. Bailey. 
Original number 1936. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfeet. 
Evotomys gapperi loringi Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 125-126, pl. 3, fig. 3, May 13, 1897. e 


75795. Skin and skull. Adult male. Portland; North Dakota. No- 
vember 22, 1895. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original number 
3438. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Evotomys mazama Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 71-72, April 21, 1897. 

79913. Skin and skull. Adult male. Crater Lake, Mount Mazama, 
Oregon. August 15, 1896. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and 
V. Bailey. Original number 5765. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Evotomys nivarius Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 136-137, pl. 3, fig. 4, May 13, 1897. 

66203. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Ellinor, Olympic 
eee Washington. July 9, 1894. Collected by C. P. 
Streator. Original number 4025. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, 


EVOTOMYS. 95 


Evotomys norvegicus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., Il, p. 93, July 26, 1900. 


84674. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bergen, Norway. May 31, 
1898. Collected by Miss Thora Steineger. 


Original number 20, 
Catalogued August 20, 1898. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except broken coronoids of 
the mandible. 


Evotomys obscurus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 72, April 21, 1897. 
80413. Skinand skull. Adult male. Prospect, Rogue River Valley, 
Oregon. August 29, 1896. Collected by E. A. Preble. 


Original 
number 1455. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Evotomys occidentalis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, pp. 25-26, pl. 2, fig. 1, October 8, 1890. 
44447, Skin and skull. Adult male. 
Washington. August 16, 1889. 


Original number 308. 


Aberdeen, Chehalis County, 
Collected by Dr. T. 5. Palmer. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken coronoids. 
Evotomys orca Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, pp. 24-25, March 14, 1900. 

98028. Skin and skull. Adult female. 
Alaska. June 28, 1899. 
number 2139. 


Orca, Prince William Sound, 
Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Evotomys hercynicus suecicus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci. II, p. 101, July 26, 1900. 

85046. Skinand skull. Adult female. 
1898. Collected by J. A. Loring. 
logued September 27, 1898. 


Upsala, Sweden. August 6, 
Original number 5009. Cata- 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull rather damaged, right half of brain 
case entirely broken away, angular and coronoid processes of right half of man- 
dible broken off. 


Evotomys vasconiz Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 96, July 26, 1900. 

86994. Skin and skull. Adult male. Montrejeau, Hautes-Pyrenees, 
France. July 4, 1899. Collected by Robert T. Young. Original 
number 625. Catalogued October 10, 1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a few almost un- 
noticeable chippings. 


96 EVOTOMYS—PHENACOMYS. 


Evotomys wrangeli Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 120, pl. 3, fig. 5, May 13, 1897. 
74724. Skin and skull. Adult female. Wrangel, Alaska. Septem- 
ber 1, 1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 4835. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for injury to posterior 
end of palate. 


Genus PHENACOMYS. 


Phenacomys albipes Merriam. Biological Survey collection, 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 125-126, July 19, 1901. 


97236. Skin and skull. Adult male. Redwoods near Arcata, Hum- 
boldt Bay, California. May 24, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. K. 
Fisher. Original number 821. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Phenacomys longicaudus ‘True. 


Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XIII, No. 826, p. 303, November 15, 1890. 


9 


49071. Skin and skull. Marshfield, Coos County, Oregon. August, 
1890. Collected by Aurelius Todd. Catalogued September 8, 
1890. 

Recently made over into a fair study skin, tail has never been skinned out. 
Skull in rather large and disarticulated fragments. All the teeth are present; 
both parietals; both frontals; both premaxillee; most of both maxille; both 
bullee, and parts about and including the basioccipital and basisphenoid, and 
most of each half of the mandible. 


Phenacomys mackenzii Preble. Biological Survey collection, 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 182, August 6, 1902. 

110625. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Smith, Slave River, 
Mackenzie, Canada. June 29, 1901. Collected by E. A. Preble. 
Original number 4271. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Phenacomys orophilus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 65-66, pl. 3, figs. 3-4, July 30, 1891. 

23856. Skinandskull. Adult female. Salmon River Mountains, near 
head of Timber Creek, Idaho. August 28, 1890. Collected by 
Dr. C. Hart Merriam and V. Bailey. Original number 1710. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for badly injured fron- 
tals and slightly perforated audital bull. 
Phenacomys preblei Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 45, March 16, 1897. 

74513. Skinand skull. Adult male. Longs Peak, Colorado. August 

12, 1895. Collected by E. A. Preble. Original number 647, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


PHEN ACOMYS—FIBER. 97 


Phenacomys truei Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., VI, p. 331, November 7, 1894. 


=Phenacomys orophilus Merriam. See sate Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 80, 
April 21, 1897. q 


geser- Okin and skull. Adult. ‘‘Black Hills.” August 10, 1857. 


Collected by Dr. W. A. Hammond, U.S. A. Original number 109. 
Wagon road to Bridgers Pass, Rocky Mountains, Lieut. I. T. 
Bryan, U.S. A. Miller, doc. cit., says, ‘‘It is therefore almost 
beyond doubt that the type of Phenacomys true? was collected in 
Albany County or Laramie County, Wyoming, a few miles north- 
east of the present town of Laramie.” Skin catalogued October 7, 
1857; skull, November 13, 1894. 

Skin in poor condition, the anterior parts much torn and glued to a cotton fill- 
ing. Right fore leg missing. Apparently good for color. Skull very frag- 
mentary; practically of value only for the molar teeth, of which three of the left 
mandibular ramus are missing, 


Genus FIBER. 


Fiber zibethicus hudsonius Preble. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 22, pp. 53-54, October 31, 1902. 

106881. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Churchill, Keewatin, 
Canada. August 9, 1900. Collected by A. E. Preble. Original 
number 3081 (E. A. Preble). 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Fiber macrodon Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 143, May 13, 1897. 
75940. Skin and skull. Adult female. Lake Drummond, Dismal 
Swamp, Virginia. October 9, 1895. Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. 
Original number 1788. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Fiber zibethicus ripensis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 119, June 2, 1902. 

109012. Skin and skull. Adult male. Carlsbad, Pecos River, New 
Mexico: July 26,1901 (not July 25 as in original description). 
Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 7757. 

Well-made skin in good condition; left fore foot injured by insects and hang- 
ing by a thread of skin; skull perfect. 
Fiber spatulatus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, pp. 36-37, pl. 6, fig. 4, October 6, 1900. 

98567. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Lake Marsh, Yukon, 
Canada. July 3, 1899. Collected by W. H. Osgood. Original 
number 552. | 

Well-made skin in good condition, except for absence of tip of tail; left fore 
foot detached; skull perfect. 
45336—08——7 


98 MYOTALPA—NEOTOMA. 
Genus MYOTALPA. 


Myotalpa cansus Lyon. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., L, No. 1726, p. 134, pl. 15, figs. 4-10, July 9, 1907. 
144022. Skin and skull. Adult female. Taocheo, Province of Kan-su, 
China. May 7, 1906. Collected by W. W. Simpson. Original 
number 7. Catalogued March 6, 1907. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus NEOTOMA. 


Neotoma mexicana bullata Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 122-123, July 2, 1894. 

$952. Skin and skull. Adult male. Santa Catalina Mountains, Ari- 
zona. June 1, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 
114. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
coronoid process. 


Neotoma cumulator Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Sciurus, Castor, Neotoma, 
and Sigmodon, from the Mexican Border of the United States, p. 3, March 
5, 1897. (Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1132, p. 503, January 
19, 1898.) 


60348. Skin and skull. Adult male. Old Fort Yuma, San Diego 
County, California. April2, 1894. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, 
U.S. A.,andF. X. Holzner. Original number 3473. International 
Boundary Commission. Catalogued May 8, 1894. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma desertorum Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., IX, pp. 125-126, July 2, 1894. 
$3733. Skin and skull. Adult male. Furnace Creek, Death Valley, 
California. January 31, 1894. Collected by Dr. T. S. Palmer. 
Original number 43. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma fuscipes dispar Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 124-125, July 2, 1894. 

$34. Skin and skull. Adult male. Lone Pine, Inyo County, Cali- 
fornia. December 25, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. - Original 
number 2310. 


root 


3 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


NEOTOMA. 99 


Neotoma fulviventer Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 121-122, July 2, 1894. 

50165. Skin and skull. Adult female. Toluca Valley, Mexico, 
Mexico. November 5, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Origi- 
nal number 3744. 


Well-made skin in good condition, except for a small bare space on abdomen; 
skull perfect. 


Neotoma occidentalis fusca True. 
Diagnoses of Some Undescribed Wood Rats (Genus Neotoma) in the National 
Museum, p. 2, June 27, 1894. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XVII, 
No. 1006, p. 354, November 15, 1894.) 
=Neotoma cinerea fusca (True). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, p. 444, 
1897. 

3370. Skin without skull. Fort Umpqua, Douglas County, Oregon. 
Collected by Dr. E. P. Vollum. Catalogued in- 1859, about 
February 25. 

Specimen remade into a modern study skin, February, 1902; a considerable 
bare spot on left side, a smaller one on nose, right side, and on belly. 


Neotoma fuscipes Baird. 


Mammals of North America, p. 495, 1857. 


22026. Skeleton. Adult male. Petaluma, California. February, 
1856. Collected by E. Samuels. 

The original specimen was No. 2679, preserved in alcohol, but abeut 1885 it 
was prepared as a skeleton, No. 22026. Now in good condition and on exhi- 
bition in the Division of Comparative Anatomy. Skeleton catalogued March 9, 
1885; original specimen April 10, 1857. 

The description immediately following the brief diagnosis reads ‘‘( 2679. ¢ ). 
This animal * * *.”? For that reason the specimen bearing this number is 
considered the type. 


Neotoma goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 48, March 19, 1903. 

116894. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Saltillo, Coahuila, 
Mexico. April 18, 1902. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 15101. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma isthmica (Groldman. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 80-81, March 21, 1904. 


73187. Skin and skull. Adult female. Huilotepec, 8 miles south of 
Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico. May 5, 1895. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 7843. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


100 NEOTOMA. 


Neotoma latifrons Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 121, July 2, 1894. 

50135. Skinandskull. Adult male. Querendaro, Michoacan, Mexico. 
August 8, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
BOSS. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma leucodon Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 120-121, July 2, 1894. 

50137. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Luis Potosi, Mexico. 
August 4, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
3076. 

Well-made skin in good condition, except for a bare space on throat; skull per- 
fect, except for absence of left audital bulla. 


Neotoma micropus littoralis Goldman. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 31-32, February 2, 1905. 

92952. Skinandskull. Adultmale. Alta Mira, Tamaulipas, Mexico. 
April 10, 1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original number 
12281. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of ptery- 
goid processes. 


Neotoma mexicana madrensis Goldman. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 31, February 2, 1905. 

95244. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. Sierra Madre, near Guadalupe 
y Calvo, Chihuahua, Mexico. August 26, 1898. Collected by 
E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 12918. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last left 
lower molar. 


Neotoma magister Baird. Cotypes. 


,—— 


Mammals of North America, pp. 486, 498, 1857. 
For remarks concerning the relations of this species with existing forms of 
Neotoma, See Rhoads, Mammals of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, p. 91, 1903. 
The cotypes are as follows, all collected in the bone caves of 
Pennsylvania by Secretary S. F. Baird. The caves are undoubtedly 
those at Carlisle. The specimens were not entered in the Museum 
catalogue until October 24, 1872. 
12206. Left half of mandible; complete, except for coronoid process. 
12207. Right half of mandible; all molar teeth and angular process 
missing. 
12208. Right half of mandible; last molar, angular, condyloid, and 
coronoid processes missing. 
12209. Right half of mandible; all teeth, angular, condyloid, and 
coronoid processes missing. 


NEOTOMA. 101 


12210. Left half of mandible; all molars, angular, coronoid, and con- 
dyloid processes missing. 
12211. Middle portion of left half of mandible, containing last two 
molars and root of incisor. 
12212. Left half of mandible; all the teeth, angular, condyloid, and 
coronoid processes missing. 
12213. Anterior portion of right half of mandible, containing only 
the incisor. 
12214. Fragment.of left maxilla, containing the incisor. 


Cotypes not designated by number. The above are the only specimens known 
in the Museum and are unquestionably the ones upon which Baird based his 
description. 


Neotoma martinensis Goldman. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 28, February 2, 1905. 

81074. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Martin Island, Lower 
California, Mexico. July 17,1896. Collected by A. W. Anthony. 
Original number 39. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma intermedia melanura Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, pp. 126-127, July 2, 1894. 

$7218. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Ortiz, Sonora, Mexico. 
November 13, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 
671. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma mexicana Baird. 
Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 533, this paper was favorably reported for 

publication April 24, 1855. 

fees. Skin (lost) and skull. Adult. Near Chihuahua, Chihuahua, 
Mexico. Collected by John Potts. Skin catalogued July 6, 1854; 
skull, March 10, 1855. 

Skull lacks posterior portion of braincase; otherwise perfect. Skin lost. 

Type not designated by number. In the original description it is said; ‘‘Col- 
lected near Chihuahua by John Potts, esq.’’ Reference to Baird’s Mammals of 
North America, page 942, shows that no. ;45; is the only one to which that remark 
applies and it is thus ra serded as the type. Unfortunately it was without a tail, 
and that is undoubtedly the reason why the measurements of another specimen, 
No. 565, are given in the original description. 


Neotoma micropus Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 333, this paper was favorably reported for 

publication April 24, 1855. 
1676. Skull. Adult male. Charco Escondido, Tamaulipas, Mexico. 
March, 1853. Collected by Lieut. D. N. Couch, U.S. A. There 


102 NEOTOMA. 


should be a skin, No. 554, but it can not be found. Catalogued 
March 10, 1855. 

The skull lacks all four occipital bones, and the periotics and tympanics of 
each side; otherwise it is in good condition. 

Type not designated by number, but by referring to Baird’s Mammals of 
North America, 1857, page 493, it is seen that the measurements given in the 
original description apply to No. 554 only, with corresponding skull number 
1676, which consequently is considered the type. 


Neotoma montezumz Goldman. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 29, February 2, 1905. 
81426. Skin and skull. Adult male. Zimapan, Hidalgo, Mexico. 
October 17, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 10275. 


Well-made skin in good condition; right hind foot attached to body with 
wire ; distal half of tail missing ; skull perfect. 


Neotoma navus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, pp. 47-48, March 19, 1903. 

116895. Skinand skull. Adult female. Sierra Guadalupe, Coahuila, 
Mexico. April 26, 1902. Collected by- E. W. Nelson and KE. A. 
Goldman. Original number 15130. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
coronoid process. 
Neotoma nelsoni Goldman. ' Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 29-30, February 2, 1905. 

54320. Skin and skull. Adult female. Perote, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 

June 3, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 4935. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skuil perfect. 


Neotoma nudicauda Goldman. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 28-29, February 2, 1905. 
79073. Skinand skull. Young adult female. Carmen Island, Lower 
California, Mexico. October 14, 1895. Collected by J. E. Me- 
Lellan. Original number 1517. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with vault of cranium mostly broken 
away; right audital bulla broken; right frontal with an irregular incision; right 
mandibular ramus lacking angular process; left ramus lacking coronoid and 
condyle. 

Neotoma occidentalis Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., VII, p. 335, this paper was favorably reported for publica- 

tion April 24, 1855. 

—Neotoma cinerea occidentalis (Baird). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, 

July 30, 1891. 

572. Skin, formerly mounted; no record of a skull. Adult male. 
Shoalwater Bay, Pacific County, Washington. 1854, probably June. 


NEOTOMA. 103 


Collected by Dr. J. G. Cooper. Original number 16. Northern 
Pacific Railroad Survey, Governor I. I. Stevens. Catalogued 
March 14, 1855. 

According to records, specimen has been mounted, but has been made into 
a well-made study skin which has the appearance of being considerably bleached 
and discolored by age and exposure. The ears are somewhat ragged, and a 
small spot on nose, another on crown, and one on throat have the hair and epi- 
dermis missing. 

Type not designated by number. It is indicated as coming from Shoalwater 
Bay and collected by Doctor Cooper. In the original description the dimen- 
sions are ‘‘ Head and body 10 inches. Tail vertebrae 8,°;inches.’’ By referring 
to Baird’s Mammals of North America, page 497, where detailed measurements 
of the only three specimens from Shoalwater Bay are given, it is seen that the 
above figures belong to No. 572 only, which is therefore considered the type. 


Neotoma ferruginea ochracea Goldman. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 30-31, February 2, 1905. 
$4443. Skinand skull. Nearly adult male. Atemajac, near Guada- 
lajara, Jalisco, Mexico. May21,1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 2653. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma orizabe Merriam. - Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 122, July 2, 1894. 

53653. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Orizaba, Puebla, Mex- 
ico. April 20, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original num- 
ber 4674. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last two 

right upper molars and last left lower molar; right audital bulla disarticulated. 

Neotoma orolestes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 128, July 2, 1894. 

72378. Skinand skull. Adult male. Saguache Valley, 20 miles west 
of Saguache, Colorado. August 13, 1892. Collected by J. A. 
Loring. Original number 482. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma palatina Goldman. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 27-28, February 2, 1905. 
90959. Skinand skull. Adult male. Bolatos, Jalisco, Mexico. Sep- 


tember 12, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 11710. 


Well-made skin in fair condition; distal three-fourths of tail missing; skull 
perfect. 


104 NEOTOMA. 


Neotoma parvidens (oldman. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, p. 81, March 21, 1904. 


71586. Skin and skull. Adult female. Juquila, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
March 2, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 7587. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of first 
right lower molar, first right upper molar, first left upper molar, and last left 
upper molar; parietals fractured. 


Neotoma picta Goldman. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 79-80, March 21, 1904. 


70050. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mountains near Chilpancingo, 
Guerrero, Mexico. December 20, 1894. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 7179. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma pinetorum Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, pp. 111-112, July 31, 1893. 


£7682. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Francisco Mountain, 


Arizona. August 16, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original 
number 366. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma micropus planiceps Goldman. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 32, February 2, 1905. 

82105. Skin and skull. Adult male. Rio Verde, San Luis Potosi, 
Mexico. January 16,1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 10461. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last 
right upper molar. 


Neotoma saxamans Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, pp. 33-34, pl. 5, fig. 8, October 6, 1900. 

98923. Skin and skull. Adult male. Bennett, British Columbia. 
June 19. 1899. Collected by W. H. Osgood. Original number 
462. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last left 
upper molar. 
Neotoma macrotis simplex True. 


Diagnoses of Some Undescribed Wood Rats (Genus Neotoma) in the National 
Museum, p. 2, June 27, 1894. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X VII, 
No. 1006, p. 354, November 15, 1894.) 

=Neotoma fuscipes simplex (True). See Millerand Rehn, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. 
Hist., X XX, p. 105, December 27, 1901. 


NEOTOMA. 105 


$651. Skin and skull. Adult male. Old Fort Tejon, in mountains 
south of Kern Lake, California. Collected by J. Xantus. Origi- 
nal number 78%. Catalogued March 24, 1859. 
Well-made skin in fair condition; skull perfect, except for a large piece of 
squamosal broken out on right side. 


Neotoma desertorum sola Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 126, July 2, 1894. 

31516. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Emigdio, Kern County, 
California. October 24,1891. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Origi- 
nal number. 1369. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except nasals, which are 
slightly fractured; angular process of left mandibular ramus broken. 

Mr. E. A. Goldman informs us that the skin and the skull in this case are not 
properly associated, since they belong to different species. 


Neotoma ferruginea solitaria Goldman. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 31, February 2, 1905. 

76908. Skin and skull. Adult male. Nenton, Guatemala. Decem- 
ber 17, 1895. . Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goidman. 
Original number 8813. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma splendens True. 
Diagnoses of Some Undescribed Wood Rats (Genus Neotoma) in the National 
Museum, p. 1, June 27, 1894. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XVII, 
No. 1006, p. 853, November 15, 1894.) 
19693. Skin; no record of a skull. Adult male. Marin County, 
California. November 25,1887. Purchased from C. K. Worthen. 
Original number 211. Catalogued September 4, 1891. 


Well-made skin in good condition. 


Neotoma stephensi Goldman. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 32-33, February 2, 1905. 
117466. Skin and skull. Adult female. Hualpai Mountains, Ari- 
zona. July 1, 1902. Collected by F. Stephens. Original number 
4192. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma fuscipes streatori Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IX, p. 124, July 2, 1894. 
64439. Skin and skull. Adult male. Carbondale, Amador County, 
California. April 4, 1894. Collected by C. P. Streator. Origi- 
nal number 3685. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


106 NEOTOMA—HODOMYS. 
Neotoma tenuicauda Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, pp. 169-170, September 29, 1892. 

83684. Skin and skull. Adult male. North slope Sierra Nevada de 
Colima, Jalisco, Mexico; altitude 12,000 feet. April 18, 1892. 
Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 2446. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right 
zygoma. 


Neotoma tropicalis Goldman. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 81-82, March 21, 1904. 

68593. Skin and skull. Adult male. Totontepec, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
July 17, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 6468. 


Well-made skin in good condition, but with a bare spot on rump; skull perfect, 
except for absence of last right upper molar and left upper incisor. 


Neotoma venusta True. 
Diagnoses of Some Undescribed Wood Rats (Genus Neotoma) in the National 
Museum, p. 2, June 27, 1894. (Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XVII, 
No. 1006, p. 354, November 15, 1894. ) 

21696. Skin and skull. Adult male. Carrizo Creek, San Diego 
County, California. November 30, 1891. Collected by F. Ste- 
phens. Original number 1800. Purchased from C. K. Worthen. 
Catalogued November 11, 1893. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma albigula warreni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X XI, pp. 143-144, June 9, 1908. 

151051. Skin and skull. Adult male. Gaumes Ranch, Baca County, 

Colorado. November 28, 1907. Collected by M. Cary. Original 


number 1271. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotoma leucodon zacatecze Goldman. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 30, February 2, 1905. 

90957. Skinand skull. Adult female. Plateado, Zacatecas, Mexico. 
September 4, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 11641. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacking last left lower molar, right 


audital bulla, pterygoids, and adjacent parts of brain case; basisphenoid disar- 


ticulated; processes of mandibular rami mostly broken away; zygomata broken. 


Genus HODOMYS. 


Neotoma alleni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, pp. 168-169, September 29, 1892. 


Hodomys alleni (Merriam). 
p. 235, September 24, 1894. 


See Merriam, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, 


7 


HODOMYS—TEANOPUS—X ENOMYS—NELSONIA. 107 


327093. Skin and skull. Adult male. Manzanillo, Colima, Mexico. 
January 26, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
1796. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hodomys vetulus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1894, pp. 236-237, figs. 3c-3d, September 24, 1894. 
53656. Skin and skull. Adult’ male. Tehuacan, Puebla, Mexico. 
May 8, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson, Original number 4754. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken zygomata, 
left coronoid, and disarticulated left audital bulla. 


Genus TEANOPUS. 


Teanopus phenax Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, p. 81, May 29, 1903. 

95841. Skin and skull. Adult female. Camoa, Rio Mayo, Sonora, 
Mexico. November 4, 1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Origi- 
nal number 13258. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus XENOMYS. 


Xenomys nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, pp. 161-163, September 29, 1892. 


33381. Skin and skull. Adult male. Hacienda Magdalena, Colima, 
lexico. March 21, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original 
number 2288. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


4 


Genus NELSONIA. 


Nelsonia goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, p. 80, May 29, 1903. 

125818. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Tancitaro, Michoacan, 

Mexico. February 25,1903. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 


Goldman. Original number 16021. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly injured 


right auditory meatus. 


Nelsonia neotomodon Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 278-279, figs 14-15, December 17, 1897. 

90891. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mountains near Plateado, 
Zacatecas, Mexico. September 3, 1897. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 11625. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


LO8 NEOTOMODON—SIGMODON. 


Genus NEOTOMODON. 


Neotomodon alstoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 128, April 30, 1898. 

50534. Skin and skull. Old male. Nahuatzin, Michoacan, Mexico. 
October 12, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
Bd80. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neotomodon orizabe Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 129, April 30, 1898. 

53486. Skin andskull. Old male. Mount Orizaba, Puebla, Mexico. 
April 26, 1893. Collected by EK. W. Nelson. Original number 
4747. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with mastoid and audital bulle dis- 
articulated; last right upper molar missing. 


Neotomodon perotensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 129, April 30, 1898. 

54398. Skinand skull. Adult female. Cofre de Perote, Vera Cruz, 
Mexico. May 29, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original 
number 4897. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right 
zygoma and right parietal. 


Genus SIGMODON. 


Sigmodon alleni Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 112-113, June 2, 1902. 

88227. Skinandskull. Adult male. San Sebastian, Jalisco, Mexico. 
March 15, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E, A. Goldman. 
Original number LOTO8. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sigmodon alticola Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 116, June 2, 1902. 

68231. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. August 24, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 6624. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken left audital 
bulla. 


Sigmodon alticola amoles Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 116, June 2, 1902. 

81430. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pinal de Amoles, Queretaro, 
Mexico. September 18, 1896 (not 1898, as in original description). 
Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 
10161. 


SIGMODON, 109 


Well-made skin in good condition, but ears badly damaged by insects; skull 
with basisphenoid and pterygoid region absent; right zygoma broken; right 
mandibular condyle, coronoid, and angular processes absent. 


Sigmodon berlandieri Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 333, this paper was reported favorably for 
publication April 24, 1855. 
=Sigmodon hispidus berlandieri (Baird). See Bailey, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., 
XV, p. 106, June 2, 1902. 


#e;. Skin (lost) and skull. Adult female. Rio Nasas, Coahuila, 
Mexico. 1853. Collected by Lieut. D. N. Couch, U. 5. A. Cata- 
logued March 14, 1855. 

The Museum catalogue records that the skin was taken out of alcohol, and 
that the body is still in alcohol, but neither skin nor body can now be found, 
and only the injured skull is present. Right zygoma and practically all of the 
occipital bones and a portion of the right parietal broken away. Right tym- 
panic and periotic are present, but detached from the rest of the skull. 

Type not designated by number in the original description, but by referring 
to Baird’s Mammals of North America, page 505, it is seen that the description is 
based upon the present specimen, designated by number 566. Also see Bailey, 
loc. cit., page 107. 


Sigmodon hispidus eremicus Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Sciurus, Castor, Neotoma, 
and Sigmodon, from the Mexican Border of the United States, p. 4, March 5, 
1897. (Reprinted in Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1132, p. 504, January 
19, 1898. ) 

60319. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cienega well, 30 miles south 
of monument No. 204, Mexican boundary line, on the left bank of 
the Colorado River, in Sonora, Mexico. March 24, 1894. Col- 
lected by Dr. KE. A. Mearns, U.S. A., and F. X. Holzner. Original 
number 3367. International Boundary Commission. Catalogued 
May 8, 1894. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sigmodon leucotis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 115, June 2, 1902. 

92001. Skin and skull. Adult female. Valparaiso Mountains, 
Zacatecas, Mexico. December 2, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nel- 
son and E. A. Goldman. Original number 11812. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sigmodon hispidus major Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 109-110, June 2, 1902. 

96275. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sierra de Choix, 50 miles 
northeast of Choix, Sinaloa, Mexico. October 20, 1898. Col- 
lected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 
13154. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


110 SIGMODON. 


Sigmodon melanotis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XV, p. 114, June 2, 1902. 

50190. Skin and skull. Adultfemale. Patzcuaro, Michoacan, Mex- 
ico. July 15, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original num- 
ber 2834. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
angular process of mandible and broken right zygoma. . 


Sigmodon hispidus microdon Bailey. Biological Survey collection, 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 111-112, June 2, 1902. 
108467. Skin and skull. Adult male. Puerto Morelos, Yucatan, 
Mexico. March 13, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 14581 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sigmodon minimus Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X VII, No. 994, p. 130, July 19, 1894. 

34557. Skin and skull. Adult male. ‘* From upper corner monu- 
ment, New Mexico, on the Mexican boundary line 100 miles west 
of the initial monument on the west bank of the Rio Grande” 
(monument No. 40, 100 miles west of El Paso, Texas). April 26, 
1892. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A., and F. X. Holzner. 
Original number 1704. International Boundary Commission. 
Skin catalogued August 30, 1893; skull, January 5, 1897. 

Fairly well made skin in good condition; extreme tip of tail missing and belly 
a litle soiled and torn. Skull has right zygomatic arch completely missing; 
pterygo-palatal region and both angular processes of mandible somewhat 
injured. 


Sigmodon ochrognathus Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 115, June 2, 1902. 

110338. Skin and skull. Adult female. Chisos Mountains, Texas. 

June 13, 1901. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 7681. 


Well-made skin in good condition, but right ear imperfect; skull perfect. 


Sigmodon hispidus pallidus Mearns. 

Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Sciurus, Castor, Neotoma, 
and Sigmodon from the Mexican Border of the United States, p. 4, March 5, 
1897. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1132, p. 504, January 
18, 1898.) 

g040?. Skin and skull. Adult male. ‘*‘From the left bank of the 

Ktio Grande about 6 miles above El Paso, Texas, and opposite the 

initial monument of the Mexican boundary.” February 19, 1892. 

Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A., and F. X. Holzner. 

Original number 1461. International Boundary Commission. 

Catalogued April 28, 1892. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with posterior half of cranial cavity 
broken away, though many fragments are present. 


SIGMODON——REITHRODONTOMYS. LTT 


Sigmodon hispidus saturatus Bailey. Biological Survey collection, 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 111, June 2, 1902. 

99998. Skinand skull. Adult male. Teapa, Tabasco, Mexico. April 
5, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Origi- 
nal number 14108. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last right 
lower molar and slight perforation of right audital bulla. 


Sigmodon hispidus tonalensis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV., p. 109, June 2, 1902. 


75144. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tonala, Chiapas, Mexico. 
August 9, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 8312. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus RETERHRODONTOMYS. 


Reithrodontomys albescens Cary. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, pp. 53-54, May 6, 1903. 
116358. Skin and skull. Adult male. Eighteen miles northwest of 
' Kennedy, Nebraska. October 31, 1901. Collected by M. Cary. 
Original number 411 (8431x). 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Reithrodontomys microdon albilabris Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II], p. 549, November 29, 1901. 
68395. Skin and skull. Adult female. Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. August 25, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 6629. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys saturatus alticolus Merriam. 


Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 556, November 29,1901. 


68392. Skin and skull. Old male. Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, Mex- 
ico. August 24, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E, A. 
Goldman. Original number 6623. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right 
zygoma. 


Reithrodontomys mexicanus aurantius Allen. Biol. Survey coll. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., VII, pp. 115, 137-138, May 20, 1895. 

7$388- Skin and skull. Adult male. Lafayette, Louisiana. May 
24, 1892. Collected by R. J. Thompson. Original number 174. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken zygomata. 


112 REITHRODONTOMYS. 


Reithrodontomys tenuirostris aureus Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 548, November 29, 1901. 

76939. Skin and skull. Adult female. Calel, Guatemala. January 
15, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and EK. A. Goldman. Origi- 
nal number 9140. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys chrysopsis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 152, June 13, 1900. 

52031. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Popocatepetl, Mexico. 
February 25, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 4405. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys saturatus cinereus Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 556, November 29, 1901. 


53623. Skin and skull. Adult male. Chalchicomula, Puebla, Mex- 
ico. April 13, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 4659. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys colimz Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 551, November 29, 1901. 
$3671) Skin and skull. Adult male. Sierra Nevada de Colima, Ja- 
lisco, Mexico; altitude 12,000 feet. April 13, 1892 (not April 21, 
1892, as in original description). Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman, Original number 2447. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys megalotis deserti Allen. Biological Survey coll. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., VII, pp. 114, 127-129, May 20, 1895. 
3$479- Skin and skull. Adult female. Oasis Valley, Nye County, 
Nevada. March 16, 1891. Collected by F. Stephens. Original 
number 149. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacking left half of brain case, includ- 
ing audital bulla. 


Reithrodontomys difficilis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., ITI, p. 556, November 29, 1901. 

63735. Skin and skull. Adult male. Orizaba, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
February 20, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 5868. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





REI VHRODONTOMYS. 113 


Reithrodontomys dorsalis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 557, November 29, 1901. 

77009. Skin and skull. Adult male. Calel, Guatemala. January 
14, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Origi- 
nal number 9112. 

Well-made skin in good condition, but tip of tail absent; skull perfect, except 
for absence of angular processes of mandible. 
Reithrodontomys goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 552-553, November 29, 1901. 

93096. Skin and skull. Adult female. Metlaltoyuca, Puebla, 
Mexico. February 12, 1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 12153. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys griseoflavus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, pp. 553-554, November 29, 1901. 
82196. Skin and skull. Adult male. Ameca, Jalisco, Mexico. Feb- 
ruary 9, 1897. Collected by EK. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 10501. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys griseus Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, pp. 106-107, October 24, 1905. 

87852. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Antonio, Texas. March 4, 

1897. Collected by H. P. Attwater. Original number 1068 (371x). 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys griseoflavus helvolus Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 554, November 29, 1901. 
68387. Skin and skull. Adult female. Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
August 14,1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 6576. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys hirsutus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 553, November 29, 1901. 


$2200. Skin and skull. Old male. Ameca, Jalisco, Mexico. Feb- 
ruary 15, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 10537. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


45336—08——8 


114 REITHRODONTOMYS. 


Reithrodontomys costaricensis jalapze Merriam. 
Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 552, November 29, 1901. 

108538. Skin and skull. Adult male. Jalapa, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
May 10, 1901. Collected by E. W. Neilson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 14712. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys klamathensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North. Amer. Fauna, No. 16, p. 938, 1899. 

95444, Skin and skull. Adult male. Big Spring (or Mayten), 
Shasta Valley, California. September 18, 1898. Collected by 
W. H. Osgood. Original number 281. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys levipes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, pp. 554-555, November 29, 1901. 

88057. Skinand skull. Adult male. San Sebastian, Jalisco, Mexico. 
March 30, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson An K. A. Goldman. 
Original number 10839. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodon longicauda Baird. Cotypes. 
Mammals of North America, p. 451, 1857. 


=Reithrodontomys longicauda (Baird). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
VII, p. 129, May 21, 1895. 


$415. Skin and skull. Female. Original number 231. 
$419. Skin and skull. Male. Original number 2382. 
$283. Skin and skull. Male. Original number 239. 
2581 to 2591, both inclusive, alcoholics. 


All collee ted at Pataioun: California, by E. Samuels. 4445, 
$414, catalogued April 24, 1856; $737, June 24, 1856; the alcoholics, 
April, 1857; 2582, 2584, and 2588 are recorded in the catalogue as 
‘Distributed to C. E. Aiken, June, 1872.” 


Of these fourteen specimens all that can now be found is the skull of 4435. 
The supraoccipital bone has been broken away; the angular process of the left 
half of the mandible is broken off, and all the molars on the upper right-hand 
side are lost. 

No type is designated and there is absolutely nothing by which any one of 
Bairda’s 15 specimens can be picked out asa type. Fourteen of the specimens 
came from Petaluma, California, and a single one from San Francisco. The 
former are regarded as cotypes and the type-locality fixed at Petaluma. (See 
Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soe. Nat. Hist., XXX, p. 97, December 27, 1901.) 


Reithrodon megalotis Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 451, pl. 84, fig. 4, 1857. 


=Reithrodontomys megalotis (Baird). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
V, p. 79, April 23, 1893. 





REITHRODONTOMYS. 115 


2281. Skull. Between Janos and San Luis Springs, State of Sonora, 
Mexico, near border of Grant County, New Mexico. Collected by 
Dr. C. B. Kennerly, under the command of Maj. W. H. Emory, 
U.S. A. Catalogued November, 1855. 

Skull perfect except for loss of both malar bones. There should be a skin, 
No. 1039, which can not.be found. 

No type specified, but Baird’s description is evidently based upon the above 
specimen, designated by number. The skull of the above is figured. He had 
one other specimen, an alcoholic, now lost. His brief diagnosis says, ‘‘Hind 
foot near .70.’’ No. 1039, in the table of measurements, is put down as .68, 
while 1040, the alcoholic, is .50. Evidently the diagnosis was based on No. 
1039. In Report United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, Part 2, page 48, 
1859, No. 1039 is alone spoken of. 


Reithrodontomys merriami Allen. Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., VII, pp. 114, 119-120, May 20, 1895. 

$2832. Skin and skull. Adult male. Austin Bayou, near Alvin, 
Brazoria County, Texas. March 15,1892. Collected by W. Lloyd. 
Original number 1162. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacking posterior half and entire 
underside of brain case. 


Reithrodontomys microdon Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sei., III, pp. 548-549, November 29, 1901. 


76923. Skin and skull. Adult female. Todos Santos, Guatemala. 
December 31, 1895. Collected by EK. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 8977. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodon montanus Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., VII, p. 335, this paper was reported favorably 

for publication April 24, 1855. 

=Reithrodontomys montanus (Baird). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

V, p. 80, April 28, 1893. 

fis. Mounted skin, and skull. Near the upper end of the San Luis 
Valley, Saguache County, Colorado. August 29 or 30, 1853-54. 
Collected by Mr. Kreutzfeldt, on Capt. E. G. Beckwith’s expedi- 
tion from Westport, Missouri, to the Pacific coast in 1853-54. 
(These data are taken from J. A. Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. 
Hist., VII, pp. 124 and 125, May 21, 1895.) Catalogued January 
ii. VS5D. 

Mounted skin in rather poor condition; body doubled up; both fore legs 
missing. Both hind legs present, but one is detached from the body; tail also 
detached, but present. Skull with both malars gone, a hole in the left parietal, 
and the right angular process of the mandible missing; otherwise in good con- 
dition. 

Type not designated by number in, the original description, but the single 


specimen is referred to by number in Baird’s Mammals of North America, page 
450. 


116 REITHRODONTOMYS. 


Reithrodontomys dychei nebrascensis Allen. Biol. Survey coll. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., VII, pp. 114, 122-123, May 20, 1895. 


18 
> x 


3634. Skinandskull. Adult male. Kennedy, Nebraska. April 19, 
1890. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 1042. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys colime nerterus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 551-552, November 29, 1901. 
$3680 Skin and skull. Adult female. Foothill region of Sierra 
Nevada de Colima, Jalisco, Mexico; altitude, 6,500 feet. April 
91,1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Orig- 
inal number 2514. 


Well-made skin in good condition, but right hind foot neariy severed from 
skin ; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys megalotis obscurus Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 558, November 29, 1901. 
95277. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sierra Madre, near Guadalupe 
y Calvo, Chihuahua, Mexico. August 26, 1898. Collected by 
‘EK. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 12900. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys orizabe Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 550-551, November 29, 1901. 
53626. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Orizaba, Puebla, 
Mexico; altitude, 9,500 feet. April 24,1893. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and EK. A. Goldman. Original number 4734. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys levipes otus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 555, November 29, 1901. 
$3670 Skin and skull. Adult female. Foothill region of Sierra 
Nevada de Colima, Jalisco, Mexico; altitude 6,500 feet. April 11, 
1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E, A. Goldman. Original 


number 2439. 


36 
oa 
dé 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys perotensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 550, November 29, 1901. 

54494. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cofre de Perote, Vera Cruz, 
Mexico. May 31, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson and K. A. 
Goldman. Original number 4912. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


SS = 


a ee ee ee ee eee me” 


ae Rn ite he ngs 


REITHRODONTOMYS—ORYZOMYS. L117 


Reithrodontomys tenuirostris Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 547-548, November 29, 1901. 

76919. Skin and skull. Adult male. Todos Santos, Guatemala. 
December 29, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 8917. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys levipestoltecus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 


Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 555-556, November 29, 1901. 

50746. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tlalpam, Federal District, 
Mexico. December 1, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 3935. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys chrysopsis toluce Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 549, November 29, 1901. 

55895. Skin and skull. Adult female. North slope Volcan Toluca, 
Mexico, Mexico; altitude 11,500 feet. September 10, 1893. Col- 
lected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 
5454. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Reithrodontomys megalotis zacatece Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 557, November 29, 1901. 

91910. Skin and skull. Adult female. Valparaiso Mountains, Zaca- 

tecas, Mexico. December 6, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson 
and E. A. Goldman. Original number 11859. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken zvgomata. 
Genus ORYZOMYS. 


Oryzomys albiventer Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 279-280, July 26, 1901. 

82256. Skin and skull. Adult male. Ameca, Jalisco, Mexico. Feb- 
ruary 6, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 10478. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right man- 
dibular ramus. 


Oryzomys angusticeps Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 292, July 26, 1901. 
76816. Skin and skull. Adult male. Volean Santa Maria, Guate- 
mala. January 22, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 9190. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
audital bulla. 


118 ORYZOMYS, 


Oryzomys crinitus aztecus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 282-283, July 26, 1901. 
51173. Skin and skull. Adult male. Yautepec, Morelos, Mexico. 
January 16, 18938. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 4290, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken upper 
incisors and interorbital region. 


Oryzomys chapmani caudatus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 289, July 26, 1901. 
68641. Skin and skull. Adult male. Comaltepec, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
July 31, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 6516. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys cozumelz Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 103-104, July 19, 1901. 

108462. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cozumel Island, Yucatan, 
Mexico. April 8, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 14666. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys crinitus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 281-282, July 26, 1901. 

50182. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tlalpam, Federal District, 
Mexico. November 30, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 3905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys chapmani dilutior Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 290, July 26, 1901. 

93124. Skin andskull. Adultmale. Huauchinango, Puebla, Mexico. 
January 10, 1898. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 12040. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys natator floridanus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 277, July 26, 1901. 
=Oryzomys palustris coloratus (Bangs). See Rhoads, Amer. Nat., XXXVI, p. 
663, August, 1902. 
71349. Skin and skull. Adult male. Everglade, Monroe County, 
Florida. March 29, 1895. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original 
number 2819. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last 
upper molars and last two right lower molars. 


a 


ORYZOMYS. 119 


Oryzomys goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection, 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 288-289, July 26, 1901. 
78110. Skin and skull. Adult female. Coatzacoaleos, Vera Cruz, 
Mexico. April 11, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 9511. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys hylocetes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 291, July 26, 1901. 
77605. Skin and skull. Old male. Chicharras, Chiapas, Mexico. 
February 14, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 9306. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys medius Robinson and Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1246, p. 142, October 3, 1901. 

105405. Skin and skull. Young adult male. San Julian, 8 miles 
east of La Guaira, Venezuela. August 8, 1900. Collected by 
Maj. Wirt Robinson, U.S. A. Original number 1655. Catalogued 
May 8, 1901. 

Well-made skin in good condition, except for small loss of hair on nape; skull 
perfect. 


Oryzomys rostratus megadon Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., ITI, p. 294, July 26, 1901. 
99978. Skin and skull. Oldmale. Teapa, Tabasco, Mexico. March 
24,1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Origi- 
nal number 14062. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of angular 
process of right mandibular ramus. 


Oryzomys nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 15, January 27, 1898. 

89200. Skin and skull. Adult male. Maria Madre Island, Tres 
Marias Islands, Mexico. May 13, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nel- 
son and E. A. Goldman. Original number 11022. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys palatinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., 1 pp. 290-291, July 26, 1901. 

99977. Skin and skull. Adult female. Teapa, Tabasco, Mexico. 
April 1, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 14080. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last right 
upper molar and left occipital condyle. 


120 ORYZOMYS. 


Oryzomys mexicanus peragrus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II], pp. 283-284, July 26, 1901. 

82119. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Rio Verde, San Luis 
Potosi, Mexico. January 8,1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
EK. A. Goldman. Original number 10398. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Mus peruvianus Peale. See page 289. 


Oryzomys rhabdops Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 291-292, July 26, 1901. 
76813. Skin and skull. Adult male. Calel, Guatemala. January 
15, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman.  Origi- 
nal number 9135. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys richmondi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 284, July 26, 1901. 

$6349, Skin and skull. Adult male. Escondido River, 50 miles 
above Bluetields, Nicaragua. June 21, 1892. Collected by Dr. 
C. W. Richmond. Original number 63. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys rostratus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 293-294, July 26, 1901. 
93112. Skin and skull. Old male. Metlaltoyuca, Puebla, Mexico. 
February 5, 1898. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 12130, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys jalape rufinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 285, July 26, 1901. 

65499. Skin and skull. Adult female. Catemaco, Vera Cruz, Mex- 
ico. April 27, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 6112. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys rufus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 287, July 26, 1901. 

91404. Skinandskull. Oldfemale. Santiago, Tepic, Mexico. June 
20, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Origi- 
nal number 112382. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last two 
left upper molars and of basisphenoid and pterygoid processes, and injured 
squamosal and supraoccipital. 


ORYZOMYS. 131 


Oryzomys chapmani saturatior Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 290, July 26, 1901. 
76183. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tumbala, Chiapas, Mexico. 


October 23, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 8574. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of angular 
processes of mandible. 
Oryzomys talamance Allen. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XIV, No. 850, p. 193, July 24, 1891. 
43223. Skinand skull. Adult male. Talamanca, Costa Rica. 1874. 


Collected by Prof. W. M. Gabb. Original number 99. Catalogued 
November 19, 1874. 


Specimen in good state of preservation; in February, 1902, made into a fair study 
skin. Left hind leg missing; tail not skinned out and from 2 to 3 cm. of the tip 
without epidermis. Skull nearly perfect. Ptervgoids injured, and angular and 
coronoid processes of right half of mandible broken. In the original description 
Dr. Allen remarks there is no lower jaw. The present lower jaw was found in 
the same vial with the rest of the skull. It was not numbered, however, so there 
is some doubt as to its belonging to the specimen. 


Oryzomys teapensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 286, July 26, 1901. 
99973. Skinand skull. Young adult male. Teapa, Tabasco, Mexico. 


April 4, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 14100, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
occipital condyle. 
Oryzomys yucatanensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 294-295, July 26, 1901. 
108139. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Chichenitza, Yucatan, 


Mexico. February 9,1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 14527. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Oryzomys zygomaticus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 285-286, July 26, 1901. 
76794. Skin and skull. Adult male. Nenton, Guatemala. Decem- 


ber 15, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 8798. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


132 ONYCHOMYS. 
Genus ONYCHOMYS. 


Onychomys leucogaster albescens Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 124-125, June 9, 1904. 
50040. Skin and skull. Adult female. Samalayuca, Chihuahua, 
Mexico. December 12, 1892. Collected by C. P. Streator. 
Original number 2399. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Onychomys torridus arenicola Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 


States, p. 3, May 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 
1103, p. 139, December 21, 1896. ) 

#3434. Skin and skull. Adult male. Rio Grande, about 6 miles 
above El Paso, Texas. February 29, 1896. Collected by Dr. E. A. 
Mearns, U. 8. A., and F. X. Holzner. Original number 1528. 
International Boundary Commission. Catalogued April 28, 1892. 

Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Onychomys leucogaster brevicaudus Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 52-53, fig. 2, July 30, 1891. 
zo$3¢- Skin and skull. Adult male. Blackfoot, Bingham County, 
Idaho. July 15, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey and Dr. B. H. 
Dutcher, U.S. A. Original number 1442. ° 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacking basioccipital, supraoccipital, 
interparietal, and part of parietals. 


Onychomys torridus canus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, p. 124, June 9, 1904. 

90843. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. San Juan Capistrano, Zacate- 
cas, Mexico. August 23, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
Kk. A. Goldman. Original number 11574. 


Well-made skin in good condition, except for bare patch on abdomen; skull 
perfect. 


Onychomys fuliginosus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 59-61, September 4, 1890. 
y7$0g¢- Skin and skull. Adult female. Black Tank lava beds, north- 
east of San Francisco Mountain, Arizona. September 27, 1889. 
Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and V. Bailey. Original num- 
ber 547. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Onychomys torridus perpallidus Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 4, May 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 
1103, p. 140, December 21, 1896.) 


ee 


ONYCHOMYS—PEROMYSOUS. 133 


60174. Skin and skull. Adult female. Left bank of the Colorado 
River, at monument 204, Mexican boundary line. March 27, 1894. 
Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A.,and F. X. Holzner. Origi- 
nal number 3301. International Boundary Commission. Cata- 
logued May 7, 1894. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for piece out of left 


zygzoma. 


Hesperomys (Onychomys) torridus Coues. 
Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1874, p. 183, December 15, 1874. 
=Onychomys torridus (Coues). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 2, p. 3, 
October 30, 1889. 

9886. Skin without skull. Camp Grant, Graham County, Arizona. 
June 10, 1867. Collected by Dr. E. Palmer. Catalogued January. 
1872. 

Skin taken out of alcohol (according to Coues), well preserved, but poorly 
made up. No record of a skull. 


Onychomys torridus tularensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, p. 123, June 9, 1904. 
$t44}. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bakersfield, California. 


July 19, 1891. Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original num- 


ber 792. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


aaa 


Onychomys torridus yakiensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proe. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, p. 124, June 9, 1904. 


95855. Skin and skull. Adult female. Camoa, Rio Mayo, Sonora, 
Mexico. October 28,1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman.  Origi- 
nal number 13158. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last 
right upper molar; audital bulleze each with a large perforation. 


Genus PEROMYSCUS. 


Hesperomys (Vesperimus) affinis Allen. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XIV, No. 850, p. 195, July 24, 1891. 
=Peromyscus affinis (Allen). See Allen and Chapman, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. 
Hist., IX, p. 7, February 23, 1897. 
8¢82. Skin and skull (latter lost). Adult female. Barrio, Tehaunte- 
pec, Mexico. October 30, 1868. Collected by Prof. F. Sumi- 
chrast. Original number 23. Catalogued April 10, 1869. 
Skin fairly well preserved, rather poorly made up; tail not skinned out; right 


foot present, but broken off from body. Skull can not be found. 
Type designated by number. In the description the figures read 7382, but it 


is an error for 9382. 


124 PEROMYSCUS. 


Peromyscus allex Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 76-77, March 21, 1904. 

$3428. Skin and skull. Adult female. Colima, Colima, Mexico. 
March 7, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
2029. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus allophylus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., X VII, p. 71, March 21, 1904. 
77657. Skinandskull. Adult female. Huehuetan, Chiapas, Mexico. 
February 21, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 9352. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus altilaneus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 74-75, March 21, 1904. 

76856, Skin and skull. Adult male. Todos Santos, Guatemala. 
December 30, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 8942. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus amplus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proe. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 62-63, March 21, 1904. 

70158. Skin and skull. Adult female. Coixtlahuaca, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. November 12, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 7033. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus banderanus angelensis Osgood. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIT, p. 69, March 21, 1904. 
71442. Skin and skull. Adult female. Puerto Angel, Oaxaca, Mex- 
ico. March 13,1895. Collected by KE. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 7642. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus eremicus arenarius Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 2, May 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1103, 
p. 138, December 21, 1896.) 

20018 Skin and skull. Adult male. Rio Grande, about 6 miles 
from El Paso, Texas. February 25, 1892. Collected by Dr. E. A. 
Mearns, U. 8S. A., and F. X. Holzner. Original number 1513. 
International Boundary Commission. Catalogued April 28, 1892. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





PEROMYSCUS. £35 


Peromyscus auritus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 119-120, April 30, 1898. 


68438. Skin and skull. Old female. Mountains 15 miles west of 
Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico. September 17, 1894. Collected by 
E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 6795. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hesperomys austerus Burd. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 336, this paper was reported favorably 
for publication April 24, 1855. 


=Peromyscus austerus (Baird). See Bangs, Amer. Nat., XX XI, p. 75, January, 
1897. 


1255. Skin (lost)and skull. Young adult. Steilacoom, Washington. 
Probably January 20, 1854. Collected by Dr. George Suckley. 
Catalogued January 4, 1855. 


Skin said to have been mounted; can not be found. Skull much broken; most 
of mandible present, and most of rostrum, both the upper tooth rows, and a 
small portion of the cranium. Parts of the skull have a charred appearance. 

No type designated. Baird (Mammals of North America, p. 467, 1857) lists 8 
specimens as positively austerus: No. 229 from Spokane Plain, and nos. 363, 
364, 365, 371, 916, 1964 and 2576 from Steilacoom, Washington. Since Steila- 
coom is the first locality mentioned in the original description, and since seven- 
eighths of the specimens came from there, Steilacoom should be chosen as the 
type-locality. (See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., V, 1893, p. 192.) Miller 
and Rehn (Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., X XX, p. 69, December 27, 1901) erro- 
neously give Spokane Plain as the type-locality. Of the specimens coming 
from Steilacoom only the first four were catalogued at the time the original 
description appeared. The other three were catalogued later in the same year 
or in the next year. Evidently they were not in Baird’s hands when the origi- 
nal description was prepared and they can not be considered as part of the 
original material. The first four may properly be considered as the original 
material. Of these no. 364, as measured by Baird in 1857, agrees very closely 
(hind foot identical) with the measurements given in the original description and 
may be chosen as the type. All of these four specimens are represented in the 
collection by imperfect skulls only. The skins are said to have been mounted. 
They could not be found in 1893. (See Allen, loc. cit.) 

No. 1964 bears one of Dr. Coues’s labels marked ‘‘Type of HZ. austerus Baird= 
leucopus,’’ in what is evidently Dr. Coues’s handwriting. In Table 16 on page 74, 
Monographs of North American Rodentia, 1877, Dr. Coues gives no. 1964 as 
““typical of ‘austerus.’’’? As this specimen was collected after the original 
description appeared, it obviously can not be considered the type. 


Peromyscus yucatanicus badius Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 70-71, March 21, 1904. 
108016. Skinand skull. Adult female. Apazote, Campeche, Mexico. 
December 28, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and. E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 14377. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


126 PEROMYSCUS. 


Peromyscus sonoriensis blandus Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., X VI, p. 56, March 21, 1904. 


57635. Skinand skull. Adult female. Escalon, Chihuahua, Mexico. 
November 27, 1893. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original num- 
ber 166. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. _ 


Hesperomys boylii Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., VII, p. 335, this paper was reported favorably 
for publication April 24, 1855. 
=Peromyscus boylii (Baird). See Mearns, Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mam- 
mals from the Mexican Border of the United States, p. 3, May 25, 1896. 
(Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1130, p. 189, December 21, 
1896.) 


fxs. Mounted skin, and skull and tail vertebre. Along the middle 
fork of the American River, between Placer and Eldorado coun- 
ties, California. Collected by Dr. C. C. Boyle. Skin catalogued 
January 4, 1855; skull, December 20, 1854. 


Skin mounted and in wretched condition; skull complete except for the right 
malar and most of the left zygomatic arch. 

Type not designated by number. It is referred to in the original description 
as ‘collected on the middle fork of the American River, California, by Dr. C. C. 
Boyle.’”’ In the list of specimens of Hesperomys boylii in Baird’s Mammals, No. 
fys) is the only one with the above data and is consequently to be taken as the 
type. 


Peromyscus bullatus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 63, March 21, 1904. 


54405. Skin and skull. Adult female. Perote, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
June 3, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 4932. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hesperomys campestris Le Conte. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 413, this paper was reported favorably for 
publication October 25, 1853. 


= Peromyscus leucopus noveboracensis (Fischer). 


4726. Skin (no history of askull). Immature. New Jersey. Major 
J. EK. Le Conte, U.S. A. Catalogued April 13, 1861. 


Skin in wretched shape and condition. Le Conte’s original specimens were 
in alcohol, and the specimen is evidently an attempt at making a skin from one 
of them, Large areas of hair have slipped from the back and belly. 

Type not designated by number. Coues is the only authority for considering 
it the type. On page 51 of Monographs of North American Rodentia he refers 
to it as the type, and again on page 62. In addition, the specimen is entered in 
the Museum catalogue as ‘‘ Hesperomys campestris’? and as coming from Le 
Conte April 13, 1861. One of the old labels on the specimen has written on the 
back, ‘‘ Type of the species as described Pr. A. N. 8., VI, 1853, 413.”’ 


PEROMYSCUS. 137 


Peromyscus canus Mearns. 
Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 3, March 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X VIII, 
No. 1075, p. 445, May 23, 1896. ) 
=Peromyscus texanus (Woodhouse). See Mearns, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 56, 
pt. 1, p. 404, April 13, 1907. 


21109, Skin and skull. Adult female. Fort Clark, Kinney County, 


Texas. January 13,1893. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S.A. 
. ’ . x 

Original number 2208. International Boundary Commission. Skin 

catalogued August 29, 1893; skull, February 27, 1896. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus texanus castaneus Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 58-59, March 21, 1904. 
107980. Skin and skull. Adult male. Yohaltun, Campeche, Mexico. 
December 19, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 14283. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus texanus clementis Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 4, March 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XVIII, 
No. 1075, p. 446, May 23, 1896. ) 

61117. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Clemente Island, Pacific 
Ocean, California. August 27, 1894. Collected by Dr. E. A. 
Mearns, U.S.A. Original number 3819. International Boundary 

1 


Commission. Catalogued November 17, 1894. 


Well-made skin in good condition; sku)! perfect. 


Hesperomys cognatus Le Conte. Cotypes. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 442, this paper was reported favorably 
for publication December 25, 1855. 
=Peromyscus gossypinus (Le Conte). 


4708 and 4709. Poorly made skins but well preserved; skulls inside. 
Collected by Major J. E. Le Conte, U.S. A. The locality given 
in the original description is Georgia and South Carolina. Cat- 
alogued April 13, 1861. 

The specimens are considered cotypes on Dr. Coues’s authority. In the syn- 
onymy of Hesperomys leucopus on page 51, Monographs of North American 
Rodentia, he gives ‘‘ Hesperomys cognatus Le Conte, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 
VII, 1855, p. 442 (Southern States; types, Nos. 4708, 4709, Mus. Smiths. ).”’ 

Peromyscus comptus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 120, April 30, 1898. 

70191. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mountains near Chilpancingo, 
Guerrero, Mexico. December 24, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nel- 
son and E. A. Goldman. Original number 7266. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken left zygoma. 


128 or, PEROMYSOUS. 


Peromyscus melanophrys consobrinus Osgood. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 66, March 21, 1904. 

79626. Skin and skull. Adult female. Berriozabal, Zacatecas, 
Mexico. July 10, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 9818. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus cozumelze Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 103, July 19, 1901. 

108449. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cozumel Island, Yucatan, 
Mexico. April 11,1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 14686. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hesperomys crinitus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 53-54, fig. 8, July 30, 1891. 
= Peromyscus crinitus (Merriam). See Bangs, Proc. New Eng. Zool. Club, J, 
p. 67, July 31, 1899. 
4255 Skin and skull. Adult male. Shoshone Falls, Idaho. Octo- 
ber 10, 1890. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and V. Bailey. 
Original number 1945. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus zarhynchus cristobalensis Merriam. 
Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 117-118, April 30, 1898. 
76109. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Cristobal, Chiapas, Mex- 
ico. October 2, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 8536. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus attwateri eremicoides Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIT, p. 60, March 21, 1904. 
=Peromyscus pectoralis eremicoides (Osgood). See Bailey, Proc. Biol. Soc. 
Wash., XIX, p. 57, May 1, 1906. 
57729. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mapimi, Durango, Mexico. 
December 15, 1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original num- 
ber 235. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hesperomys eremicus Baird. Cotypes. 
Mammals of North America, p. 479, 1857. 
=Peromyscus eremicus (Baird). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., VII, 
p. 226, June 29, 1895. 
$221. Skin (lost) and skull. Male. Fort Yuma, California. 1853. 
Received from Maj. G. H. Thomas, U.S. A. Catalogued June 


a 


sl i i clit ee ee 


PEROMYSCUS. 129 


24, 1856. Both halves of mandible present and a portion of the 
left upper maxilla, all with some of the teeth out, which are still 
present, however. 
2574. Dataas above, preserved in alcohol; specimen lost. Catalogued 
May, 1857. . 
gov. Inalcohol; skull removed. Female. Data as above.  Speci- 
men in good condition except for some shedding of hair about 
the flanks. The skull was removed in May, 1902, and is in good 
condition. Alcoholic catalogued May, 1857; skull, May 26, 1902. 
Baird’s description is based upon six specimens, three from Fort Yuma, Cali- 
fornia, and three from ‘‘Colorado bottom, Cal.’’ There is nothing to indicate 
that any one specimen was regarded as more typical than any of the others. It 
seems best, however, to restrict the cotypes to the three first mentioned as from 
Fort Yuma, since this is a definite locality; and to consider the three from ‘‘ Col- 
orado bottom’’ as paratypes. Much of the description is based upon details of 
the soles of the feet, which could be made out more readily in alcoholic speci- 
mens. Two of the Fort Yuma specimens were in alcohol, while all the ‘‘Colo- 


rado bottom’ specimens were skins. 


Peromyscus spicilegus evides Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, p. 64, March 21, 1904. 
71426. Skin and skull. Adult male. Juquila, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
February 28, 1895. Collected by E.W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 7572. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus felipensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 122-123, April 30, 1898. 

68409. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. August 22, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 6611. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus sonoriensis fulvus Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 57, March 21, 1904. 
68655. Skinand skull. Adultmale. Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico. June 
12, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Origii- 
nal number 6277. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hesperomys gambelii Baird. Cotypes. 
Mammals of North America, p. 464, 1857. 
—=Peromyscus texanus gambelii (Baird). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. 
Hist., VIII, p. 267, December 4, 1896. 
ey. Skin and skull, and tail vertebree. —°y°2;. Skin (lost) and skull, 
and tail vertebre. Monterey, California. Collected by Lieut. 
W. P. Trowbridge, U. S. A. Skins catalogued January 4, 1854; 
skulls, January 6, 1855. 
45336—08 9 





Ta0 PEROMYSOUS. 


Dr. J. A. Allen discusses the status of the type of this species in the Bulletin 
of the American Museum of Natural History, Volume V, 1893, pages 190 and 
i91. Hesays: ‘‘ Hesperomys gambelii Baird was based primarily on two mounted 
specimens (Nos. j3)8; and ,3°;) from Monterey, California, of which No. 369 
should probably be rezarded as the type, as it is the only specimen specifically 
mentioned in the original account of the species. This specimen, Mr. F. W. 
True informs me (in a letter dated June 8, 1893), is not now extant, and has 
not been in the collection for many years. No. 368, which may be considered 
as a cotype, is, through the kindness of Mr. True, now before me. It is, how- 
ever, almost valueless for purposes of comparison, having become greatly faded 
from long exposure to light as a mounted specimen; it has also lost its ears and 
is ina sad plight generally. This is the only skin extant positively referred by 
Baird in his original account of the species to H. gambelii.”’ 

In a footnote on page 191, op. cit., Dr. Allen skillfully eliminates from his 
cotypes a large number of specimens from various localities that Baird lists in 
the original description. 

Skin No. 368 in very poor condition, much faded and without ears; No. 369 
can not be found. Skull No. 1282 lacks both malars, No. 1283 lacks all the right 
upper molars and left malar, otherwise both in good condition. 


Peromyscus gratus gentilis Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., pp. 61-62, March 21, 1904. 
78937. Skinand skull. Adult male. Lagos, Jalisco, Mexico. June 
27, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman.  Origi- 
nal number 9702. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus goldmani Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 75, March 21, 1904. 
96340. Skin and skull. Adult female. Alamos, Sonora, Mexico. 
December 19, 1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original num- 
ber 13306. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hesperomys gossypinus Le Conte. Cotype. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 411, this paper was reported favorably for 
publication October 25, 1853. 
= Peromyscus gossypinus (Le Conte). See Rhoads, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 
1896, p. 189, April 21, 1896. 

546. Skin. Male. Riceboro, Georgia. September 13, 1847.  Col- 
lected by Major J. E. Le Conte, U. S. A. Catalogued March 8, 
1855. It can not be found. 

4704. Skin, skull inside. Riceboro, Georgia. Collected by Major 
J. E. Le Conte, U.S. A. Catalogued April 13, 1861. 

Skin in fair condition, but tail not skinned out; skull still in the skin. 

As this is the only one extant in the National Museum of Le Conte’s original 
specimens, it is perhaps well to treat it as a cotype. 

No. 546 is the only specimen from Georgia listed in Baird’s Mammals of North 
America. Later, other specimens from Le Conte, from Georgia, came into 


— 


ace sea 


PEROMYSCUS. 13} 


the collection—4704, 4705, and 4711. Of these, 4704 is the only one that can 
be found. The published measurements of 546, both in Baird’s Mammals of 
North America, page 469, and Coues’s Monographs of North American Rodentia, 
page 78, more nearly agree with the measurements of the original description 
than the measurements of any of the others do. 


Hesperomys gracilis Le Conte. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 442, ordered published at meeting of 
December 25, 1855. 

=Peromyscus gracilis (Le Conte). 

40293. Skinandskull. Received from Major J. E. Le Conte, U.S. A. 
Date and locality unknown. Skin catalogued October 15, 1872; 
skull, May 26, 1902. 

The skin is in very poor condition. The left hind leg is the only one present. 
The skull, removed in May, 1902, is somewhat more serviceable. The posterior 
half of the brain-case has been cut away; the left zygoma is missing. The right 
half of the mandible is perfect, while the ascending portion of the left half is 
broken off. 

Attached to the specimen are three labels reading as follows: 

(1) ‘Monograph of American Muridee. Dr. Elliott Coues, U. S. A. No. 
10292. Type of Hesperomys gracilis=leucopus.”’ 

(2) ‘‘Hesp. ‘gracilis’ Le Conte type specimen Wisconsin? Ohio? Michigan?’’ 
pasted on the reverse side of this label is ‘‘gracilis.”’ 

(3) “Monograph of American Muride. Dr. Elliott Coues, U. S. A. No. 
10292. Hesperomys leucopus.”’ 

There is little in the original description to indicate that this specimen is the 

type. The entry in the catalogue for 10292 reads ‘‘ Dry type of gracilis.” 

On page 51, Monographs of North American Rodentia, under the synonomy 
of Hesperomys leucopus, Dr. Coues gives ‘‘THesperomys gracilis, Le Conte, Proc. 
Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, 1855, 442 (Ohio or Michigan and Wisconsin; types 
Nos. , 4710, Mus. Smiths.).’’? The dash may refer to the above specimen; 
the other specimen, 4710, is one not quite so poor. There is nothing about its 
labels or catalogue entry to indicate that it is a type or cotype. 








Peromyscus gratus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 128, April 30, 1898. 
50619. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tlalpam, Federal District, 
Mexico. November 30, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Origi- 
nal number 3927. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus guatemalensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XII, p. 118, April 30, 1898. 
76861. Skin and skull. Adult male. Todos Santos, Guatemala. 
December 31, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 8991. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
coronoid process. 


132 : PEROMYSCUS. 


Peromyscus hylzus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., X XI, pp. 141-142, June 9, 1908. 


127038. Skin and skull. Adult male. Hollis, Kasaan Bay, Prince 
of Wales Island, Alaska. May 15, 1908. Collected by W. H. 
Osgood. Original number 2234. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus hylocetes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 124, April 30, 1898. 

50423. Skin and skull. Adult female. Patzeuaro, Michoacan, Mex- 
ico. July 27, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 2961. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus pectoralis laceianus Bailey. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 57, May 1, 1906. 

97063. Skin and skull. Adult male. Ranch of Howard Lacey, 
Turtle Creek, near Kerrville, Texas. May 3, 1899. Collected by 
V. Bailey. Original number 6860. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus boylei laceyi Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, pp. 99-100, October 24, 1905. 
= Peromyscus attwateri Allen. See Bailey, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 57, 
May 1, 1906. 
92746. Skin and skull. Adult male. Turtle Creek, Kerr County, 
Texas. December 4, 1897. Collected by H. P. Attwater. Orig- 
inal number 1372x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last 
right lower molar. 


Peromyscus lepturus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 118-119, April 30, 1898. 
68612. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Zempoaltepec, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. July 8, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and KE. A. 
ao 


Goldman. Original number 6381. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus levipes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 123-124, April 30, 1898. 

53673. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Malinche, Tlaxcala, 
Mexico. May 12, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original 
number 4799, 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 

















PEROMYSCUS. ibeye> 


Peromyscus lophurus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., X VII, p. 72, March 21, 1904. 

77219. Skin and skull. Adult male. Todos Santos, Guatemala. 
December 30, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 8956, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus luteus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 78, February 21, 1905. 

$8668. Skin and skull. Adult female. Kennedy, Nebraska. April 
23, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 1079. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hesperomys macropus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, pp. 53-54, October 8, 1890. 
—=Peromyscus floridanus (Chapman). See Chapman, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
VI, p. 336, November 30, 1894; Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, p. 516. 
897. 
46582. Skin and skull. Adult male. Lake Worth, Florida. May 
5, 1889. Collected by M. M. Green. Original number 72. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
coronoid process. 


_ 


Peromyscus madrensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 16, January 27, 1898. 

89223. Skin and skull. Adult male. Maria Madre Island, Tres 
Marias Islands, Mexico. May 18, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nel- 
son and E. A. Goldman. Original number 11040. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus texanus medius Mearns. 
Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 4, March 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., X VIII, 
No. 1075, p. 446, May 23, 1896.) 

61059. Skin and skull. Adult male. Nachoguero Valley, near mon- 
ument No. 238, Mexican Boundary line, Lower California, Mexico, 
June 4, 1894. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original 
uumber 3623. International Boundary Commission. Catalogued 
November 17, 1894. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of angular 
process on left half of mandible. 
Peromyscus megalops Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 119, April 30, 1898. 

71592. Skin and skull. Old male. Mountains near Ozolotepec, 
Oaxaca, Mexico. March 26, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson 
and E. A. Goldman. Original number 7733. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of first 
upper molars, and angular processes of mandible. 


134 PEROMYSCUS. 


Hesperomys megalotis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 63-64, pl. 3, figs. 1-4, pl. 4; September 4, 1890. 
= Peromyscus truei (Shufeldt). 


3343. Skin and skull. Adult male. Black Tank, Little Colorado 
Desert, Arizona. September 21, 1889. Collected by Dr. C. Hart 
Merriam and V. Bailey. Original number 502. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus mekisturus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 124-125, April 30, 1898. 

64108. Skin and skull. Adult female. Chalchicomula, Puebla, 
Mexico. March 16, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 5951. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken left lower 
ineior. 
Peromyscus melanocarpus Osgood. — Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 73-74, March 21, 1904. 

68610. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Mount Zempoaltepec, 
Oaxaca, Mexico. July 8, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
K. A. Goldman. Original number 6379. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right zygoma. 


Hesperomys (Vesperimus) melanophrys Coues. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sei. Phila., 1874, p. 181, December 15, 1874. 
=Peromyscus melanophrys (Coues). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
IX, p. 51, March 15, 1897. 


13433. Skin and skull. Adult. Santa Efigenia, near Tapana, Oax- 
aca, Mexico. July 11, 1871. Collected by Prof. F. Sumichrast. 


Original number 2. Skin catalogued February 24, 1872; skull, 
January 4, 1873. 

The skin is in good condition and fairly well made up, except that tail has never 
been skinned out. The following parts are lacking on the skull: All four oceip- 
ital bones, both malars, and both angular processes of the mandible. 

The original label bears the following legible measurements: ‘‘Le. tot. 245 
mill.—tip of snout to tail (below) 11 centim.—tail 135 mili.—from tip of nose to 
eye 15 mill.—ditto to ear 25.—ear, exteriorly 20 mill., interiorly 22 mill.”’ 


Peromyscus merriami Mearns. 
Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 2, May 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1103, 
p. 188, December 21, 1896. ) 

59234. Skin and skull. Adult female. Sonoyta, on the Sonoyta 
River, Sonora, Mexico. January 21,1894. Collected by Dr. E. A. 
Mearns, U. S. A., and F. X. Holzner. Original number 2815. 
International Boundary Commission. Catalogued February 23, 
1894. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 





PEROMYSCUS. 135 


Peromyscus texanus mesomelas Osgood. —_ Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 57-58, March 21, 1904. 

58210. Skin and skull. Adult male. Orizaba, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
January 20, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 5705. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect, 


Peromyscus leucopus minnesotze Mearns. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 154, August 9, 1901. 


82717. Skin and skull. Adult female. Fort Snelling, Hennepin 
County, Minnesota. November 30, 1890. Collected by Dr. E. A. 
Mearns, U. 8. A. Original number 1181. Catalogued July 30, 
1896. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus musculoides Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 124, April 30, 1898. 


69661. Skin and skull. Old male. Cuicatlan, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
October 14, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 6892. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Sitomys musculus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, pp. 170-171, September 29, 1892. 
—Peromyscus musculus (Merriam). See Allen and Chapman, Bull. Amer. Mus. 
Nat. Hist., IX, p. 203, June 16, 1897. 


23. Skin and skull. Adult male. Colima, Colima, Mexico. 


4 
4 
March 9, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 


~~ 


2055. 


33 
45 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus (Megadontomys) nelsoni Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 116-117, April 30, 1898. 

55024. Skin and skull. Adult female. Jico, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
July 10, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
5202. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last left 
upper molar. 


Peromyscus musculus nigrescens Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 76, March 21, 1904. 
76827. Skin and skull. Adult female. Valley of Comitan, Chiapas, 
Mexico. December 9, 1895. Collected by E.W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 8719. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


186 PEROMYSCUS. 


Peromyscus oaxacensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 122, April 30, 1898. 

68426. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Cerro San Felipe, 
Oaxaca, Mexico. September 1, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nel- 
son and E. A. Goldman. Original number 6700. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus mexicanus orizabe Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 121-122, April 30, 1898. 
58197. Skin and skull. Adult male. Orizaba, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
January 29, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 5787. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus attwateri pectoralis Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 59-60, March 21, 1904. 
=Peromyscus pectoralis (Osgood). See Bailey, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX. 
p. 57, May 1, 1906. 
81236. Skin and skull. Adult male. Jalpan, Queretaro, Mexico. 
August 30, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 10095. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect.except for absence of last 
upper molars. 


Peromyscus boylii penicillatus Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 2, May 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1103, 
p. 189, December 21, 1896. ) 


=Peromyscus boylei rowleyi (Allen). See Bailey, North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, 
p. 98, October 24, 1905. 

29034. Skin and skull. Adult female. Foothills of Franklin Moun- 
tains near El Paso, Texas. February 19, 1892. Collected by 
Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A., and F. X. Holzner. Original number 
1463. International Boundary Commission. Catalogued April 28, 
1892. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of angular proc- 
ess of left half of mandible. 


Peromyscus eremicus pheurus Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 75-76, March 21, 1904. 

50438. Skin and skull. Adult female. Hacienda La Parada, San 
Luis Potosi, Mexico. August 20, 1892. Collected by EK. W. 
Nelson. Original number 3227. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight perforations 
of left audital bulla and left parietal. 





PEROMYSCUS. 
Peromyscus polius Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 61, March 21, 1904. 
98226. Skin and skull. Adult female. Colonia Garcia, Chibuahua, 
Mexico. June 26, 1899. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 

Goldman. Original number 13846. 
Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 
Peromyscus prevostensis Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 21, pp. 29-30, September 26, 1901. 
100818. Skin and skull. Adult female. Prevost Island, Queen Char- 
lotte Islands, British Columbia. July 5, 1900. Collected by 


W. H. Osgood and E. Heller. Original number 1135. 
Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 
Peromyscus oreas rubidus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 198-194, December 12, 1901. 


91650. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Mendocino City, Men- 
docino County, California. November 17, 1897. Collected by 


J. A. Loring. Original number 4925. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Hesperomys leucopus rufinus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 64-66, pl. 3, figs. 5-8, September 4, 1890. 


— Peromyscus rufinus ( Merriam). 


Adult female. 


San Francisco Mountain, 
Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and 


£72646. Skin and skull. 
Arizona. August 22, 1889. 
Original number 401. 


V. Bailey. 


Well-made skin in good condition, except for a bare spot on left side; skull 


perfect. 
Biological Survey coll. 
_ - 


Peromyscus mexicanus saxatilis Merriam. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 121, April 30, 1898. 
77296. Skin andskull. Adult male. Jacaltenango, Huehuetenango, 
Guatemala. December 19, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 8824. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
® 
Peromyscus simulatus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 72-73, March 21, 1904. 
55028. Skin and skull. Adult female. Jico, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
July 12, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 


5224. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


138 PEROMYSCUS. 


Peromyscus spicilegus simulus Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, pp. 64-65, March 21, 1904. 


88088. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Blas, Tepic, Mexico. 
April 18, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 10933. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last 
right upper molar. 


Peromyscus sitkensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 223, July 15, 1897. 


73809, Skin and skull. Adult male. Sitka, Alaska. July 30, 1895. 
Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 4720. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hesperomys sonoriensis Le Conte. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 413, this paper was reported favorably for 
publication October 25, 1853. 
Peromyscus sonoriensis (Le Conte). See Mearns, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 56, 
p. 384, April 18, 1907. 


fis. Skin and skull. Young. Santa Cruz, Sonora, Mexico. 1851. 
Collected by J. H. Clark on expedition under command of Col. J. D. 
Graham, U.S. A. Catalogued May 19, 1853. 

The skin is well made up, probably remade, but the specimen has a worn and 
dirty look about it. Skull much broken, but now patched up, so that the 
missing parts are the two zygomatic arches, the last leit upper molar, and the 
angular, condyloid, and coronoid processes of the right half of the mandible. 

Type not designated by number, but it is mentioned as one ‘‘ collected by the 
Boundary Commission under Major Graham.’’ Referring to Baird’s Mammals 
of North America, page 476, there are found to be three specimens collected by 
that commission—nos. 144, 146, and 147. The measurements of no. 146 agree 
very closely with the measurements given by Le Conte; no. 144 does not agree 
with them at all, and of no. 147 no measurements are given and the specimen 
itself can not be found. No. 146 is evidently the type. It was so considered 
and marked by Coues in 1877. 


Peromyscus stephensi Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1121, p. 721, July 30, 1897. 


61026. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. From the lowest water on the 
wagon road, in a canyon at the eastern basesof the Coast Range 
Mountains, San Diego County, near Mexican boundary line, Cali- 

‘fornia. May 9, 1894. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. 5. A. 
Original number 3512. International Boundary Commission. Cata- 
logued November 17, 1894. 

Well-made skin in good condition. Skull perfect, except right zygoma broken 
and some slight injury at base of foramen magnum. 





PEROMYSCUS. 1389 


Peromyscus taylori subater Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, pp. 102-103, fig. 15, October 24, 1905. 


32616) Skin and skull. Adult female. Bernard Creek, near Colum- 
yia, Texas. February 25, 1892. Collected by W. Lloyd. Origi- 


nal number 1122. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus mexicanus teapensis Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 69-70, March 21, 1904. 


100022. Skin and skull. Adult female. Teapa, Tabasco, Mexico. 
March 25, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 


Original number 14067. 


Well-made skin in good condition; a bare spot on abdomen; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus tehuantepecus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 122, April 30, 1898. 


75302. Skin and skull. Adult female (not male as in original descrip: 
tion). Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico. May 23, 1895. Collected 
by E. W. Nelson and KE. A. Goldman. Original number 7980. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull periect. 


Hesperomys texanus Woodhouse. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 242, this paper was reported favorably for 
publication February 22, 1853. 
— Peromyscus texanus (Woodhouse). See Mearns, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 56, 
p. 404, April 13, 1907. 


2%. Skin preserved in alcohol and fragments of skull. Western 
Texas on the Rio Grande near El Paso, according to published 
statements of Woodhouse, but probably from south-central Texas. 
(See Mearns, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 56, p. 406, April 13, 1907.) 
Collected by Dr. S. W. Woodhouse, on Capt. L. Sitgreaves’s 
expedition, probably in autumn of 1852. Skin catalogued April, 
1857; skull, January 12, 1896. 

Skin in alcohol, a miserable looking affair and much’ discolored. Feet and 
leg bones complete and perfect. Skull represented by the greater portion of 
each half of the mandible, most of the rostrum, and a portion of each maxillary 
bone, each piece containing the two anterior molars. 

Type not designated by number. In the description but one specimen is im- 
plied, and in Baird’s Mammals, under list of specimens, 2559 is the only one 
having the data of Doctor Woodhouse’s specimen. Another specimen, No. 
A748, labeled ‘‘ Hesperomys texana W. Texas, Dr. Woodhouse,”’ is in the Museum, 

but this was not mentioned by Baird and has not been regarded as a type, 

although it may have been in the hands of Dr. Woodhouse when the description 
was written. 


140 PEROMYSCUS. 


Peromyscus (Megadontomys) thomasi Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 116, fig. 20, April 30, 1898. 

70142. Skin and skull. Old male. Mountains near Chilpancingo, | 

Guerrero, Mexico. December 24, 1894. Collected by. E. W. Nel- 
son and E. A. Goldman. Original number 7250. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus tiburonensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1121, p. 720, July 30, 1897. 

63186. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tiburon Island, Gulf of Cali- 
fornia, Mexico. December 25, 1895. Collected by J. W. Mitchell. 
Original number 1. Catalogued March 16, 1896. 

Skin in fair condition, recently made into a modern study skin, a small area 
on the left flank without hair; skull perfect, except for loss of right malar. 


Perormyscus tornillo Mearns. 

Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 3, March 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., X VIII, No. 

1075, p. 445, May 23, 1896.) 
$2938. Skinand skull. Adult male. Six miles above El Paso, Texas, 
on the Rio Grande. February 18, 1892. Collected by Dr. E. A. 
Mearns, U. 8S. A., and F. X. Holzner. Original number 1458. 
International Boundary Commission. Catalogued April 28, 1892. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of left malar. 


Peromyscus mexicanus totontepecus Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 120-121, April 30, 1898. 

68624. Skinand skull. Adult female. Totontepec, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
July 16, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 6465. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly broken 
basioccipital and right zygoma. 

Hesperomys truei Shufeldt. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus , VILI, p. 405, pl. 21, figs. 1, 5, and 8, September 14, 1885. 
= Peromyscus truei (Shufeldt). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., VII, 

p. 229, June 29, 1895. 

$4434. Skin, skull, and skeleton. Adult male. Fort Wingate, New 
Mexico. March 14,1885, Collected by Dr. R.W. Shufeldt,U.S. A. 
Skin catalogued April 17, 1885; skull, April 9, 1891. 

Fairly well-made skin in good condition. Right fore and left hind leg used 
for the skeleton. Skull with both malars absent, and pterygoids injured. Two 
night upper and lower posterior molars and last left lower molar missing. — 
Angular process of left half of mandible broken off. Greater part of skeleton 
seems to be present but mostly disarticulated. 

Type designated by number on page 405 of the original description, where it 
reads ‘‘14904,”’ evidently a mistake for 14954, as 14904 refers in the Museum ecata- 
logue to a Neotoma collected by Doctor Shufeldt at Fort Wingate. 





PEROMYSCUS. 141 


Peromyscus banderanus vicinior Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 68-69, March 21, 1904. 
126503. Skin and skull. Adult male. La Salada, Michoacan, Mex- 
ico. March 23, 1908. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 16216. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus xenurus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 67, March 21, 1904. 
94518. Skin and skull. Adult female. Durango, Durango, Mexico. 


July 1, 1898. Collected by E. W. Nelson and EK. A. Goldman. 
- Original number 12677, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last 
right and left upper molars. 
Peromyscus melanotis zamelas Osgood. — Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 59, March 21, 1904. 

98197. Skin and skull. Adult female. Colonia Garcia, Chihuahua, 
Mexico. July 24, 1899 (not July 23, 1899, as in original descrip- 
tion). Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original 
number 13915. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus melanophrys zamore Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 65-66, March 21, 1904. 
120288. Skin and skull. Adult male. Zamora, Michoacan, Mexico. 
January 20, 1903. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 15783. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus zarhynchus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 117, April 30, 1898. 
76119. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tumbala, Chiapas, Mexico. 


October 26,1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number S606. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Peromyscus zelotes Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 67-68, March 21, 1904. 
50430. Skin and skull. Adult female. Querendaro, Michoacan, 
Mexico. August 8, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original 
number 3056. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


142 NYCTOMYS—TYLOMYS—OTOTYLOMYS. 


Genus NYCTOMYS. 


Sitomys (Rhipidomys) decolorus True. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XVI, No. 963, p. 689, February 5, 1894. 
=Nyctomys decolorus (True). See Bangs, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., XXXIX, 
p. 30, April, 1902. 
+35. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Rio de las Piedras, 
londuras. November 17, 1890. (Not Dee. 11, 1890, as in original 
description. The original label is marked thus: ‘*17 11.90.” The 
‘7° is rather blotted, but scarcely looks like a ‘*2.”) Collected 
by Erich Wittkiigel. 
Original number 9. Catalogued August 12, 1893. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with nearly all of each zygoma broken 
away; otherwise complete. 

Type not designated as such by number, but the single specimen is referred 
to by number. 


Genus Tl YL@Moy:s: 


Tylomys bullaris Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 561, November 29, 1901. 
76058. Skin and skull. Immature male. Tuxtla, Chiapas, Mexico. 
September 7, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and KE. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 8406. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of nasals. 


Tylomys tumbalensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 560-561, November 29, 1901. 
76059, Skin and skull. Young adult male. Tumbala, Chiapas, 
Mexico. October 23,1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 8568. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus OTOTYLOMYS. 


Ototylomys phyllotis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., ITI, pp. 562-563, November 29, 1901. 
108099. Skin and skull. Old male. Tunkas, Yucatan, Mexico. 
February 17, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 14551. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Ototylomys phyllotis phzeus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 563, November 29, 1901. 
LOT940. Skin and skull. Adult female. Apazote, near Yohaltun, 
Campeche, Mexico. December 28, 1900. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 14369. 


Well-made skin in good condition, except for bare space on left shoulder; left 
ear attached to skin with thread; skull perfect. 


ee ie oe ns ee ey ey eee 


EUNEOMYS—OXYMYCTERUS—REITHRODON—MUS. 143 
Genus EUNEOMYS. 


Euneomys petersoni Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, p. 192, May 9, 1903. 


84198. Skin and skull. Adult female. Upper Rio Chico de Santa 
Cruz, near the Cordilleras, Patagonia. February 10, 1897. Col- 
lected by O. A. Peterson. Original number 390. Catalogued 
March 16, 1898. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skuil slightly damaged; pterygoids absent, 
left bulla broken, tip of right nasal broken, both angular processes of lower jaw 
broken away. 

GenvisiOxey MyiCare Rous: 


Oxymycterus microtus Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, p. 189, May 9, 1903. 


84234. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pacific slope of the Cordilleras 
near the head of the Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, Patagonia. March 
7, 1897. Collected by O. A. Peterson. Original number 570. 
Catalogued March 16, 1898. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that left zygoma is 
broken. 


Genus REITHRODON. 


Reithrodon hatcheri Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, p. 191, May 9, 1903. 


84210. Skinand skull. Adult male. Pacific slope of the Cordilleras, 
head of the Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, Patagonia. March 11, 1897. 
Collected by O. A. Peterson. Original number 600.  Catalogued 
March 16, 1898. : 

Well-made skin in good condition, but lacks left fore and right hind legs. *[It 
was Mr. Peterson’s custom to save a good many skeletons of the animals he had 
skinned or to make up the skins of the animals he had saved for skeletons. } 
The skeleton of this individual was probably saved, but there is no record of its 
being inthe Museum. Skuil perfect except condyle of right half of mandible 
broken off, and corresponding angular process is slightly damaged. 


Genus MUS. 
Mus albigularis Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 440, May 13, 1905. 


125258. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Apo (7,600 feet alti- 
tude), southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. July 8, 1904. Col- 
lected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 5699. 
Catalogued December 12, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


144 MUS. 


Mus anambe Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 205, August 20, 1900. 
101737. Skinand skull. Adult female. Pulo Jimaja, Anamba Islands, 
South China Sea. September 21, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Catalogued January 20, L900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of malars 
and both pterygoids. 


Mus vulcani apicis Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 447, May 13, 1905. 


125229. Skin and skull. Adult female. Summit of Mount Apo 
(altitude about 9,700 feet), southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. 
June 6,1904. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original 
number 5709. Catalogued December 12, 1904. _ 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull damaged in pterygoid region, a 
diagonal hole in brain-case across posterior portion of parietals, and free end of 
left nasal broken away. 


Mus aquilus True. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XV, No. 915, p. 460, fig. 1, October 26, 1892. 

ts933. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mt. Kilimanjaro, German 
East Africa; altitude, 8,000 feet. April 11, 1888. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued June 24, 1890. 


Skin in good condition, fairly well made up ; skull has the right posterior and 
basal portion of brain case broken away. The specimen was killed by a hawk. 


Mus asper Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 145, pl. 5., fig. 3, April 21, 1900. 


86767. Skin and skull. Adult female.. Khow Sai Dow (1.000 feet) 
Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. February 2, 1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued July 19, 1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus atratus Miller. 

Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 767, pl. 41, fig. 5; pl. 42, figs. 5, da; 
May 28, 1902. Name preoccupied by Mus atratus Philippi. (Annales del 
Museo Nacional de Chile, Entrega, XIV, p. 57, 1900. ) 

=Mus atridorsum Miller. See Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, p. 50, March 19, 
1903. 
111868. Skin and skull. Adult female. Barren Island, Andaman 

Islands. January 7, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 

Original number 818. Catalogued August 17, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





‘ 
3 
1 


MUS. 145 


Bullimus bagobus Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 450, May 11, 1905. 
—=Mus bagobus (Mearns). See Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1907, p. 141. 


125248. Skin and skull. Adult female. Todaya (altitude 4,000 feet) 
Mount Apo, southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. July 13, 
1904. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 
5729. Catalogued December 12, 1904. 

Fairly well-made skin in fair condition, slight loss of hair on lower abdomen; 


skull perfect. 


Mus bale Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 33, November 6, 1903. 
121781. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, 
off west coast of Sumatra. February 12, 1903. Collected by Dr. 
W.L. Abbott. Original number 2274. Catalogued August 2, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus batamanus Lyon. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1502, p. 654, January 16, 1907. 
143232. Skin and skull. Adult male. Senimba Bay, Batam Island, 
Rhio-Linga Archipelago. March 30,1906. Collected by C. Boden 
Kloss. Original number 75. Catalogued June 19, 1906. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that both lower 
incisors are broken off to alveoli. 


Mus bentincanus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 38, November 6, 1903. 
104269. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bentinck Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. March 11, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 348. Catalogued November 5, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus burrescens Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 771, May 28, 1902. 
111789. Skin and skull. Adult female. Great Nicobar, Nicobar 
Islands. March 12, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 926. Catalogued August 14, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus burrulus Miller. = 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 770, May 28, 1902. 

111817. Skin and skull. Adult male. Car Nicobar, Nicobar Islands. 
January 25, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 865. Catalogued August 15, 1901. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
45336—08——10 


146 MUS. 


Mus burrus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 768, May 28, 1902. 

111811. Skin and skull. Adult female. Trinkut Island, Nicobar 
Islands. February 5, 1902. Collected by Dr.-W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 881. Cuatalogued August 14, 1901. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect, a piece of left ptery- 
goid and nearly all of the left coronoid process of mandible missing. 
Mus surifer butangensis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XIII, p. 190, December 21, 1900/ 

104309. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Adang, Butang Islands, 
off west coast of Malay Peninsula. December 16,1899. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 157. Catalogued Novem- 
ber 5, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus carimatez Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1481, p. 59, July 23, 1906. 

125079. Skin and skull. Adult male. Telok Pai, Karimata Island, 
off west coast of Borneo. August 20, 1904. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 3612. Catalogued December 8, 
L904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus casensis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 38, November 6, 1903. 

104249. Skinand skull. Adult male. Chance Island, Mergui Archi- 
pelago. December 28, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. lL. Abbott. 
Original number 188. Catalogued November 5, 1900. 

Fairly well-made skin in good condition, end of tail lost during life; skull 
perfect. 
Mus catellifer Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 464, February 3, 1903. 

114590. Skinand skull. Adult female. Pulo Mansalar, off Tapanuli 
Bay, west coast of Sumatra. March 38, 1902. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 1587. Catalogued September 3, 
1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right 
upper Incisor. 
Mus clabatus Lyon. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 596, December 18, 1906. 

124888. Skinandskull. Adult female. Klabat Bay, island of Banka, 
vastof Sumatra. June 25, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 3439. Catalogued December 3, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull considerably damaged, posterior left 
halt of brain case broken away, and right ramus of mandible broken in two. 





MUS. 147 


Mus commissarius Mearns. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XXVIII, No. 1402, p. 449, May 13, 1905. 

125213. Skin and skull. Adult female. Military commissary build- 
ing at Davao, southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. July 19, 
1904. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 
5734. Catalogued December 12, 1904. 

Fairly well-made skin in fair condition, some naked spots on belly; skull per- 
fect, except loss of pterygoids. 
Mus cremoriventer Miller. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 144, pl. 5, fig. 2, April 21, 1900. 

86770. Skin and skull. Adult male. Khow Nok Ram (3,000 feet), 
Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. January 16, 1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued July 19, 1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of 2 or 3 mm. of 
distal end of left nasal. 


Mus defua Miller. 
Proce. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 635, December 28, 1900. 

83837. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Coffee (400 to 500 feet), 
Liberia, West Africa. May 3, 1897. Collected by R. P. Currie. 
Original number 53. Catalogued September 30, 1597. 

Well-raade skin in good condition; skull perfect, except right pterygoid mis- 
sing and some injury about the foramen magnum. 
Mus domelicus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 39, November 6, 1903. 

104257. Skin and skull. Adult female. Domel Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. February 24,1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 320. Catalogued November 5, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with both zygomata and both con- 
dyloid processes, and last upper molar, right side, lacking. 
Mus domitor Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 461, February 3, 1903. 

114621. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Mansalar, at entrance 
to Tapanuli Bay, west coast of Sumatra. March 4, 1902. Col- 
lected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 1592. Catalogued 
September 3, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus enganus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXX, No. 1472, p. 821, June 4, 1906. 
140976. Skin and skull. Adult male. Engano island, west of Suma- 
tra. December 4, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Orig- 
inal number 3823. Catalogued July 18, 1905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of pterygoids. 


148 MUS. 


Mus exulans Peale. 
U. 8. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 47, 1848. 
3730. Mounted skin with skull inside. Tahiti, Society Islands, 
Pacific Ocean. Collected by U.S. Exploring Expedition. Cata- 
logued December 20, 1859, 
Specimen old, dirty, much bleached, tail broken off, but still present. 
It was mounted on a walnut stand with this inscription painted on the bottom: 
‘* | 3730 | Mus exulans, Peale (Type) | (Mus penicillatus, Gould) | Tahiti Rat | 
Society Ids. T. R. Peale | .”’ This specimen is accordingly considered the type 
rather than any of the other specimens collected by the Exploring Expedition 
from widely separated islands in the Pacific. 
Mus ferreocanus Miller. : 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 140, pl. 3, fig. 2, and pl. 4, fig. 2, April 21, 1900. 
86737. Skin and skull. Adult female. Khow Nok Ram (3,000 feet), 
Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. January 15, 1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued July 19, 1899. 
Well-made skin in good condition, except a slight scar on the lower back; 
skull perfect. 
Mus firmus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 155, June 11, 1902. 
113038. Skin and skull. Adult female. Linga Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. August 25, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1215. Catalogued January 25, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus surifer flavidulus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 189, December 21, 1900. 

104330. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Lankawi, off west 
coast of Malay Peninsula. December 4, 1899. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 109. Catalogued November 5, 
L900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus flaviventer Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 204, August 20, 1900. 
LOL739. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Jimaja, Anamba Islands, 
South China Sea. September 18, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Catalogued January 20, 1900, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of right malar. 


Mus flebilis Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 762, pl. 41, fig. 2; pl. 42, figs. 2, 2a; 
May 28, 1902. 
111841. Skin and skull. Adult female. Henry Lawrence Island, 
Andaman Islands. January 9, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Ab- 
bott. Original number 827. Catalogued August 15, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





MUS. 149 

Mus fremens Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 154, June 11, 1902. 

113087. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sinkep Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. September 4,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1273, Catalogued January 29, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus gilbiventer Miller. 

Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 35, November 6, 1903. 

104153. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sullivan Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. February 2, 1900. Ccllected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 295. Catalogued November 3, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus arianus griseus True. Cotypes. 
Proc. U. §. Nat. Mus., X VII, No. 976, p. 8, May 8, 1894. 

No type is mentioned, so that the three following specimens 
designated by numbers, upon which the description of the species 1s 
based, are taken as cotypes. They were all collected by Dr. W. 1. 
Abbott in Kashmir in 1891, prepared as skins and skulls. Cata- 
logued May 9, 1892. 

20133. Adult female. Central Kashmir (8,500 feet), in pine forest. 
October 8, 1891. 

Skin fairly well made, in good condition; skull has posterior and basal parts 

of brain case cut away. 


44. Young adult male. Pir Panjal Range, Kashmir. August 31, 


Skin fairly well made, in good condition; skult perfect. 
29151. Male, apparently young. Mountains of central Kashmir. 
September 13, 1891. 


Skin fairly well made, in fairly good condition; skull can not be found. 


Mus integer Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 119, March 26, 1901. 

104837. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sirhassen Island, Natuna Is- 
lands. June 7, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 455. Catalogued December 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus julianus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 34, November 6, 1903. 

112393. Skin and skull. Adult female. St. Julian Island, South 
China Sea. June 2, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 987. Catalogued November 11, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except tip of nasals broken. 


150 MUs. 


Mus kelleri Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 444, May 13, 1905. 

125278. Skinand skull. Adult female. Davao, southern Mindanao, 
Philippine Islands. July 20,1904. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, 
U.S.A. Original number 5738. Catalogued December 13, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of pterygoids 
and tip of left lower incisor. 


Mus vociierans lancavensis Miller. 

Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 188, December 21, 1900. 

104173. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Lankawi, off west 
coast of Malay Peninsula. December 6, 1899. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 122. Catalogued November 3, 
1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus lingensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 206, August 20, 1900. 

101614. Skin and skull. Adult male. Linga Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. July 15, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition, but pelage worn; skull perfect, except for 
loss of both malars, both pterygoids, and right upper incisor. 


Mus lucas Miller. 
Smithsonian Miseell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 30, November 6, 1903. 
104190. Skin and skull. Adult female. St. Luke Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. January 20, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 253. Catalogued November 5, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus lugens Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 38, November 6, 1903. 
121533. Skin and skull. Adult female. North Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. November 15, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2046. Catalogued July 29, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus luteolus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 36, November 6, 1903. 
104276, Skin and skull. Adult female. St. Matthew Island, Mer- 
gui Archipelago. January 15, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 226. Catalogued November 5, 1905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of right malar. 





MUS. Pt 


Mus magnirostris Mearns. 


Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXVIII, No. 1402, p. 441, May 13, 1905. 


125212. Skin and skull. Adult female. Zamboanga (old Spanish 
hospital), western Mindanao, Philippine Islands. January 15, 1904. 
Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 5639. 
Catalogued December 12, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, excepr for loss of left pterygoid. 


Mus masz Miller. 


Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 32, November 6, 1903. 


121822. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tana Masa, Batu Islands, 
off west coast of Sumatra. February 21, 1903. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 2327. Catalogued August 2, 
1908. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus matthzus Miller. 


Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 29, November 6, 1905. 


104159. Skin and skull. Adult male. St. Matthew Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. January 18, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. lL. Abbott. 
Original number 243. Catalogued November 3, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that pterygoids are 
broken. 


Mus mindanensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 442, May 13, 1905. 


125274. Skin and skull. Adult male. Todaya (altitude 4,000 feet), 
Mount Apo, southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. July 9, 1904. 
Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 5719. 
Catalogued December 13, 1904. 

Fairly well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that pterygoids 
are broken. 


Mus obscurus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., Il, p. 213, August 20, 1900. Preoccupied by Mus obscurus 
Waterhouse. (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, V, p. 19, 1837. ) 
=Mus pullus Miller. Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 178, September 25, 1901. 


101764. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Tioman, off southeast 
coast of the Malay Peninsula. October 1, 1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 20, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition, except tip of fail shriveled and a small bare 
spot on belly; skull perfect. 


152 MUS. 
Mus pagensis Miller. 

Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 39, November 6, 1903. 
121629. Skin and skull. Adult male. South Pagi Island, off west 


coast of Sumatra. December 23, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 


Abbott. Original number 2153. Catalogued July 31, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Mus pannosus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 190, December 21, 1900. 
104110. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Adang, Butang Islands, 


west coast of Malay Peninsula. December 14, 1899. Collected 


by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 146. Catalogued Novem- 
ber 2, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Mus pantarensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. §. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 448, May 13, 1905. 


123294. Skinand skull. Adult female. Pantar (altitude 1,907 feet), 


Mindanao, Philippine Islands. September 4, 1903. Collected by 


Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 5622. Catalowued 
3 >a >= 
January 28, 1904. 


Fairly well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that pterygoids 
and right coronoid process are broken away. 


Mus pellax Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 147, April 21, 1900. 


ee 


86755. Skin and skull. Adult female. Khow Sai Dow (1,000 feet), 
Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. February 5, 1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued July 19, 1899. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of left malar 
and both pterygoids. 


Mus pulliventer Miller. 

Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 765, pl. 41, fig. 3; pl. 42, figs. 3, 3a; 
May 28, 1902. 

111790. Skin and skull. Adult female. 


Great Nicobar Island, Nico- 
bar Islands. March 12, 1901. 


Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 927. Catalogued August 14, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of left malar. 
Mus tullbergi rostratus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 637, December 28, 1900. 
83836. Skinand skull. Adult male. Mount Coffee (400 to 500 feet), 
Liberia, West Africa. May 7, 1897. Collected by R. P. Currie. 
Original number 60. Catalogued September 30, 1897. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





MUS. 153 


Mus serutus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1481, p. 59, July 23, 1906. 
125032. Skin and skull. Adult male. PuloSerutu, Karimata Islands, 
off west coast of Borneo. August 17,1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 3590. Catalogued December 7, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus siantanicus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 210, fig. 11b, August 20, 1900. 


101705. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Siantan, Anamba Islands, 
South China Sea. September 11, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 

Fairly well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of both 
malars. 


Mus simalurensis Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X XVI, No. 1317, p. 458, February 3, 1903. 
114216. Skin and skull. Adult female. Simalur Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. December 14, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 1372. Catalogued August 27, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus soccatus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 30, November 6, 1903. 

121549. Skin and skull. Adult male. North Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. December 29, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2183. Catalogued July 29, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus stoicus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 759, pl. 41, fig. 1; pl. 42, figs. 1, 
la, May 28, 1902. 
111834. Skin and skull. Adult male. Henry Lawrence Island, 
Andaman Islands. January 9, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 820. Catalogued August 15, L901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull slightly injured about the left ptery- 
goid and left zygoma, left lower incisor broken off at alveolus, and left condyloid 
process lacking. 


Mus strepitans Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 207, August 20, 1900. 

101697. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Siantan, Anamba 
Islands, South China Sea. September 10, 1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


154 “MUS. 


Mus stridens Miller. 

Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 28, November 6, 1903. 

104992. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tioman Island, off southeast 
coast of Malay Peninsula. October 10, 1900. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 702. Catalogued January 2, 
1901. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that it lacks the 
pterygoids. 

Mus stridulus Miller. 

Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 29, November 6, 1903. 

104196. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bentinck Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. March 12, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 350. Catalogued November 5, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that the pterygoids 
are slightly injured. 
Mus surdus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 460, February 3, 1903. 

114184. Skin and skull. Adult male. Simalur Island, off west coast 
of Sumatra. December 11,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1359. Catalogued August 26, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus surifer Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XIII, p. 148, April 21, 1900. 

86746. Skin and skull. Adult male. Khow Nok Ram (3,000 feet), 
Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. January 14,1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued July 19, 1899. 

Well-made skin in good condition, save for a break in tail and some damage 
to left hind leg, probably from jaws of trap; skull perfect, except for injury to 
pterygoids. 

Mus taciturnus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 762, May 28, 1902. 

111828. Skinandskull. Adult male. South Andaman Island, Anda- 
man Islands. January 16,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L.. Abbott. 
Original number 854. Catalogued August 15, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus tagulayensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXVIII, No. 1402, p. 439, May 18, 1905. 

125964. Skin and skull. Adult male. At sea level, Tagulaya, Gulf 
of Dayao, foot of Mount Apo, southern Mindanao, Philippine 
Islands. July 15,1904. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. 
Original number 5732. Catalogued December 13, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of pterygoids 
and right zygoma. 





MUS. 15 


On 


Mus tambelanicus Miller. 

Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 212, fig. 11e, Aygust 20, 1900. 

101665. Skin and skull. Adult male. Big Tambelan Island, South 
China Sea. August 10, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued January 19, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition (tail met with an injury during life and is 
abnormally short); skull perfect, except for lack of right pterygoid. 
Mus tana True. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X VI, No. 954, p. 602, October 25, 1893. 

%¢034- okin, skull, and body in alcohol. Adult female. Along the 
Tana River, between the coast and Hameye, British East Africa. 
November, 1892. Collected by Hon. William Astor Chanler and 
Lieut. Ludwig von Héhnel. Catalogued July 21, 1893. 

The specimen was originally in alcohol, but at the time the species was de- 
scribed it was made up into a skin, in good condition; skull perfect. 
Mus tiomanicus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 209, fig. lla, August 20, 1900. 

101763. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Tioman, off southeast 
coast of Malay Peninsula. October 4, 1899. Collected by Dr. 
W.L. Abbott. Catalogued January 20, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus todayensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X XVIII, No. 1402, p. 445,-May 13, 1905. 

125224. Skinand skull. Adult female. Todaya (altitude 4,000 feet), 
on Mount Apo, southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. July 11, 
1904. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 
5722. Catalogued December 21, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for lack of pterygoids. 


Mus umbridorsum Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 37, November 6, 1903. 

104227. Skin and skull. Adult male. Loughborough Island, 
Mergui Archipelago. January 24,1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 269. Catalogued November 5, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for lack of pterygoids. 


Mus validus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XIII, p. 141, pl. 3, fig. 1; pl. 4, fig. 1, April 21, 1900. 
86741. Skin and skull. Adult male. Khow Sai Dow (1.000 feet), 
Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. February 18, 1899. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued July 19, 1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus vitiensis Peale. See page 289. 





156 MUS——-CHIROPODOMYS—LIMNOMYS. 


Mus vociferans Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 138, pl. 3, fig. 3; pl. 4, fig. 3, April 21, 1900. 
86736. Skin and skull. Adult male. Khow Sai Dow (1,000 feet), 
Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. February 21, 1899. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued July 19, 1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mus vulcani Mearns. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XX VITI, No. 1402, p. 446, May 13, 1905. 
125216. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Apo (7,600 feet), 
southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. June 26,1904. Collected 


by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 5674. Cata- 
logued December 12, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except pter “goids and four 
occipital bones broken away. 


Mus zamboange Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X XVIII, No. 1402, p. 443, May 13, 1905. 


125279. Skin and skull. Adult male. Zamboanga, western Min- 
danao, Philippine Islands. January 20, 1904. Collected by Dr. 


EK. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 5753. Catalogued 
December 13, 1904. 
Well-made skin in good condition, a spot without hair or rump and adjoining 
part of tail; skull perfect. 
Genus, CHLROPODOMYS: 


Chiropodomys niadis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 40, Noveml er 6, 1903. 
121867. Skin and skull. Adult female. Lafau, Nias* Island, off west 


coast of Sumatra. March 30, 1908. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2413.  Catalogued August 2, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus LIMNOMYS. 


Limnomys sibuanus Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXVIII, No. 1402, p. 452, May 18, 1905. 
125228. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Apo (altitude 6,600 
feet), southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. June 30, 1904. 


Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 5688. 
Catalogued December 12, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for lack of pterygoids. 


TARSOM YS—APOMYS—LENOTHRIX. 157 
Genus TARSOMYS. 


Tarsomys apoensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 453, May 13, 1905. 

125280. Adult male in alcohol, skull removed. Mount Apo (altitude 
6,750 feet), southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. July 5, 1904. 
Collected by Dr. . A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 5706. 
Catalogued December 13, 1904. 


Alcoholic in good condition ; skull removed and pertect. 
Genus APOMYS. 


Apomys hyloccetes Mearns. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 456, May 13, 1905. 

125246. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Apo (altitude 6,006 
feet), southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. Collected by Dr. 
EK. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 5696. Catalogued 
December 12, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that the pterygoids 

are missing. 


Apomys insignis Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 459, May 13, 1905. 

125230. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Apo (altitude 6,000 
feet), southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. July 8, 1904. Col- 
lected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 5711. 
Catalogued December 12, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for lack pterygoids 
and right coronoid process missing. 


Apomys petrzus Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXVIII, No. 1402, p. 458, May 13, 1905. 

125245. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Apo (altitude 7,600 
feet), in southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. June 30, 1904. 
Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 5690. 
Catalogued December 12, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect, except for lack of pterygoids 
and malars. 


Genus LENOTHRIX. 


Lenothrix canus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 466, pl. 18, February 3, 1903. 
114386. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Tuanku, west coast of 
Sumatra. January 27, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1477. Catalogued August 29, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


158 DASYMYS——ARVICANTHIS—DEN DROMYS—GERBILLUS., 
Genus DASYMYS. 


Dasymys rufulus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 639, fig. 40, December 28, 1900. 

83844. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Coffee, Liberia, West 
Africa. March 30, 1897. Collected by R. P. Currie. Original 
number 19. Catalogued September 30, 1897. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with a slight break in right zygoma; 
otherwise perfect. 


Genus ARVICANTHIS. 


Arvicanthis planifrons Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., Il, p. 641, fig. 4la, December 28, 1900. 

83814. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Coffee, Liberia, West 
Africa. April 26, 1897. Collected by R. P. Currie. Original 
number 46. Catalogued September 23, 1897. 

Well-made skin in good condition except a small naked area on belly; skull 


perfect. The specimen was first preserved in alcohol, but shortly after coming 
to the Museum it was made into a skin. 


Genus DENDROMYS. 


Dendromys nigrifrons True. 


Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XV, No. 915, p. 462, fig. 2, October 26, 1892. 


c 


#383. Alcoholic, with skull removed. Adult female. Mount 
Kilimanjaro (5,000 feet), German East Africa. November, 1889. - 
Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 10. Catalogued 
September 26, 1891. 


1 
3 


Alcoholic in fair condition. A few small bare spots, and the under side exten- 
sively cut open toremove skull, but it has been recently sewed up; skull perfect. 

No type designated by number. <A skull is figured and marked ‘‘typical 
specimen.’ An examination of the 5 specimens collected by Dr. Abbott shows 
that the figured skull is No. 35263, consequently the specimen to which it belongs 
may be regarded as the type. 


Genus GERBILLUS. 


Gerbillus arenicolor Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 163, October 31, 1900. 

62153. Skin and skull. Adult male. In jungle on Yarkand River, 
east of Maralbashi, Eastern Turkestan. February 9, 1894. Col- 
lected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued May 16, 1895. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with left zygoma missing, otherwise 


perfect. 
Type designated by number, which is given as 62143, an error for 62153. 
. . ? eS ? 


SPALAX—ELIOMYS—APLODONTIA. 159 


Genus SPALAX. 
Spalax berytensis Miller. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, p. 162, November 30, 1903. 

43009. Skin and skull. Adult female. Beyrout, Syria. April, 
1878. Collected by W. T. Van Dyck. Skin catalogued Decem- 
ber 10, 1878; skull, June 26, 1894. 

Fairly well-made skin in fair condition, a bare patch about chin and throat; 
skull perfect, except occipital bones broken away, both upper incisors and left 
lower incisor broken off to alveoli. 

Spalax dolbrogez Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 161, November 30, 1903. 

122109. Skin and skull. Adult male. Maleociu near Tulchea, Do- 
brogea (or Dobruja), Roumania. March 20, 1903. Purchased 
from Wilhelm Schliiter, of Halle a. S., Germany. Catalogued 
August 22, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect; pterygoids slightly in- 
jured, as well as root caps of lower incisors. 


Family MUSCARDINIDE. 
Genus ELIOM YS. 
Eliomys cincticauda Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 39, April 25, 1901. 

103030. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sorrento, near Naples, Italy. 
May 31, 1900. Collected by Dane Coolidge. Original number 
1118. Catalogued September 28, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Eliomys parvus True. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X VI, No. 954, p. 601, October 25, 1893. 

340%. Skin and skull. Adult female. Along the Tana River, 
hetween the coast and Hameye, British East Africa. November, 
1892. Collected by Hon. William Astor Chanler and Lieut. Lud- 
wig von Héhnel. Catalogued July 21, 1893. 

The specimen was originally in alcohol, but at the time the species was 

described it was made into a modern study skin, in good condition; skull perfect. 
Family APLODONTID.X. 
Genus APLODONTIA. 

Aplodontia olympica Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 20, January 31, 1899. 

89549. Skinandskull. Young adult male. Queniult Lake, Olympic 
Mountains, Washington. July 24, 1897. Collected by R. T. 
Young. Original number 309. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


160 APLODONTIA——CASTOR-—NANNOSCIURUS. 


Aplodontia pacifica Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, pp. 19-20, January 31, 1899. 
77372. Skin and skull. Adult female. Newport, Oregon. March 
26, 1896 (not March 20, as in original description). Collected by 
B. J. Bretherton. Original number 2219. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Aplodontia major rainieri Merriam. — Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XIII, p. 21, January 31, 1899. 
90144. Skin and skull. Adult male. 

Washington. 
number 6122. 


Paradise Creek, Mount Rainier, 
August 6, 1897. Collected by V. Bailey. Original 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Family CASTORID 2%. 
Genus CASTOR. 


Castor canadensis frondator Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Sciurus, Castor, Neotoma, 
and Sigmodon from the Mexican Border of the United States, p. 2, March 5, 


1897. (Reprinted in Proce. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1132, p. 502, January 
19, 1898.) 


5 0 


73°. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Pedro River, Sonora, 
Mexico, near monument No. 98 of the Mexican boundary line. 
October 24, 1892. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. 8. A., and 
F. X. Holzner. Original number 2151. International Boundary 
Commission. Catalogued January 6, 1893. 


20 
35 


Well-made skin, but rather overstuffed, in good condition; skull perfect. 


Castor canadensis texensis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 

North. Amer. Fauna, No. 25, pp. 122-124, October 24, 1905. 

135744. Skin and skull. Cummings Creek, Colorado County, Texas. 
December 25, 1900. Collected by F. Brune. Kept in captivity 
until January 10, 1901. Original number 5139x. 

Skin folded and flattened, having been made over after mounting; rump, under- 
parts, and nose largely bare or with scattered patches of underfur; right fore leg 
missing; nails of hind toes mostly broken or absent; skull lacks occipital con- 
dyles and most of supracccipital; left pterygoid and upper incisors broken. 


Family SCIURIDZE. 
Genus NANNOSCIURUS. 
Nannosciurus bancanus Lyon. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 55, May 1, 1906. 
124880. Skinand skull. Adult female. 


east of Sumatra. June 24, 1904. 
Original number 3430. 


Klabat Bay, island of Banka, 
Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued December 3, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 








NANNOSOCLURUS—MARMOTA—CYNOMYS. 161 


Nannosciurus borneanus Lyon. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 54, May 1, 1906. 
142271. Skin and skull. Adult female. Sanggau, western Borneo. 
August 23,1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original*num- 
ber 4368. Catalogued January 20, 1906. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of left pm’, and 
right pm’, and pm’. 


Nannosciurus pulcher Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 153, June 11, 1902. 

113131. Skin and skull. Adult female. Sinkep Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. September4,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1274. Catalogued January 31, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull badly injured; all the posterior part 


of the cranium missing; both nasals and all the ascending part of the left half 
of the mandible also missing. 


Nannosciurus sumatranus Lyon. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 53, May 1, 1906. 
141058. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tarussan Bay, west coast 
of Sumatra. January 16, 1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 3946. Catalogued July 19, 1905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacks posterior half of brain-case, and 
feft pm', right pm’, and left pm. 


Genus MARMOTA. 


Arctomys olympus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, p. 352, August, 1898. 
=Marmota olympus (Merriam). See Elliot, Check List of Mammals, ete., Field 
Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 121, 1905. 
90518. Skin and skull. Adult male. Head of Soleduck River, 
Olympic Mountains, Washington. August 27, 1897. Collected 
by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. Original number 6210 (V. Bailey). 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus CYNOMYS. 


Spermophilus gunnisoni Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 334, this paper was reported favorably for 
* publication April 24, 1855, 

=Cynomys gunnisoni (Baird). See Baird, Mammals of North America, p. 335, 
1857. 

Pssty. Skin (lost) and skull. Young adult. Cochetopa Pass, Saguache 
County, Colorado. September (first week), 1853. Collected by F. 
Kreutzfeldt, on expedition in charge of Capt. J. W. Gunnison, 

45336—08——11 


162 CYNOMYS—CITELLUS. 


U.S. A., and after his death in charge of Lieut. E. G. Beckwith, 
U.S. A. Original number 22. Catalogued February 20, 1855. 


Skin can not now be found. Most of the skull is present, posterior part of 
the brain case lacking, last two molars in right half of mandible are missing, 
one detached bulla is present. 

The type is not designated by number in the original description, but in the 
Mammals of North America it is specified by number. 


Cynomys mexicanus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, pp. 157-158, July 27, 1892. 

36423 Skin and skull. Adult male. La Ventura, Coahuila, Mexico. 
March 24, 1891. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 
625. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
upper premolar. 
Genus CITELLUS. 


Citellus plesius ablusus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, pp. 25-26, March 19, 1903. 

119815. Skin and skull. Adult male. Nushagak, Alaska. Septem- 
ber 16, 1902. Collected by W. H. Osgood and A. G. Maddren. 
Original number 2043. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Citellus adocetus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, pp. 79-80, May 29, 1903. 
126129. Skin and skull. Adult female. La Salada, Michoacan, 
Mexico. March 17, 1903. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 16183. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Spermophilus tridecemlineatus alleni Merriam. Biol. Sury. coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 71, March 24, 1898. 


=Citellus tridecemlineatus alleni (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mam- 
malium, Suppl., p. 341, 1904. 
56050. Skin and skull. Adult male. West slope of Bighorn Moun- 
tains, Wyoming; altitude 8,000 feet. September 18, 1893. Col- 
lected by V. Bailey. Original number 4383. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Spermophilus spilosomaannectens Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, pp. 182-133, December 28, 1893. 
=Citellus spilosomaannectens (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, 
Suppl., p. 340, 1904. 


$9410. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Padre Island, Texas. 


August 24, 1891. Collected by W. Lloyd. Original number 694. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
postorbital process. 


CITELLUS. 1638 


Spermophilus spilosoma arens Bailey. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 118, June 2, 1902. 
=Citellus spilosoma arens (Bailey). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. 
Hist., XX XI, p. 75, August, 1903. 
64977. Skinand skull. Adult male. El Paso, Texas. May 10, 1894. 
Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original number 1446. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
audital bulla. 


Spermophilus armatus Kennicott. Cotypes. 


Proe. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1863, p. 158, ordered published June 30, 1863. 
=Citellus armatus (Kennicott). See Elliot, Check List Mammals North Amer. 
Cont., etc., Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 112, 1905. 


No numbers are mentioned in the original description. Ken- 
nicott briefly describes new spermophiles in the collection of the 
Smithsonian Institution, collected by C. Drexler at Fort Bridger, 
Utah, now Wyoming. Consequently, all the specimens from 
Fort Bridger coilected by C. Drexler and in the collection prior 
to 1863 are evidently cotypes of the species. In the following 
list are included all the known specimens from Fort Bridger 
collected by Drexler. The labels all have armatus written on 
them, possibly in Kennicott’s own hand, and they are entered in 
the catalogue as Spermophilus armatus. The skins were all col- 
lected in April to June of 1858, and the alcoholics were probably 
taken at the same time. 

$463. Female. Skin, can not be found; anterior half of skull and 
mandible present. Original number 454. Collected May 26, 
1858. 

3464. Female. Very poor skin, torn in two; part of skull inside. 
Original number 728. Collected June 25, 1858. 

$466 Male. Skin, can not be found; anterior half of skull and of 
mandible present. Original number 610. 

3467. Male. Skin, can not be found; no record of askull. Original 
number 261. Collected May 2, 1858. 

3470. Female. Skin, can not be found; no record of a skull. Origi- 
nal number 455. Collected May 26, 1858. 

#443. Skin and skull; neither can be found. Original number 167. 
Collected April 11, 1858. 

3474. Skin, can not be found; no record of a skull. Original num- 
ber 215. Collected April 14, 1858. 

3475. Male. Skin, can not be found; no recordof askull. Original 
number 197. Collected April 14, 1858. 

3476. Female. Very poor skin, torn in two: two loose detached lees 
present; part of skull inside. Original number 229. Collected 
April 15, 1858. 


164 CITELLUS. 


3478. Male. Skin, can not be found; no record of a skull. Original 
number 140. Collected April 2, 1858. 

3481. Skin, can not be found; no record of a skull, Original num- 
ber 875. Collected May 19, 1858. 

5958. Alcoholic, can not be found. 

5959. Alcoholic, can not be found. 

5960. Alcoholic, can not be found. 

$334. Skin; can not be found; anterior half of skull and right half of 
mandible present. Remarks in catalogue say, ‘‘ Died at S. I., after 
two years’ confinement,” so that it was probably collected at the 
time the others were taken and brought to Washington alive. 

3463-3481. Skins. Catalogued March 3, 1859. 

5958-5960. Alcoholics. Catalogued February 5, 1863. 

4921. Skin. Catalogued October 27, 1860. 

All the skulls catalogued January 20, 1863. 


Spermophilus barrowensis Merriam. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 19, March 14, 1900. 
=Citellus barrowensis (Merriam). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX 
p. 141, March 31, 1903. 
s4¢34- Skin and skull. Adult male. Point Barrow, Alaska. May 
30,1883. Collected by Lieut. P. L. Rae,U.S. A. Original number 
1428. Skin catalogued January 16, 1884; skull December 4, 1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of coronoid 
process of right half of mandible. 


Spermophilus beringensis Merriam. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 20, March 14, 1900. 
=Citellus beringensis (Merriam). See Elliot, Check List Mammals North Amer. 
Cont., ete., Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 110, 1905. 
15253. Skin; no skull. Adult male. Cape Lisburne (coal veins), 
Alaska. May, 1885. Collected by H. D. Wolfe. Catalogued 
December 3, 1885. 


Fairly well-made skin in good condition. 


Spermophilus canescens Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 38, October 8, 1890. 
=Citellus canescens (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, Suppl., 
p. 341, 1904. 
$3343. Skin and skull. Immature male. Willcox, Cochise County, 
Arizona. November 16, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original 
number 676. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





CITELLUS. 165 


Spermophilus mollis canus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 70-71, March 24, 1898. 
=Citellus mollis canus(Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, Suppl. 
p- 339, 1904. 
78681. Skin and skull. Adult female. Antelope, Wasco County, 
Oregon. June 21, 1896. Collected by V. Bailey. Original num- 
ber 5561. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Spermophilus couchi Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 332, this paper was reported favorably for 

publication April 24, 1855. 

=Citellus variegatus couchi (Baird). See Bailey, North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, 

p. 83, October 24, 1905. : 

s3;. Skin and skull. Santa Catarina (not on modern maps; see 
Baird, Mammals of North America, p. 713), a few miles west of 
Monterey, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. April, 1853. Collected by Lieut. 
D. N. Couch, U.S. A. Catalogued December 20, 1854. 

The specimen was formerly mounted, but it has recently been made a study 
skin, in fair condition. Some hair has slipped from the underparts. Instead of 
being the ‘‘glossy black’’ described by Baird, it is now a blackish brown, prob- 
ably due to exposure to light and consequent bleaching. Skull has left malar, 
left incisors, and the posterior parts involving the occipital bones, and left bulla, 
wanting. 

Type not designated by number, but the measurements given in the original 
description agree exactly with those of No. 38; given by Baird in Mammals of 
North America, p. 312. 


Spermophilus cryptospilotus Merriam. Biol. Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 57-58, pl. 9, figs. 1-3, September 4, 1890. 
=Citellus cryptospilotus (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, 

Suppl., p. 341, 1904. 

34678. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tenebito Wash, Painted Desert 
Arizona. August 17, 1889. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. 
Original number 374. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight break in 
supraorbital border. 

Spermophilus elegans Kennicott. Cotypes. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1863, p. 158, ordered published at meeting of June 

30, 1863. 

=Citellus elegans (Kennicott). See Elliot, Check List Mammals North Amer. 

Cont., etc., Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 118, 1905. 

No numbers are mentioned in the original description. Kenni- 
cott briefly describes new spermophiles in the collection of the 
Smithsonian Institution. He speaks of Spermophilus elegans as 
coming from Fort Bridger, Utah (now Wyoming), and collected by 


166 CITELLUS. 


C. Drexler. Consequently all the specimens from Fort Bridger 
collected by C. Drexler and in the collection prior to 1863 become 
cotypes of the species. In the following list are included all the 
known specimens from Fort Bridger collected by Drexler. The 
labels all have c/egans written on them, possibly in Kennicott’s 
hand, and they are entered in the catalogue as Spermophilus clegans. 
The skins were collected in Apriland May of 1858 and the aleoholics 
were probably taken at the same time. 

i#3¢- Female. Skin, can not be found; skull, anterior half present 
and in fair condition; mandible lost. Original number 168. Col- 
lected April 11, 1858. 

3469. Female. Very poor skin; no record of askull. Original num- 
ber 169. Collected April 11, 1858. 

3473. Male. Skin, can not be found; no record of askull. Original 
number 166. Collected April 11, 1858. 

i413. Female. Well-made skin in good condition (remade in Febru- 
ary, 1902); skull has most of mandible and upper tooth row and 
orbit of right side present. Original number 233. Collected April 
17, 1858. 

3480. Male. Very poor skin with part of skull inside. Original 
number 216. Collected April 14, 1858. 

4003. Female. Very poor skin; has been mounted; fragmentary 
skull inside. Original number 3. 

#244. Skin in aleohol; condition good; skull in good condition. 

5951. Alcoholic; abdominal viscera removed; condition fair. 

5952. Alcoholic; abdominal viscera removed; condition fair. 

5953. Alcoholic; abdominal viscera removed; condition good. 

5954. Alcoholic; abdominal viscera removed; young; condition poor. 

5955. Body without feet or head, in alcohol; also a poor skin which 
has been mounted. | 

5956. Alcoholic; abdominal viscera removed; condition fair. 

5957. Body without feet or head, in aleohol; no skin can be found. 

Skins Nos. 3468-3480; catalogued March 3, 1859; No. 4003, 

June 18, 1860; alcoholic material in February, 1863; skulls Janu- 
ary 20, 1868. 


Spermophilus beecheyi fisheri Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, pp. 133-134, December 28, 1893. 


=Citellus grammurus fisheri (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, 
Suppl., p. 336, 1904. 


mo 


343. Skin and skull. Adult male. Kern Valley, 25 miles above 
Kernville, California. July 6, 1891. Collected by Dr. A. K. 
Fisher. Original number 741. 

Well-made skin in good condition, except for absence of a small patch of hair 
on the side of the abdomen; skull perfect. 





CITELLUS. 167 


Spermophilus annulatus goldmani Merriam: Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 69, March 22, 1902. 
—Citellus annulatus goldmani (Merriam). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soc. 
Nat. Hist., XX XI, p. 74, August, 1903. 

91259. Skin and skull. Adult female. Santiago, Tepic, Mexico. 
June 18, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 11225. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for small perforation 
in squamosal. 


Spermophilus spilosomamacrospilotus Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 38, October 8, 1890. 
—Citellus spilosoma macrospilotus (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mam- 
malium, Suppl., p. 340, 1904. 

46759, Skin and skull. Adult female. Oracle, Pinal County, Ari- 
zona. June 11, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 
129. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for small perforation 
in brain-case. 


Spermophilus spilosoma major Merriam. “Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 39, October 8, 1890. 
—Citellus spilosoma major (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, 
Suppl., p. 340, 1904. 
$7116, Skin and skull. Adult female. Albuquerque, New Mexico. 
July 22, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 225. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left post- 
orbital process and slight injuries to left zygoma, nasals, and right auditory 
meatus. 


Spermophilus spilosoma marginatus Bailey. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 118, June 2, 1902. 
=Citellus spilosoma marginatus (Bailey). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soe. 
Nat. Hist., XX XI, p. 75, August, 1903. 
108927. Skinand skull. Adult male. Alpine, Texas. July 5, 1901. 
Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 7702. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for several small shot 
perforations; left coronoid and condyle missing. 


Spermophilus mollis Kennicott. Cotypes. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1863, p. 157, ordered published at meeting of June 
30, 1863. 
=Citellus mollis (Kennicott). See Elliot, Check List Mammals North Amer. 
Cont., etc., Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 112, 1905. 
$427. Skin and skull. Camp Floyd, Utah (now near Fuirtield). 
March 18, 1859. Collected by C. S. McCarthy during ** explora- 


168 OITELLUS. 


tions with the army in Utah” under Capt. J. H. Simpson, U. 5. A. 
Original number 164. Skin catalogued February 21, 1860, skull, 
January, 1863. 
Skin remade in February, 1902, in good condition. The skull has most of the 
brain-case lacking, otherwise it is in good condition. 
3775. Skin. Another cotype from the same place and by the same 
collector, can not be found. Catalogued February 21, 1860. 


No type is designated by Kennicott. The specimens are referred to as coming 
from Camp Floyd and the Rocky Mountains in Utah, and collected by C. Drexler 
and C. 8. McCarthy. The above two specimens are the only ones that fulfill 
these requirements. Nos. #333 and 4953 are catalogued as coming from the 
Rocky Mountains and doubtfully collected by Drexler. In view of this uncer- 
tainty in regard to the Rocky Mountain specimens, it seems best to restrict the 
cotypes to the Camp Floyd specimens, which is the better course, since it gives 
the species a definite type-locality. Camp Floyd is considered the type-locality 
by Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., X XX, p. 53, December, 1901. 


Citellus nebulicola Osgood. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, p. 26, March 19, 1903. 


59145. Skin and skull. Adult female. Nagai Island, Shumagin 
Islands, Alaska. June 24, 1893. Collected by C. H. Townsend. 
Catalogued February 5, 1895. 


Fairly well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Spermophilus spilosoma obsidianus Merriam. _ Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 56-57, September 4, 1890. 
=Citellus spilosoma obsidianus (Merriam). See Elliot, Check List Mammals 
North Amer. Cont., ete., Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 100, 1905. 
téie- Skin and skull. Adult male. Cedar belt northeast of San 
Francisco Mountain, Arizona. October 1, 1889. Collected by V. 
Bailey. Original number 557. 


1 
9 
“ 


Well-made skin in fair condition; underparts somewhat grease-stained; skull 
perfect, except for perforation in supraoccipital. 


Spermophilus obsoletus Kennicott. Cotypes. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1863, p. 157, ordered published at meeting of June 

30, 1863. 

=Citellus obsoletus (Kennicott). See Elliot, Check List Mammals North Amer. 

Cont., ete., Field Columbian Museum, Zool. Ser., VI, p. 99, 1905. 

No type is designated in the description. The species is based 
upon specimens in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution, 
from **‘ Nebraska” (including the present Nebraska, Wyoming, and 
Dakotas), collected by Doctors Suckley, Cooper, and Hayden. The 
following seven specimens answer to these requirements and are 
undoubtedly the ones Kennicott had. This leaves the type-locality 
rather indefinite. It is the general region of the present western 
Nebraska. 





CITELLUS. 169 


3140. Skin. Male. Fort Laramie, Wyoming, formerly Nebraska 
Territory. Collected September 22, 1857, by Dr. J. G. Cooper. 
Original number 62. Skin lost. 

$144. Skin and skull. Fort Laramie, Wyoming, formerly Nebraska 
Territory. September 30, 1857. Collected by Dr. J. G. Cooper. 
Original number 67. Skin lost. Most of skull present but badly 
broken. 

gfees. Skin. Female. Fifty miles west of Fort Kearney, Nebraska. 
August 9, 1857. Collected by Dr. J. G. Cooper. Original num- 
ber 44. Fair skin, remade February, 1902. Skull in fair condition; 
broken about the brain case posteriorly. 

3223. Skin. Female. One hundred and twenty miles west of Fort 
Kearney, Nebraska. August 16, 1857. Collected by Dr. J. G. 
Cooper. Original number 45. Skin lost. 

$324, Skin and steal. Female. One hundred and thirty miles west 
of Fort Kearney, Nebraska. August 17, 1857. Collected by Dr. 
J. G. Cooper. Original number 47. Poor skin; most of skull 
present, but it is broken in two across the brain case. 

3225. Skin. Male. Same data as 3224. Original number 48. 
Wretched skin, without feet; part of skull inside. 

$252. Skinandskull. Black Hills, South Dakota, formerly Nebraska 
Territory. Collected by Dr. F. V. Hayden. Neither skin nor 
skull can be found. 

Skins catalogued 1857-1858; skulls in 1863, except No. 37998, 

catalogued in February, 1902. 


Spermophilus oregonus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 69, March 24, 1898. 
=Citellus oregonus (Merriam). See Elliot, Check List Mammals North Amer. 
Cont., ete., Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 115, 1905. 

89177. Skin and skull. Adult female. Swan Lake Valley, Klamath 
Basin, Oregon. June 12, 1897. Collected by V. Bailey. Origi- 
nal number 6005. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for several small shot 
perforations. 
Spermophilus osgoodi Merriam. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 18, March 14, 1900. 


=Citellus osgoodi (Merriam). See Elliot, Check List Mammals North Amer. 
Cont., etc., Field Columbian Museum, Zool. Ser., VI, p. 110, 1905. 


. 


29, 1877. Collected by Lucien M. Turner. Original number 
1635. Skin catalogued November 15, 1877; skull, December 4, 1899. 

Well-made skin in good condition. Most of the brain-case of the skull has 
been broken away ; left zygomatic arch complete, right broken away; both 
upper incisors broken off to the roots; left half of mandible perfect, the parts 
posterior to the molars of the right half of mandible broken off. 


427438. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Yukon, Alaska. April 
2s 


170 CITELLUS. 


Spermophilus mexicanus parvidens Mearns. 

Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the 
United States, p. 1, March 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 
XVIII, No. 1075, May 23, 1896, p. 443.) 

=Citellus mexicanus parvidens (Mearns). See Stone and Rehn, Proc. Acad. 
Nat. Sci. Phila., 1903, p. 21, May 7, 1903. 
63073. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Clark, Kinney County, 

Texas. March 21, 1893. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. 

Original number 2312. Catalogued January 14, 1896. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for an irregular hole 
in top of brain-case. 


Spermophilus perotensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, pp. 131-182, December 28, 1893. 
=Citellus perotensis (Merriam). See Elliot, Mamms. Middle Amer. and W. I., 
Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., IV, p. 145, 1904. 
54274. Skin and skull. Adult female. Perote, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
June 8, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 4976. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Spermophilus empetra plesius Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, pp. 29-30, October 6, 1900. 
=Citellus plesius (Osgood). See Osgood, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, p. 25, 
March 19, 1903. 
98931. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bennett, head of Lake Ben- 
nett, British Columbia. June 19, 1899. Collected by W. H. 
Osgood. Original number 465. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Spermophilus spilosoma pratensis Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 55-56, September 4, 1890. 

=Citellus spilosoma pratensis (Merriam). See Elliot, Check List Mammals 

North Amer. Cont., ete., Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 100, 1905. 


659 


$7$3%. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pine plateau at north base 
of San Francisco Mountain, Arizona. August 5, 1889. Collected 
by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and Y. Bailey. Original number 285. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Citellus stejnegeri Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, p. 142, March 31, 1903. 

63226, Skin and skull. Male(4), young. Near Petropaulski, south- 
astern Kamchatka. 1895. Collected by Dr. L. Stejneger. Cata- 
logued March 27, 1896. 

Flat skin; all parts present and apparently in good condition; skull nearly 
perfect; permanent premolars not yet in place; slightly injured about left zygoma 
and left pterygoid, a hole in supraoccipital. 


CITELLUS—AMMOSPERMOPHILUS. Rit 


Spermophilus mollis stephensi Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XII, pp. 69-70, March 24, 1898. 
—Citellus mollis stephensi (Merriam). See Elliot, Check List Mammals North 
Amer. Cont., ete., Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 112, 1905. 


29492 Skin and skull. Adult male. Queen Station, near head of 


Owens Valley, Esmeralda County, Nevada. July 12, 1891. Col- 
lected by F. Stephens. Original number 718. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of first left 


upper premolar and slightly injured left pterygoid and angular process of 
mandible. 


Spermophilus tereticaudus Baird. Cotypes. 
Mammals of North America, p. 315, pl. 67, fig. 2, head and feet, probably No. 
2490; pl. 81, fig. 4, skull No. 2419, 1857. 


=Citellus tereticaudus (Baird). See Elliot, Field Columbian Museum, Zool. Ser., 
III, p. 211, 1904. 


No type is designated by Baird. The description is apparently 
equally based upon these three specimens, which are specified by 
number: 

4684. Skin and skull. A not fully adult male. Skin in bad condi- 
tion; most of hair on the posterior half of body, except the legs 
and tail, is lacking; skull pefect, except the two small upper pre- 
molars lacking. 

1585. Skin of the head and neck. The body is said to be in alcohol, 
but can not be found. 


249). A young female in alcohol. All the hair behind the shoulders, 
except that on the feet and tail, has sloughed off. 
All the specimens were collected at Fort Yuma, Arizona, by 
Maj. G. H. Thomas, U.S. A. Skins catalogued June 24, 1856, the 
alcoholic, April 9, 1857. 


Spermophilus mollis yakimensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 70, March 24, 1898. 
=Citellus mollis yakimensis (Merriam). See Elliot, Check List Mammals North 
Amer. Cont., etc., Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., VI, p. 112, 1905. 
89331. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mabton, Yakima County, 
Washington. July 16, 1897. Collected’ by Dr. W. K. Fisher. 
Original number 323. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus AMMOSPERMOPHILUS. 

Tamias leucurus cinnamomeus Merriam. — Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 51-53, September 4, 1890. 

=Ammospermophilus leucurus cinnamomeus (Merriam). 


See Mearns, Bull. U.S. 
Nat. Mus., No. 56, Pt. 1, p. 299, April 13, 1907. 


Lite AMMOSPERMOPHILUS——-CALLOSPERMOPHILUS. 


»7434. Skin and skull. Adult female. Echo Cliffs, Painted Desert, 
Arizona. September 22, 1889. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam 
and V. Bailey. Original number 510. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for fractured basi- 
occipital and supraoccipital. 
Tamias interpres Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No, 4, pp. 21-22, October 8, 1890. 
—=Ammospermophilus leucurus interpres (Merriam). See Mearns, Bull. U. 8. 
Nat. Mus., No. 56, Pt. 1, p. 301, April 13, 1907. 
\¢3. Skin and skull. Adult female. El Paso, Texas. December 
10, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 762. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfeet. 


Spermophilus nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VITI, pp. 129-131, December 28, 1893. 
=Ammospermophilus nelsoni ( Merriam). - 
54651. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tipton, Tulare County, Cali- 
fornia. June 24, 1893. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original 
number 2968. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Spermophilus harrisi saxicolus Mearns. 
Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals from the Mexican Border of the United 
States, p. 2, March 25, 1896. (Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XVIII, 
No. 1075, p. 444, May 23, 1896. ) 
=Ammospermophilus harrisi saxicola (Mearns). See Mearns, Bull. U. S. Nat. 
Mus., No. 56, Pt. 1, p. 306, April 13, 1907. 

59869. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tinajas Altas, Gila Moun 
tains, Yuma County, Arizona. February 17, 1894. Collected by 
Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A., and F. X. Holzner. Original number 
2983. Catalogued April 12, 1894. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus CALLOSPERMOPHILUS. 


Spermophilus chrysodeirus brevicaudus Merriam. 
Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Biol. Soe. Wash., VIII, p. 184, December 28, 1893. Preoccupied by Sper- 
mophilus brevicauda Brandt (Bull. Acad. St. Petersburg, 1844, II. p. 369). 
Spermophilus bernardinus Merriam. Science, new ser., VIII, p. 782, December 2, 
1898. 
—Callospermophilus bernardinus (Merriam). See Mearns, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., 
No. 56, Pt. 1, p. 318, April 13, 1907. 

56661. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Bernardino Peak, Cali- 
fornia. October 9, 1893. Collected by J. E. McLellan. Original 
number 274. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for small perforation 
in nasals and broken angular processes of mandible. 


EUTAMIAS. 173 





CALLOSPERMOPHILUS 
Biological Survey collection. 


Tamias castanurus Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 19, October 8, 1890. 
Adult male. Park City, Summit County, 
Original number 


=Callospermophilus castanurus (Merriam). 
2433. Skin and skull. 
July 3, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. 


ccleo 


Utah. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a few small shot 


1383. 
Biological Survey coll. 


perforations. 


Callospermophilus madrensis Merriam. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 563, November 29, 1901. 

Sierra Madre, near Guada- 

Collected 


95363. Skin and skull. Adult female. 
lupe y Calvo, Chihuahua, Mexico. August 27, 1898. 
Original number 12923. 


by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last 


right upper molar. 
Callospermophilus chrysodeirus trinitatis Merriam. 
Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 126, July 19, 1901. 
95531. Skin and skull. Adult female. Trinity Mountains east of 
Hoopa Valley, California. September 10, 1898. Collected by V. 
Bailey. Original number 6693. 

. Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus EUTAMIAS. 
Biological Survey collection. 


Tamias alpinus Merriam. 
Proc. Bioi. Soc. Wash., VIII, pp. 187-1388, December 28, 1893. 
=Eutamias alpinus (Merriam). See Merriam, op. cif., XI, p. 191, July 1, 1897. 
$7. Skinandskull. Youngadult female. Big Cottonwood Mead- 
ows, near Mount Whitney, California; altitude 10,000 feet. August 
Collected by Dr. B. H. Dutcher, U. S. A. Original 


305 
4249 


12, 1891. 
number 191. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Eutamias pallidus cacodemus Cary. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, pp. 89-90, June 4, 1906. 
138737 (not 138137, as in original description). Skin andskull. Young 
adult male. Sheep Mountain, Big Badlands, South Dakota. Sep- 

Collected by M. Cary. Original number 682. 


tember 2, 1905. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


174 EUTAMIAS. 


Tamias callipeplus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soa Wash., VIII, pp. 186-137, December 28, 1893. 


=Eutamias speciosus callipeplus (Merriam). See Merriam, op. cit., XI, p. 202, 
July 1, 1897. 


373i. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Summit of Mount 
Pinos, Ventura County, California; altitude 9,000 feet. October 


20, 1891. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 1344. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight break in 
supraorbital border. 


Eutamias canicaudus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 77, May 29, 1903. 
gi¢es- Skinandskull. Adult female. Spokane, Washington. April 
11, 1891. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 639. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Eutamias caniceps Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, pp. 28-29, October 6, 1900. 


99200. Skin and skull. Adult female. Lake Lebarge, Yukon, 
Canada. July 13, 1899. Collected by W. H. Osgood. Original 
number 603. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Eutamias cinereicollis canipes Bailey. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 117, June 2, 1902. 

109229, Skin and skull. Adult female. Guadalupe Mountains, 
Texas. August 24, 1901. Collected by V. Bailey. Original 
number 7827. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken tip of nasals 
and absence of right coronoid process of mandible. 


Eutamias minimus caryi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X XI, p. 148, June 9, 1908. 

150740. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Medano Ranch, San 
Luis Valley, Colorado. October 24,1907. Collected by M. Cary. 
Original number 1176. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Eutamias caurinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, pp. 352-353, October 4, 1898. 

90636. Skin and skull. Adult male. Timber line near head of Sole- 
duck River, Olympic Mountains, Washington. August 27, 1897. 
Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. Original number 6211 (V. 
Bailey). 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


EUTAMIAS. 175 


Tamias cinereicollis Allen. Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., III, pp. 94-96, June, 1890. 
=Eutamias cinereicollis (Allen). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. 
Hist., XXX, p. 40, December, 1901. 
$7523. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Francisco Mountain, 
Arizona. August 2, 1889. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and 
V. Bailey. Original number 260 (V. Bailey). 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
postorbital process. 


Tamias cooperi Baird. Cotype. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 334, this paper was reported favorably 
for publication April 24, 1855. 
=Eutamias cooperi (Baird). See Lyon, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., L, No. 1713, 
p. 89, June 27, 1907. 


° 


fies. Skinandskull. Klickitat Pass, Cascade Mountains (4,500 feet), 
Skamania County, Washington. (See Cooper, American Natural- 
ist, II, p. 531; Baird’s published statements regarding the locality 
are inaccurate.) July, 1853. Collected by Dr. J. G. Cooper. Skin 
catalogued January 30, 1854; skull October, 1853. 

Skin is well preserved, and in June, 1902, was remade into 
a modern study skin. The posterior half of the brain-case and 
right zygoma lacking. 

No. #/s's is another cotype, having the same data as the above, 
but it can not be found. 

No type is designated in the original description, but on page 
301, Mammals North America, Baird refers to Nos. 211 and 212 as 
the ones he had in view when Zam/as cooperi was first described. 


Tamias dorsalis Baird. Cotypes. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 332, this paper was reported favorably 
for publication April 24, 1855. 
=Eutamias dorsalis (Baird). See Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 210, 
July 1, 1897. 

120. Mounted specimen (which has a skull inside). Fort Webster, 
copper mines of the Mimbres River; lat. 32°, 47’, long. 108°, 04’. 
Near the present Georgetown, Grant county, New Mexico. 1851. 
Collected by J. H. Clark. Catalogued March 31, 1853. 

In fair condition. Some skin is broken about the chin and about right fore 
leg, and tip of tail is missing. 

sisi. Data as above. Skin catalogued March 31, 1853; skull, April 
10, 1857. Only the mandible of this specimen can be fonnd. 

These specimens were designated by number by Baird as the basis of Tamias 
dorsalis on page 300 of the Mammals of North America, 1857. 


176 EUTAMIAS. 


Tamias quadrivittatus gracilis Allen. Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., III, pp. 99-101, June, 1890. 
—=Eutamias quadrivittatus gracilis (Allen). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. 
Soc. Nat. Hist., XXX, p. 44, December, 1901. 
37444. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Pedro, New Mexico. 
July 4,1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 166. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Eutamias hopiensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VITI, p. 165, June 29, 1905. 
67768. Skin and skull. Adult female. Keam Canyon, Navajo 
County, Arizona. July 27, 1894. Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. 
Original number 1688. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Eutamias speciosus inyoensis Merriam. — Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XI, p. 208, July 1, 1897. 
4333. Skin and skull. Young adult male. White Mountains, Inyo 
County, California. July 7, 1891. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 1069. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with interorbital region fractured 
and right half of brain case in fragments. 


Tamias quadrivittatus luteiventris Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., III, p. 101, June, 1890. 

=Eutamias quadrivittatus luteiventris (Allen). See Miller and Rehn, Proe. 

Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., X XX, p. 44, December 27, 1901. 

44991. Skin and skull. Adult maie. Chief Mountain Lake, north- 
ern ee of Montana. August 24, 1874. Collected by Dr. 
Elliott Coues on the U. $8. Northern Boundary Survey. Skin 
catalogued October 21, 1874; skull, February 1, 1902. 

Remade in February, 1902, into a modern study skin, in good condition. A 
skull was found inside. It is somewhat injured about the optic foramina and 
pterygopalatal region; last left upper molar is lost; condyloid process of right 
half of mandible lacking. 


Tamias minimus melanurus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 22, October 8, 1890. 
=Eutamias minimus pictus (Allen). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, p. 
46, July 30, 1891. 
048. Skin and skull. Adult male. Snake River, near Blackfoot, 
Idaho. gee Mi, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey and Dr. B. H. 
Dutcher, U. S. A. Original number 1451. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacks right upper premolars and first 
molar, right postorbital process, part of right audital bulla, and most of left 
parietal. 


23 
30 





EUTAMIAS. Le 


aI 


Tamias obscurus Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., III, pp. 70-71, June, 1890. 
=Eutamias obscurus (Allen). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., 
XXX, p. 42, December 27, 1901. 
£5050.) Skinand skull. Adult female. San Pedro Martir Mountains, 
Lower California, Mexico. May 1, 1889. Collected by C. H. 
Townsend, Gaul number 7. Catalogued January 21, 1890. 


Well-made skin in good condition, but no wire in tail; skull perfect. 


Eutamias townsendi ochrogenys Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 195, 206-207, July 1, 1897. 


67182. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mendocino, California. July 
17, 1894. Collected by J. E. McLellan. Original number 1015. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of post- 
orbital processes and first left upper premolar. 


Eutamias amcenus operarius Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 164-165, June 29, 1905. 


129808. oan and skull. Young adult female. Gold Hill, Colorado. 
October 8, 1903. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 8160. 
Ww Sahil skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Eutamias oreocetes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 207-208, July 1, 1897. 


72468. Skin and skull. Adult female. Timber line, near Summit, 
Teton Mountains, Montana. June 14, 1895. Collected by v. 
Bailey. Original number 5024. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tamias quadrivittatus pallidus Allen. Lectotype. 
Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., XVI, p. 289, 1874. 


=Eutamias pallidus(Allen). See Cary, Proc. Biol.Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 87, June 4, 
1906. 


$e$i4- Skin and skull. Nearly adult. Camp Thorne (near present 
a of Glendive), Yellowstone River, Montana. July 18, 1873. 
Collected by Dr. J. A. Allen. Original number 200. Skin cata- 
logued January 1874; skull, May 18, 1906. 

Skin originally had skull inside, but in 1906 the skull was removed and the 
specimen made into a modern study skin, now in good condition. The skull 
lacks all the occipital bones and one bulla; otherwise in good condition. 

For regarding this specimen a lectotype out of a series of cotypes from widely 
separated localities and representing more than one form, see Cary, Proc. 
Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 88, under ‘‘Remarks.’’ 

45336—08——12 


siol. 


178 EUTAMIAS—TAMIOPS—SCIURUS. 


Eutamias palmeri Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 208-210, July 1, 1897. 
$075) Skin and skull. Adult male. Charleston Peak, Nevada. 


February 13, 1891. Collected by Dr. T. S. Palmer and E. W. 
Nelson. Original number 4382. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tamias panamintinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, pp. 134-135, December 28, 1893. 
=Eutamias panamintinus (Merriam). See Merriam, op. cit., XI, p. 191, July 
1 8o7s 


$403. Skin and skull. Adult male. Panamint Mountains, Inyo 
eee California. April 3, 1891. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 723. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Eutamias senescens Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, p. 349, October 4, 1898. 
83395. Skin and skull. ~ Adult female. Low barren hills, 15 miles 


west of Peking, China. August 21, 1896. Collected by George 
D. Wilder. Catalogued March 6, 1897. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that right posterior 
half of brain-ease is broken away. 


Genus TAMIOPS. 


Sciurus novemlineatus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 147, November 12, 1903. 


=Tamiops novemlineatus (Miller). 


84403. Skinand skull. Adult male. One thousand five hundred feet 
elevation in heavy forest among the hills of Trong (or Tarang), lower 
Siam. February 19, 1897. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued March 25, 1898. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that the left ramus of 


mandible is lacking. 


Genus SCIURUS. 


Sciurus abbotti Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 224, August 20, 1900. 
101662. Skin and skull. Adult female. Big Tambelan Island, Tam- 


belan Islands, South China Sea. August 10, 1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


SCIURUS. 179 


Sciurus adangensis Miller. 


Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLY, No. 1420, p. 17, November 6, 1903. 

104389. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Adang, Batu Islands, 
off west coast of Sumatra. December 14,1899. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 153. Catalogued November 6, 
1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus alleni Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 147-148, June 3, 1898. 
25731. Skin and skull. Adult male. Monterey, Nuevo Leon, Mex- 
ico. February 22, 1891. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original 
number 563. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus altinsularis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLY, No. 1420, p. 21, November 6, 1903. 
111975. Skin andskull. Adult female. High Island, Mergui Archi- 
pelago. December 31, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. Li. Abbott. 
Original number 810. Catalogued August 20, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus anambensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., IT, p. 223, August 20, 1900. 

101686. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Siantan, Anamba Is- 
lands, South China Sea. September 12, 1899. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus fossor anthonyi Mearns. 
Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Sciurus, Castor, Neotoma, 
and Sigmodon, from the Mexican Border of the United States, p. 1, March 5, 
1897. (Reprinted in Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1132, p. 501, January 19, 
1898. ) 

60928. Skin and skull. Adult female. Campbell’s ranch, Laguna, 
San Diego County, California. June 10, 1894. Collected by Dr. 
E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 3642. Catalogued No- 
vember 14, 1894. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a few shot holes 
in brain-case. 
Sciurus aoris Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 10, November 6, 1903. 

112418. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Aor, off the coast of 
Johore. June 5,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 1002. Catalogued November 12, 1901. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for two shot holes on- 
superior surface and one just above right bulla. 


180 SCIURUS. 


Sciurus arizonensis Coues. 
Amer. Nat., I, p. 357, footnote, September, 1867. 
gfey;. Skin and skull. Female. Fort Whipple, Arizona. Decem- 
ber 20, 1865. Collected by Dr. Elliott Coues. Skin catalogued 
April 16, 1866; skull, November 1, 1898. 

Specimen has evidently been mounted, but it has been made into a good study 
skin. The floor of the brain-case has been broken out, otherwise the skull is 
complete. 

In the catalogue, No. 8475 is recorded as having been collected on December 
6, 1864. Dr. Coues says (loc. cit.): The only specimen he obtained was shot 
December 20, 1865. Dr. Allen, in his list, on page 741, Monographs of North 
American Rodentia, gives the same date, probably taken from Coues, who was 
working with him, or from an original label which is now lost. Dr. Coues refers 
to no number as type in his description, but Dr. Allen, ten years later, in table 
(loc. cit.), under ‘‘Remarks,’’ states that specimen no. 8475 is the type of 
S. arizonensis. 

In the skull catalogue under ‘‘Remarks’’ is written: ‘Skull taken from 
mounted type, not naturally attached to skin, and it is very doubtful if it is the 
type skull. Oct. 31/98.” 

Sciurus atratus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 18, November 6, 1903. 
121524. Skin and skull. Adult female. North Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. November 22, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2087. Catalogued July 29, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus hudsonicus baileyi Allen. iological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X, pp. 261-262, July 22, 1898. 
56040. Skin and skull. Adult male. West slope of Bighorn Moun- 
tains, Wyoming. 8,400 feet altitude. September 19,1893. Col- 
lected by V. Bailey. Original number 4390, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus bale Miller. 

Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 14, November 6, 1903. 

121799. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, 
west coast Sumatra. February 12, 1903. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 2282. Catalogued August 2, 
L908. 

Well-made skin in good condition, but tail was damaged during life and only 


23mm. remain; skull perfect, except loss of left small upper premolar and second 
right lower molar and left angular process of mandible. 


Sciurus yucatanensis baliolus Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 131, August 9, 1901. 
107939. Skin and skull. Adult male. Apazote, Campeche, Mexico. 


January 8,1901. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original number 
14428. 


Se 


SCIURUS. 181 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken mandible; 
posterior portion of right ramus missing; left ramus broken, but with teeth and 
processes intact. 


Sciurus bancarus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 451, February 3, 1903. 

114311. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Bangkaru, Banjak 
Islands, off west coast of Sumatra. January 17, 1902. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 1422. Catalogued 
August 28, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except both small upper pre- 
molars lacking. 


Sciurus boothiz belti Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, pp. 78-79, pl. 2, figs. 1, 5, May 9, 1899. 


ia 


$4, Skin and skull. Adult female. Escondido River, 50 miles 
rom Bluefields, Nicaragua. October 12, 1892. Collected by 
Dr. C. W. Richmond. Original number 124. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a few shot pertora- 
tions. 


364 
£85 
f 


~ 
‘ 
. 


Sciurus bentincanus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 19, November 6, 1903. 
104383. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bentinck Island, Mergui 


Archipelago. March 11, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 349. Catalogued November 6, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus bilimitatus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 8, November 6, 1903. 
105072. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tanjong Laboha, Tringanu, 
Malay Peninsula. September 29, 1900. Collected by C. Boden 


Kloss. Original number (Dr. W. L. Abbott) 671. Catalogued 
January 4, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for shot holes in hase 
and vault of cranium. 
Sciurus billitonus Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 592, December 18, 1906. 


124977. Skin andskull.. Adultfemale. Buding Bay, Billiton Island, 
between Sumatra and Borneo. August 5,1904. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 3539. Catalogued December 6, 
1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


182 SOIURUS. 


Sciurus carimate Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1481, p. 57, July 23, 1906. 


125076. Skin and skull. Adult male. Telok Pai, Karimata Island, 
off west coast of Borneo. August 27, 1904. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 3662. Catalogued December 8, 
1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except slight injury to right 
condyloid process of mandible. 


Sciurus carimonensis Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 261, September 11, 1906. 


122800. Skin and skull. Adult female. Great Karimon Island, 
Rhio-Linga Archipelago. May 24,1908. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2423. Catalogued January 20, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect, a few small shot 
Injuries. ec 


Sciurus douglasii cascadensis Allen. Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X, pp. 277-278, July 22, 1898. 


80229. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Hood, Oregon. Sep- 

tember 9, 1896. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 5874. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a few small shot 
perforations. 


Sciurus casensis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 20, November 6, 1903. 


104370. Skin and skull. Adult female. Chance Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. December 28, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 185. Catalogued November 6, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus castanotus Baird. 

Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 382, reported favorably for publication 
April 24, 1855 (typographical error for castanonotus).  Sciurus castanonotus 
Baird, Mammals of North America, p. 266, 1857. 

=Sciurus aberti Woodhouse. See Allen, Monographs North American. Rodentia, 
p. 735, 1877. 

rox Skinandskull. Adult female. Coppermines, near the present 

site of Georgetown, Grant County, New Mexico. (On page 

707 of Mammals of North America, Baird says of Coppermines, 

‘*A former station of the United States-Mexican Boundary Survey, 

subsequently called Fort Webster. Not indicated clearly whether 

on a tributary of the Gila or Mimbres. About latitude 33°, lon- 
gitude 108°.” In his original description the specimen is spoken 





SCIURUS. 183 


of as coming from the Mimbres. 1851. Collected by J. H. Clark 
Catalogued March 31, 1853. 


The specimen has evidently been made over into a modern study skin, quite 
complete except for the tail, which is rather fragmentary; skull perfect. 

No numbers are referred to in the original description, but in the Mammals 
ot North America it isseen that there were two specimens, an adult female and a 
young. Measurements of a skull are given in the first description, which apply 
to the adult female, no. 3), Hence it is regarded as the type. 


Sciurus griseoflavus chiapensis Nelson. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, pp. 69-70, May 9, 1899. 


—~( 


75957. Skinandskull. Adultmale. San Cristobal, Chiapas, Mexico. 
September 22, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. -A. 
Goldman. Original number 8447. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus socialis cocos Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 155-156, June 3, 1898. 

70644. Skin and skull. Adult male. Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico. 
January 11, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 7360. 


Well-made skin in good’ condition; skull perfect, except for broken right 
audital bulla. 


Sciurus albipes colimensis Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 152, June 3, 1898. 
=Sciurus poliopus colimensis (Nelson). See Nelson, Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, 
p. 52, May 9, 1899. 


493. Skin and skull. Adult male. Hacienda Magdalena, Colima, 
Mexico. March 19, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 


Goldman. Original number 2239. 


33 
45 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus aberti concolor True. 
Diagnoses of New North American Mammals, p. 1, April 26, 1894. (Reprinted 
in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XVII, No. 999, p. 241, gia 15, 1894.) Preoc- 
cupied by Sciurus acolo Blyth (Journ. Asiat. Boe 3engal XXIV, p. 474, 1855. ) 
=Sciurus aberti ferreus True. Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 183, November 
30, 1900. 


21423. Skin and skull. Adult female. Loveland, Larimer County, 
Colorado. Collected by William G. Smith. Catalogued October 
30, 1893. 


Skin in good condition, but not made up in form of a modern study skin; skull 
perfect, except for a few minor chippings. 


184 SCIURUS. 


Sciurus condurensis Miller. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 260, September 11, 1906. 
122876. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Kundur, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. June 13, 1903. Coilected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2486. Catalogued January 21, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect, left zygoma lacking 
and last left upper molar shot away. 


Sciurus domelicus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 18, November 6, 1903. 
104381. Skinandskull. Adult female. Domel Island, Mergui Arch- 
ipelago. February 24, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 322. Catalogued November 6, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Sciurus dorsalis Woodhouse. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 110, reported favorably for publication June 

29, 1852. (Name preoccupied; see Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1848, p. 138.) 

=Sciurus aberti Woodhouse. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 220, requested 

to be published December 28, 1852. 

2430. Skin, no skull. San Francisco Mountain, Arizona, on the 
routes of Captains Sitgreaves and Whipple, about lat. 35° and long. 
111° 80’. October, 1851. Collected by Dr. S. W. Woodhouse. 
Catalogued April 4, 1857. 

The specimen was formerly mounted, but it has since been taken down and 
made into a fairly good study skin. The first description reads: ‘‘ This beautiful 
squirrel I procured whilst attached to the expedition under the command of 
Capt. L. Sitgreaves, Topographical Engineer, U. S. Army, exploring the Zuni 
and the Great and Little Colorado rivers of the West in the month of October, 
1851, in the San Francisco Mountain, New Mexico.’ This statement makes it 


practically certain that the above specimen is the one on which Dr. Woodhouse 
based his description. 


Sciurus albipes effugius Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 152-153, June 3, 1898. 
=Sciurus poliopus effugius (Nelson). See Nelson, Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 54, 
May 9, 1899. 
70288. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mountains near Chilpan- 
cingo, Guerrero, Mexico. December 24, 1894. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 7271. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken alisphenoid. 


Sciurus erebus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 456, February 3, 1903. 


=Sciurus piceus Peters. See Lyon, Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XXXIV, No. 1626, 
p. 638, 1908. 


SCIURUS. 185 


114537. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tapanuli Bay, west coast 
of Sumatra. March 17, 1902. Colleeted by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1653. Catalogued September 2, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Sciurus fossor Peale. See page 290. 


Sciurus aureogaster frumentor Nelson. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 154-155, June 3, 1898. 

54259. Skinand skull. Adultmale. Las Vigas, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
June 18, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 5073. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of last two 
right upper molars and last left upper molar. 


Sciurus goldmani Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 149-150, June 3, 1898. 

77903. Skin and skull. Adult male. Huehuetan, Chiapas, Mexico. 
February 28, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 9435. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus hippurellus Lyon. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., L, No. 1705, p. 27, fig. 12b, April 8, 1907. 

142274. Skin and skull. Adult female. Batu Ampar, Landak 
River, western Borneo. July 11, 1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 4260. Catalogued January 20, 1906. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of two minute 
upper premolars. 


Sciurus hippurosus Lyon. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., L, No. 1705, p. 26, fig. 12a, April 8, 1907. 

141031. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tarussan Bay, west coast 
of Sumatra. December 18,1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 3826. Catalogued July 19, 1905. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with a few shot holes in cranium, 
most of the left half of the mandible destroyed by shot, and right lower incisor 
shot off at alveolus. 


Sciurus nelsoni hirtus Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 153-154, June 3, 1898. 

55325. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tochimileo, Puebla, Mexico. 

~ August 7, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 5295, ; 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken pterygoids. 


186 SCLURUS. 


Sciurus ictericus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 12, November 6, 1903. 

121727. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, 
off west coast Sumatra. February 4, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. 
L. Abbott. Original number 2223. Catalogued August 1, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus (Microsciurus) isthmius Nelson. 

Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XII, p. 77, fig. 1, April 14, 1899. 

33°°;. Skinand skull. Truando River, northwestern Colombia. Col- 
lected by Dr. A. Schott. Original number 232. Received from 
Lieut. N. Michler, U.S. A. Skin catalogued March 1, 1859; skull, 
March 25, 1898. 

Skin in rather poor condition, tail imperfect; most of the posterior basal por- 

tion of the brain case of the skull has been cut away. 


Sciurus kaibabensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, pp. 129-130, June 9, 1904. 
130982. Skin and skull. Adult male. Bright Angel Creek, top of 
Kaibab Plateau, Grand Canyon, Arizona. December 1, 1903. 
Collected by J. T. Stewart. Original number 4470x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with zygomata, pterygoids, left 
audital bulla, and angular processes of mandible broken. 


Sciurus klossi Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 225, fig. 18b, August 20, 1900. 
101678. Skin and skull. Adult male. Kaju Ara, or Saddle Island, 
of the Tambelan Islands, South China Sea. August 15, 1899. 
Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus lancavenis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 16, November 6, 1903. 

104390. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Lankawi, off west coast 
of Malay Peninsula. December 1, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 101. Catalogued November 6, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus lautensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 128, March 26, 1901. 
104683. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Laut, Natuna Islands. 
August 6, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original num- 
ber 612. Catalogued December 17, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except posterior portion of 
left half of mandible has been shot away. 





SOCTURUS. 187 


Sciurus (Heliosciurus) rufobrachiatus libericus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 683, December 28, 1900. 

83834. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Coffee, Liberia, West 
Africa. March 22, 1897. Collected by R. P. Currie. Original 
number 16. Catalogued September 30, L897. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus limitis Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 331, this paper was reported favorably for 
publication April 24, 1855. 
=Sciurus niger limitis (Baird). See Osgood, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 45 
April 18, 1907. 
qe's's- Skin (lost) and skull. Devils River, Texas. Collected by 
J. H. Clark, United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, under 
Maj. W. H. Emory, U.S. A. Catalogued December 12, 1854. 
Skin can not be found; skull perfect, except for loss of left pterygoid and a 
small piece out of left angular process of mandible. <i 
The original description says, ‘‘Collected by J. H. Clark on Devil’s River, 
Texas,’’ and by referring to Baird’s Mammals of North America, p. 256, it is seen, 
that this specimen is no. ;3°/., which is consequently considered the type. 
Sciurus lingungensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 123, March 26, 1901. 


104693. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Lingung, off the south- 
ern extremity of Bunguran Island, Natuna Islands. June 19, 1900. 
Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 494.  Cata- 
logued December 17, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus socialis littoralis Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, pp. 87-88, December, 1907. 
71322. Skin and skull. Adult female. Puerto Angel, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. March 11,1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 7627. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of two 
molars, left pterygoid, and adjacent part of the floor of the brain-case. 


Sciurus lucas Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 20, November 6, 1903. 
104385. Skin and skull. Adult female. St. Luke Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. January 20,1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 256. Catalogued November 6, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that the right ptery- 
goid is defective. 


188 SOIURUS. 


Sciurus lutescens Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 124, March 26, 1901. 
104668. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sirhassen Island Natuna 
Islands. June 8, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Origi- 
nal number 429. Catalogued December 17, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus boothi# managuensis Nelson. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 150, June 3, 1898. 
=Sciurus managuensis (Nelson). See Nelson, Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 81, 
May 9, 1899. 
62476. Skin and skull. Adult male. Along the Managua River, 
Guatemala. February 12, 1895. Collected by Mrs. C. McElroy. 
Catalogued June 26, 1895. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus mansalaris Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X XVI, No. 1317, p. 452, February 3, 1903. 

114633. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Mansalar, off Tapanuli 
Bay, west coast of Sumatra. March 2, 1902. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 1583. Catalogued September 3, 
1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus matthzus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 19, November 6, 1903. 
111920. Skinand skull. Adult female. St. Matthew Island, Mereui 
Archipelago. December 11, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Ab- 
bott. Original number 774. Catalogued August 17, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus hudsonius mearnsi Townsend. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 146, June 9, 1897. 
=Sciurus mearnsi (Townsend). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X, p. 
286, July 22, 1898. 
48266. Skin and skull. San Pedro Martir Mountains, at about 7,000 
feet, Lower California, Mexico. May, 1889. Collected by C. H. 
Townsend. Catalogued February 15, 1890. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus melanops Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 151, June 11, 1902. 

113152. Skin and skull. Adult female. Indragiri River, eastern 
Sumatra. September 15, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1307. Catalogued February 3, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of both minute 
upper premolars. 





SCIURUS. 189 


Sciurus mendanauus Lyon. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 589, December 18, 1906. 

124916. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Mendanau, west coast 
of Billiton Island, between Sumatra and Borneo. July 14, 1904. 
Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 3475. Cata- 
logued December 5, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus mimellus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 218, August 20, 1900. 
101668. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Wai, Tambelan Islands, 
South China Sea. August 13, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus mimiculus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 219, August 20, 1900. 

101616. Skin and skull. Adult male. Santa Barbe Island, South 
China Sea. August 1, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except right lower incisor 
broken off, first right upper premolar and last upper molar on left side missing. 


Sciurus aberti mimus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, p. 130, June 9, 1904. 

70908. Skin and skull. Adult female. Hall Peak, Cimarron Moun- 
tains, New Mexico. January 16, 1895. Collected by C. M. Bar- 
ber. Original number 61. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
upper premolars and end of left pterygoid. 


Sciurus notatus miniatus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 79, July 25, 1900. 

84415. Skin and skull. Adult female. Trong (or Tarang), lower 
Siam. February 25, 1897. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Cata- 
logued March 25, 1898. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus negligens Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 147, June 3, 1898. 

93028. Skin and skull. Adult female. Alta Mira, Tamaulipas, 
Mexico. April 18, 1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original 
number 12319. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull with nasals and left jugal missing, 
and left mandibular ramus broken. 


190 SCIURUS. 


Sciurus nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VIII, p. 144, December 29, 1893. 
51157. Skin and skull. Aduit female. Huitzilac, Morelos, Mexico. 
January 1, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
4144, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus albipes nemoralis Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 151, June 3, 1898. 
=Sciurus poliopus nemoralis (Nelson). See Nelson, Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, 
p. 50, May 9, 1899. 
33338) Skin and skull. Adult male. Patzcuaro, Michoacan, Mexico. 
July 23, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 2905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus fremonti neomexicanus Allen. Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X, p. 291, July 22, 1898. 

71690. Skinand skull. Adult male. Rayado Canyon, Colfax County, 
New Mexico. April 1, 1895. -Collected by C. M. Barber. Orig- 
inal number 89. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus collizi nuchalis Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, pp. 59-60, May 9, 1899. 

32657 Skin and skull. Adult male. Manzanillo, Colima, Mexico. 
February 2, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
1828. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of second 
left upper premolar; right audital bulla and pterygoids slightly broken. 
Sciurus borneoensis palustris Lyon. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XIII, No. 1577, p. 558, December 24, 1907. 

142330. Skin and skull. Adult male. North bank of the Kapuas 
River, below Pulo Limbang, western Borneo. September 22, 
1905. Collected by Dr. W. Ll. Abbott. Original number 4467. 
Catalogued January 22, 1906. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except slight injury to both 
angular processes of mandible. 
Sciurus pannovianus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 11, November 6, 1903. 

112351. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Pannow, Atas Islands, 
South China Sea. May 28,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 952. Catalogued November 8, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull berets shot hole back of right supra- 
orbital process. 


SCLURUS. 191 


Sciurus parvus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 33, April 5, 1901. 

84509. Skin and skull. Adult male. Nulu, Sarawak, Borneo; alti- 
tude 1,000 feet. October, 1894. Collected by Charles Hose. 
Catalogued April 12, 1898. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull slightly broken about the foramen 
magnum, otherwise complete. 


Sciurus pemangilensis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 9, November 6, 1903. 
112460. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Pemangil, off coast of . 
Johore. June 12, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Origi- 
nal number 1062. Catalogued November 13, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except small holes in left 
bulla. 


Sciurus peninsularis Miller. 

Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 10, November 6, 1903. See Lyon 
(Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLVIII, No. 1660, pp. 277-279, February 4, 1907), 
for remarks on the status of this species. 

112511. Skin and skull. Adult male. North Bank of Endau River, 

Pahang, Malay Peninsula. June 21,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. 

Abbott. Original number 1078. Catalogued November 15, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus poliopus perigrinator Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 149, October 6, 1904. 

70279. Skin and skull. Adult femaie. Piaxtla, Puebla, Mexico. 
November 25, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 7104. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly broken 
pterygoid and supraorbital border. 


Sciurus hudsonicus petulans Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, pp. 27-28, pl. 5, fig. 2, October 6, 1900. 

97457. Skin andskull. Adultfemale. Glacier, White Pass, Alaska. 

June 4,1899. Collected by W. H. Osgood. Original number 370. 


Well-madeé skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus piniensis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 14, November 6, 1903. 
121800. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Pinie, Batu Islands 
off west coast of Sumatra. March 1, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. 
L. Abbott. Original number 2344. Catalogued August 2, 1903. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of first and second 
upper molars on right side. 


192 SCIURUS. 


Sciurus pretiosus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 454, February 3, 1908. 


114325. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Bangkaru, Banjak 
Islands, off west coast of Sumatra. January 20, 1902. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 1442. Catalogued 


August 28, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus procerus Miller. 


Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 122, March 26, 1901. 


104698. Skin and skull. Adult male. Bunguran Island, Natuna 
Islands. July 18,1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 574. Catalogued December 17, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus proserpine Lyon. 


Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLVIII, No. 1659, p. 275, February 4, 1907. 


142285. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Temaju (also written 
Temadjoe and Temadju), about 4 miles off the west coast of Borneo. 
June 9, 1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 
4180. Catalogued January 22, 1906. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect except loss of left pm, pm?, m°, 
and left m,, ms. 


Sciurus pumilus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No, 1420, p. 15, November 6, 1903. 


121627. Skin and skull. Adult male. South Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. November 27, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2098... Catalogued July 31, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a few scarcely 
noticeable shot holes. 


Sciurus albipes quercinus Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 150-151, June 38, 1898. Preoceupied by Sciwrus 
quercinus Erxleben, Syst. Reg. Animal., p. 432, 1777. Sciurus albipes her- 
nandezi Nelson, Science, new ser., VIII, p. 782, December 2, 1898. 
=Sciurus poliopus hernandezi (Nelson). See Nelson, Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., J, 
p. 48, May 9, 1899. 

68202. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mountains on west side of 
valley of Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico. September 15, 1894. Col- 
lected by EK. W. Nelson and EK. A.Goldman. Original number 6768. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for shot perforation 
from base of nasals through anterior part of palate. 


SCLURUS. 193 


Sciurus richmondi Nelson. ' Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 146-147, June 3, 1898. 

$6481. Skin and skull. Adult female. Escondido River, 50 miles 
from Bluefields, Nicaragua. October 4, 1892. Collected by Dr. 
C. W. Richmond. Original number 118. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
> 


Sciurus rubeculus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 22, November 6, 1903. 

86777. Skin and skull. Adult male. Khow Sai Dow (1,000 feet), 
Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. February 21, 1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued July 20, 1899. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except pterygoids slightly 
injured. 
Sciurus rubidiventris Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 127, March 26, 1901. 

104671. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bunguran Island, Natuna 
Islands. June 22,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 498. Catalogued December 17, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except condyloid process of 
right mandible shot away. 
Sciurus rutiliventris Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 126, March 26, 1901. 

104658. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Midei (Low Island), 
Natuna Islands. May 24, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 405. Catalogued December 17, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect, except several shot holes and 
angle of right half of mandible lacking. 
Sciurus sanggaus Lyon. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XX XIII, No. 1577, p.554, December 24, 1907. 

142296. Skin and skull. Adult female. Sanggau, western Borneo, 
south bank of Kapuas River. August 21,1905. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 4357. Catalogued January 22, 
L906. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Sciurus saturatus Miller. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 453, February 3, 1903. 

114629. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Mansalar, off Tapan- 
uli Bay, west coast of Sumatra. March 9, 1902. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 1633. Catalogued Septem- 
ber 3, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of all the upper 
premolars, both last upper molars, right last lower molar. 
45336—08 13 





194 SCIURUS. 


Sciurus poliopus senex Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 148-149, October 6, 1904. 

126208. Skin and skull. Adult female. La Salada, Michoacan, 
Mexico. March 14, 1903. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 16127. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of first left 
upper premolar. 

Sciurus seraiz Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 125, March 26, 1901. 

104660. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Seraia, Natuna Islands. 
May 29, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 
415. Catalogued December 17, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 

Sciurus serutus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1481, p. 58, July 23, 1906. 

125025. Skinand skull. Adult male. Pulo Serutu, Karimata Islands, 
off west coast of Borneo. August 17, 1904. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 3584. Catalogued December 7, 
1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 

Sciurus suckleyi Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 333, this paper was reported favorably for 

publication April 24, 1855. 

=Sciurus douglasii Bachman. See Baird, Mammals of North America, p. 275, 

1857. 

gz¢ag: Skin and skull. Adult male. Steilacoom, Washington. 
January 13, 1854. Collected by Dr. George Suckley, U.S. A., 
Pacific Railroad Survey. Original number 1. Skin catalogued 
March 17, 1854; skull, November 1, 1898. 

Specimen made into a modern study skin and the skull removed in November, 
1898. The skin is in fair condition, but the left fore leg is lacking. Only that 
part of the skull anterior to the brain-case, and the right half of the mandible is 
present. 

In Baird’s original description he gives the three measurements ‘‘Head and 
body 9 inches. Tail vertebrze 43 inches. To tip of hairs 6 inches.’? In 1857, in 
his Mammals of North America, Baird gives more details of the Pacific Railroad 
specimens, and in the table on page 278, No. 272, the above specimen is the only 


one which agrees with the above three mez surements, and consequently it is 
taken as the type. 


Sciurus sullivanus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 17, November 6, 1903. 

104377. Skin and skull. Adult female. Sullivan Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. February 1, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 294. Celienes November 6, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, ee left pterygoid. 


SCIURUS. 195 


Sciurus tenuis surdus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 80, July 25, 1900. 


84412. Skin and skull. Adult male. Trong (or Tarang), lower 
Siam. February 3,1897. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Cata- 
logued March 25, 1898. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull a trifle damaged by shot, the two 
premolars and first molar in the left upper jaw shot away. In left half of 
mandible only the two last molars remain, and in the right half the last molar. 
has fallen out. 


Type designated by number. In original description under ‘‘ Measurements,’’ 
external measurements of the type are said to be given. This is an error, how- 
ever, as they are measurements of a paratype, No. 83243. 


Sciurus vittatus tapanulius Lyon. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLVIII, No. 1660, p. 280, February 4, 1907. 


114519. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tapanuli Bay, west coast of 
Sumatra. February 21, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1560. Catalogued September 2, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus vittatus tarussanus Lyon. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLVIII, No. 1660, p. 279, February 4, 1907. 


141038. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tarussan Bay, west coast of 
Sumatra. December 28, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 3857. Catalogued July 19, 1905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of left pm! and 
shot injuries to angular processes of mandible. 


Sciurus tedongus Lyon. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 591, December 18, 1906. 


124717. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tanjong Tedong, island of 
Banka, east of Sumatra. June 1, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 3285. Catalogued November 30, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect, a few shot holes, right 
hali of mandible especially damaged. 


Sciurus tenuirostris Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 221, fig. 13c, August 20, 1900. 


101753. Skin and skull., Adult female. Pulo Tioman, off southeast 
coast Malay Peninsula. September 30, 1899. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 20, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with several shot holes, and the last 
two upper molars on each side shot away; posterior portion of right half oi 
mandible lacking, and the first two right mandibular cheek-teeth shot away. 


196 SCIURUS. 


Sciurus thomasi Nelson. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 71, pl. 2, fig. 6, May 9, 1899. 


$2244, Skinand skull. Talamanca, Costa Rica. 1874. Collected by 
Prof. W. M. Gabb. Skin catalogued November 11, 1874; skull, 
April 16, 1889. 
The specimen has been remade into a modern study skin and is in good con- 
dition; skull is perfect except for loss of pterygoids and of right postorbital 


process. 


Sciurus oculatus tolucz Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 148-149, June 3, 1898. 


55927. Skin and skull. Adult male. North slope Volcan Toluea, 
Mexico, Mexico. September 8, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson 
and E. A. Goldman. Original annie 5419. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for fractured squamosal 
and supraoccipital region. 


Sciurus truei Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, pp. 61-62, May 9, 1899. 


g 


16229, Skin and skull. Adult male. Camoa, Rio Mayo, Sonora, 
Mexico. January 20,1899. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Origi- 
nal number 13405. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for fractured frontal 
and supraoccipital and absence of last left upper and lower molars. 


Sciurus ubericolor Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 455, February 3, 1903. 


114378. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Tuangku, Banjak 
Islands, off west coast of Sumatra. February 5, 1902. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 1517. Catalogued August 
28, 1902. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull in good condition, except most of left 
zygoma and anterior half of left ramus of mandible shot away. 


Sciurus undulatus True. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XV, No. 915, p. 465, fig. 3, October 26, 1892. 


19095 Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Kilimanjaro (6,000 
feet), German East Africa. June 12, 1888. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 7. Catalogued June 24, 1890. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 

Type designated by number, skull No. 34731 being figured and marked 
‘“‘type.’? Two specimens are listed, the above and a female, No. 19006, also 
marked ‘‘type,’’ but as there can not be two types of the same species, it seems 
advisable to consider the second specimen as a paratype, the one figured as the 
type. 





ScIURUS—FU NAMBULUS. 197 


Sciurus hudsonicus ventorum Allen. Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X, pp. 263-264, July 22, 1898. 

56030. Skin and skull. Adult male (not female, as in original 
description). South Pass City, Wyoming. September 6, 1898. 
Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 4305. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for numerous small 
shot perforations and absence of one molar. 


Sciurus deppei vivax Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 181-132, August 9, 1901. 

107932. Skinand skull. Adult female. Apazote, Campeche, Mexico. 
January 8, 1901. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original number 
14429. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciurus carolinensis yucatanensis Allen. Cotype. 


Monographs North American Rodentia, p. 705, August, 1877. 
=Sciurus yucatanensis (Allen). See Elliot, Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., I 
p- 80, May, 1896. 


$3,93,. Skin and skull. Adult female. Merida, Yucatan, Mexico. 
March 3, 1865. Collected by Dr. A. Schott, ‘*Comision cientifica 
de Yucatan, Jose Salagar Llarregui.” Original number 229, Skin 
catalogued May 2, 1866; skull, September 20, 1898. 


The specimen has been remade into a modern study skin and is in good con- 
dition; skull in fair condition, right zygoma lacking, and a considerable hole 
above the foramen magnum as well as breaks about the optic foramina. 

In the original description Dr. J. A. Allen speaks of four specimens, all of the 
same date, locality, and collector as the above. In the table of measurements, on 
page 711, three of them are referred to by number, namely, 8502, 8503, and 8505, 
which should be regarded as cotypes. Unfortunately, Nos. 8502 and 8505 can 
not be found. His fourth specimen, not referred to by number and hence 
regarded as a paratype, is in good condition and in the collection. It is about 
half or two-thirds grown. 


’ 


Genus FUNAMBULUS. 
Funambulus castaneus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 217, August 20, 1900. 

101696. Skin and skull. Immature male. Pulo Siantan, Anamba 
Islands, South China Sea. September 10,1899. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 

Fairly well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Funambulus obscurus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 23, November 6, 1905. 

121640. Skin and skull. Adult female. South Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. November 22, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2086. Catalogued July 31, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


198 FUNAMBULUS—RATUFA. 


Funambulus peninsulz Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 25, November 6, 1903. 
86776. Skin and skull. Adult male. Kbow Sai Dow, Trong (or 
Tarang), lower Siam. February 18,1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
- Abbott. Catalogued July 20, 1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Funambulus rostratus Miller. 

Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 24, November 6, 1903. 

121801. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, off 
west coast of Sumatra. February 12, 1903. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 2281. Catalogued August 2, 
1908. 

Well-made skin in good condition, tail apparently imperfect in life; skull 
perfect. 
. Genus RATUFA. 
Ratufa anambez Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 215, August 20, 1900. 

101725. Skin and skull. Adult female (not male, as in original 
description). Pulo Jimaja, Anamba Islands, South China Sea. 
September 25, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued 
January 20, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Ratufa angusticeps Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 180, March 26, 190T. 

104646. Skinand skull. Adult male. Pulo Lingung, off south coast 
of Bunguran, Natuna Islands. June 17, 1900. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 481. Catalogued December 17, 
1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for left malar shot 
away. 
Ratufa arusinus Lyon. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXXII, No. 1534, p. 442, May 23, 1907. 

143351. Skin and skull. Adult male. Aru Bay, northeastern coast 
of Sumatra. January 16, 1906. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 4635. Catalogued June 21, 1906. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Ratufa balz Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 6, November 6, 1903. 

121715. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, off 
west coast of Sumatra. February 5, 1908. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2224. Catalogued August 1, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





RATUFA. 19 


<O 


Ratufa polia bancana Lyon. 
Proce. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 587, December 18, 1906. 

124680. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tanjong Rengsam, island of 
Banka, east of Sumatra. May 27, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 3277. Catalogued November 29, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull nearly perfect, somewhat damaged 
by shot, especially mandible. 


Ratufa carimonensis Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 257, September 11, 1906. 

122813. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. Great Karimon Island, Rhio- 
Linga Archipelago. June 2, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2465. Catalogued January 20, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Ratufa catemana Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XTI, No. 1534, p. 443, May 23, 1907. 

123124. Skin and skull. Adult male. Kateman River, southeastern 
Sumatra. August 27, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2759. Catalogued January 25, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull somewhat damaged by shot holes in 


palate and cranium; left zygoma and anterior portion of right half of mandible 
lacking. 


Ratufa condurensis Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 258, September 11, 1906. 

122879. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Kundur, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. June 25, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2552. Catalogued January 21, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of right pterygoid; 
left m! and pm' worn down to alveoli and right m, lost. 
Ratufa confinis Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 259, September 11, 1906. 

113134. Skin and skull. Adult female. Sinkep Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. September 3, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1265. Catalogued January 31, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of left pterygoid. 


Ratufa conspicua Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 5, November 6, 1903. 
115528. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Bintang, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. August 19, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1900. Catalogued December 27, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


200 RATUFA. 


Ratufa femoralis Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 447, February 3, 1903. 

114861. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Tuangku, Banjak 
Islands, off west coast of Sumatra. January 27, 1902. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 1479. Catalogued August 
28, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Ratufa insignis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 4, November 6, 1903. 

115531. Skinand skull. Adult male. Pulo Sugi, Rhio-Linga Archi- 
pelago. August 26, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Orig- 
inal number 1960. Catalogued December 27, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that the left pterygoid 
is broken. 
Ratufa lenata Miller. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 449, pl. 19, February 3, 1903. 

114350. Skinandskull. Adultmale. Pulo Tuangku, Banjak Islands, 
off west coast of Sumatra. January 27, 1902. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abobtt. Original number 1478. Catalogued August 28, 
1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 





Ratufa masz Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 7, November 6, 1903. 

121818. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tana Masa, Batu Islands, 
off west coast of Sumatra. February 21, 1903. Collected by Dr. 
W.L. Abbott. Original number 2330. Catalogued August 3, 1903. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a few scattered 
shot holes. 
Ratufa melanopepla Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., Il, p. 71, July 25, 1900. 

83230. Skin and skull. Adult male. Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. 
February 27, 1896. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued 
December 1, 1896. 

Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect, except for loss of left last upper 
molar and right pterygoid. 
Ratufa nigrescens Miller. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 448, February 3, 1903. 

114556. Skinand skull. Adult female. Pulo Mansalar, off Tapanuli 

Bay, west coast of Sumatra. March 11, 1902. Collected by Dr. 


W. L. Abbott. Original number 1641. Catalogued September 2, | 
1902. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. | 


RATUFA. 201 


Ratufa notabilis Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 150, June 11, 1902. 

113064. Skin and skull. Adult male. West coast of Linga Island, 
Rhio-Linga Archipelago, August 24, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 1210. Catalogued January 28, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Ratufa palliata Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 147, June 11, 1902. 

113162. Skin and skull. Adult male. Indragiri River, eastern 
Sumatra. September 23, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1327. Catalogued February 4, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull slightly injured by shot, both upper 
incisors more or less broken, and a piece out of right zygoma. 


Ratufa piniensis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 8, November 6, 1903. 

121940. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Pinie, Batu Islands, 
off west coast of Sumatra. March 1,1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2348. Catalogued August 2, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition (tail imperfect in life); skull slightly dam- 
aged by shot; both lower incisors broken off to alveloi, hole in right bulla, and 
slight damage about lachrymal region on each side. 


Ratufa polia Lyon. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 585, December 18, 1906. 

125004. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bukit Menguru, Billiton 
Island, between Sumatra and Borneo. August 9, 1904, Col- 
lected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 3551. Catalogued 
December 4, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Ratufa pyrsonota Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 75, July 25, 1900. 
83483. Skinand skull. Adult male. Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. 
September 29, 1896. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued 
April 23, 1897. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Ratufa tiomanensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 216, August 20, 1900. 

101751. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Tioman, off southeast 
coast of Malay Peninsula. October 4, 1899. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 20, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


202 PETAURISTA——-SCIUROPTERUS. 
Genus PETAURISTA. 


Petaurista batuana Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 27, November 6, 1903. 
121742. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, 
off west coast of Sumatra. February 5, 1903. Collected by Dr. 
W.L. Abbott. Original number 2233. Catalogued August 1, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for shot holes about 
left antorbital foramen. 


Petaurista terutaus Lyon. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 17, February 23, 1907. 

123934. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Terutau (also written 
Trotau, Trotto), about 15 geographical miles off west coast Malay 
Peninsula, and about 5$° north of equator. April 9, 1904. Col- 
lected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 3219. Catalogued 
July 22, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull verfect. 
Genus SCIUROPTERUS: 


Sciuropterus amcenus Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 261, September 11, 1906. 

122883. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Kundur, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. June 12, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2483. Catalogued January 21, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciuropterus volans goldmani Nelson. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 148, October 6, 1904. 

132833. Skin and skull. Adult male. Twenty miles southeast of 
Teopisca, Chiapas, Mexico. April 8, 1904. Collected by E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 16667. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacking right audital bulla, left upper 
molars, and posterior part of palate; left mandibular ramus in three pieces. 


Sciuropterus alpinus klamathensis Merriam. — Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 225, July 15, 1897. 
87310. Skinand skull. Adult female. Fort Klamath, Oregon. Jan- 


uary 11,1897. Collected by B. L. Cunningham. Original number 


355x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciuropterus sabrinus macrotis Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X XI, No. 1147, p. 353, figs. 1, 2, and 3, November 4, 1898. 
83152. Skin and skull. Adult ae Hunter Mountain, Catskill 
Mountains, Green County, New York. August 31, 1896. Col- 





i ae 


SCTUROPTERUS—IDIURUS. 203 


lected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 4036, 
Catalogued November 16, 1896. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciuropterus merens Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 26, pl. 1, fig. 1, November 6, 1903. 
121531. Skin and skull. Adult female. North Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. January 14, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2206. Catalogued July 29, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sciuropterus oregonensis stephensi Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 151, June 13, 1900. 


99830. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Sherwood, Mendocino 
County, California. May 10, 1894. Collected by F. Stephens. 
Original number 2307 (2624x). 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
postorbital process and right coronoid process. 
Sciuropterus yukonensis Osgood. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, p. 25, October 6, 1900. 


d990e. Skin and skull. Adult female. Camp Davidson, Yukon 
River, near Alaska-Canada boundary. December 8, 1890. Col- 
lected by R. E. Carson, a member of the survey party of the United 
States Coast and Geodetic Survey. Catalogued March 10, 1892. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull not quite perfect, some slight damage 
about the bony palate. 


Sciuropterus alpinus zapheus Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 133-134, April 18, 1905. 
136137. Skin and skull. Adult female. Helm Bay, Cleveland Penin- 
sula, Alaska. January 21, 1905. Collected by C. Catt. Original 
number 5196x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Family ANOMALURID ZL. 
Genus IDIURUS. 


Idiurus macrotis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, p. 73, figs. 15-19, March 24, 1898. 
83625. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Efulen, Cameroon dis- 
trict, West Africa. June 18, 1895. Collected by G. L. Bates. 
Original number 4. Catalogued June 23, 1897. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull in fair condition, the four occipital 
bones cut away. 


904 PHOCA. 
Order FER. 
Family PHOCID®. 


Genus PHOCA. 


Halichcerus antarcticus Peale. 
U.S. Exploring Exped., VIII, Mamm. and Ornithol., p. 30; woodcut, p. 31, 1848. 

Phoca pealii Gill, Communications, Essex Institute, V, 1866-7, p. 4, footnote. 
Allen, Monogr. North Amer. Pinnipeds, U. 8. Geol. Sury., Miscell. Pub., XII, 

1880, p. 561; and pp. 580-582. 

—Phoca richardii (Gray). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XVI, pp. 491- 

492; see also p. 463 and pp. 466 and 467, December 12, 1902. 

3648. Skull. Young adult. Said to have been collected by the 
United States Exploring Expedition at Deception Island, Octo- 
ber 10. Catalogued January 10, 1860. Gill and Allen (see refer- 
ences above) strongly and rightly question the locality given by 
Peale. 

The skull has evidently been injured in recent years. Most of the right half 
of the brain case has been broken away, including the right zygoma. The tips 
of the nasals are injured and the region about the right premaxillo-maxillo-nasal 
sutures considerably broken. There should be a skin, No. 3741, which can not 
be found. 

Type not designated by number, but a consideration of Allen’s ‘‘ Pinnipeds,”’ 
pp. 580-582, leaves no doubt that this specimen is the type. 


Phoca richardii geronimensis Allen. Biological Survey collection. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X VI, pp. 495-496, December 12, 1902. 

81520. Skin and skull (skin not examined by describer and not men- 
tioned in original description). Adult male. San Geronimo Island, 
Lower California, Mexico. September 13, 1896. Collected by 
A. W. Anthony. Original number 209, 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for perforation of basi- 
occipital. 
Phoca ochotensis macrodens Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XVI, p. 483, December 12, 1902. 

83447. Skull (no skin). Young adult (male #de Allen). Avatcha 
Bay, Kamchatka. 1896. Collected by Dr. L. Stejneger. Cata- 
logued April 7, 1897. 

Skull nearly perfect, except right malar and first right lower incisor lost. Atlas 
present. 
Phoca richardii pribilofensis Allen. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XVI, p. 495, December 12, 1902. 
223. Skin and skeleton. Adult female. St. Paul Island, Pribilof 
Islands, Alaska. Collected by C. H. Townsend, U. S. Bureau of 
Fisheries. Catalogued November 28, 1896. 


83 
49 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect (in Division of Mammals) ; 
rest of skeleton in storage (Division of Comparative Anatomy). 


A ty te WS en 


PHOCA——-MIROUNGA—ARCTOCEPHALUS. 205 


In the original description, owing to the confusion caused by the double entry 
of one specimen in two different divisions of the Museum, Dr. J. A. Allen does 
not seem to have been aware that this skin, 83223, is the same individual as skull 
and skeleton 49550. 


Phoca stejnegeri Allen. 


Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., X VI, p. 485, figs. 7, 8, and 10, December 12, 1902. 


21310. Skull only. Adult male. Bering Island. April 16, 1883. 
Collected by Dr. L. Stejneger. Original number 1973. Cata- 
logued July‘17, 1884. 


Skull perfect, except for loss of two of the lower incisors. 
Genus MIROUNGA. 


Macrorhinus angustirostris Gill. 
Communication Essex Institute, V, 1866-7, p.13. Communicated October 16, 1865. 

Preliminary notice only. 

Proc. Chicago Acad. Sci., I, p. 33, April, 1866. 
=Mirounga angustirostris (Gill). See Elliot, Land and Sea Mammals Middle 
America and West Indies, Field Columbian Mus., Zool. Ser., IV, p. 245, 1904. 
4704. Skull. Immature female. St. Bartholomew Bay, Lower Cali- 
fornia, Mexico. 1857. Collected by Dr. W. O. Ayres. Cata- 
logued October 18, 1863. Skull has the following legend on it 
in old, nearly faded writing: ‘‘ Macrorhinus | * * * Barthole 
mew Bay | L. California | Sea Elephant | * * posited Dr. 
Ayre | A | ” and number 4704. 

Skull perfect except loss of the five right maxillary teeth, last three left max- 
illary teeth, inner upper right incisor, right lower canine, and three mandibular 
cheek teeth, left lower inner incisor and last mandibular cheek tooth. 

Type not designated by number. There is but one specimen in the Museum 
answering to the locality and dimensions published by Dr. T. N. Gill, and that 
is the above, No. 4704. The type skull is figured by Allen (Hist. North Amer. 
Pinnipeds, 1880, figs. 57, 58, 59, 60, on pp. 744 to 747). Some of the teeth were 


lacking at that date. On page 748, footnote to table, No. 4704 is said to be the 
type of the species. 


Family OTARITDE. 


Genus ARCTOCEPHALUS. 


Arctocephalus townsendi Merriam. 


Froc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 178, July 1, 1897. 


83617. Skull. Adult male. Picked up on the beach on the west side 
of Guadelupe Island, Lower California. May 22,1892. Collected 
by C. H. Townsend. Catalogued June 15, 1897. 

Skull is an old weatherworn specimen, without teeth and with no lower jaw. 


On the whole, it is in good condition for such a specimen. The only serious 
damage to the skull is a large hole in the brain case, superoposteriorly. 


206 LYNX. 
Family FELIDA 
Genus LYNX. 


Lynx ruffus californicus Mearns. “a 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Lynx, Urocyon, Spilogale, 
and Mephitis, from the Mexican Boundary Line, p. 2, January 12, 1897. 
(Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1126, p. 458, December 24, 
1897.) 


givfes- Skin and skull. Adultfemale. San Diego, California. Feb- 

ruary 2, 1856. Collected by Dr. J. F. Hammond. Skin cata- 
logued February 27, 1856; skull, August 8, 1896. 

Well-made skin in fair condition, a small bare spot on throat. It was evi- 


dently made over into its present shape and the skull removed and cleaned in 
1896. Skull perfect. 


Lynx ruffus eremicus Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Lynx, Urocyon, Spilogale, 
and Mephitis from the Mexican Boundary Line, p. 1, January 12, 1897. 
(Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1126, p. 457, December 24, 
1897.) 

60676. Skin, skull, and tail vertebre. Adult male. New River, 
6 miles northwest of Laguna station, in the Colorado Desert, San 
Diego County, California. May 5, 1894. Collected by Dr. E. A. 
Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 3506. International Bound- 
ary Commission. Catalogued November 5, 1894. 

Specimen remade in February, 1902, into a modern study skin, in good con- 
dition; skull perfect. 


Lynx fasciatus pallescens Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 16, p. 104, October 28, 1899. 

76585. Skin and skull. Adult male. South base of Mount Adams, 
near Trout Lake, Washington. January 10, 1896 (not 1895, as in 
original description). Collected by D. N. Kaegi. Original num- 
ber 23. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken left ptery- 
void. 
Lynx uinta Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 71-72, March 22, 1902. 
s3¢48. Skinandskull. Adultmale. Bridger Pass, south slope Uinta 


Mountains, Wyoming. May 11, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. 
Original number 1156. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





FELIS. 207 
Genus FELIS. 


Felis equatorialis Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXV, No. 1286, p. 246, September 17, 1902. 
113267. Skinand skull. Adult female. Paramba, northern Ecuador 
(altitude 3,500 feet). November 2, 1899. Collected by G. Flem- 
ming. Original number 22. Catalogued February 25, 1902. 
Well-made skin in good candition; skull perfect, except that the zygomatic 
arches have been broken, but are now repaired; right pterygoid lost. 
Felis apache Mearns. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 150, August 9, 1901. 

1373. Skull only. Young adult female. Matamoras, Tamaulipas, 
Mexico. Collected by Dr. J. L. Berlandier. Catalogued January 
Bo. 18a5. 

Three teeth are missing, both last upper molars and the first left upper pre- 
molar; otherwise skull perfect. 
Felis hippolestes aztecus Merriam... Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 592-593, December 11, 1901. 

99658. Skin and skull. Adult male. Colonia Garcia, Chihuahua, 
Mexico. October 17, 1899. Collected by H. A. Cluff. Original 
number 2401Xx. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Felis aztecus browni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, pp. 73-74, May 29, 1903. 

Felis hippolestes browni (Merriam). 

125719. Skull only. Adult male. Lower Colorado River, 12 miles 
south of Yuma, Arizona. February (4), 1903. Collected by Her- 
bert Brown. Original number 3908x. 

Skull with repaired fractures of left mandible, left zygoma, and inner wall of 
orbit; left audital bulla broken; left pterygoid and left coronoid absent; two 
upper incisors, left canine, left carnassial, and last left molar badly broken. 

Felis cacomitli Berlandier in Baird. 
Report U. 8. and Mexican Boundary Survey, II, Pt. 2, p. 12, January, 1859. 

1426. Skullonly. Adultfemale. Matamoras, Tamaulipas, Mexico. 
1840. Collected by Dr. J. L. Berlandier. Received from Lieut. 
D. N. Couch, U.S. A. Catalogued January 27, 1855. 

Skull nearly perfect; lambdoid crest worn by handling, ete., and left bulla 
broken. 

Felis centralis Mearns. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 139, August 9, 1901. 

14177. Skull. Adult, probably male. Talamanca, Costa Rica. Col- 
lected by Prof. W. M. Gabb. Original number 47. Catalogued 
November 19, 1874. 


Skull perfect. Catalogue calls for a skin, No. 12177, which can not be found. 


208 FELIS. 


Felis costaricensis Mearns. 


Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. XX V, No. 1286, p. 245, September 17, 1902. Preoecupied 
by Felis bangsi costaricensis Merriam, Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 596, De- 
cember 11, 1901. 


=Felis pardalis mearnsi Allen. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XX, 1904, p. 71, Feb- 
ruary 29, 1904. . 


14180. Skull. Adult (male, 7de Dr. E. A. Mearns). Talamanca, 
Costa Rica. Collected by Prof. W..M. Gabb. Original number 
73. Catalogued November 19, 1874. 

The catalogue calls for a skin, 12180, but it has never been found, and the 
type was described without it. Skull is nearly perfect; the pterygoids are 
chipped and the following teeth are missing from the upper jaw: Right side, first 
incisor, first premolar, and the molar; left side, first incisor, canine, and first 
premolar. 

Felis fossata Mearns. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 150, August 9, 1901. 

7036, Skull only. Adult. Merida, Yucatan, Mexico. Collected by 
Dr. A. Schott. Original number 952. Catalogued July 8, 1866. 


Skull perfect. 


Felis hernandesii goldmani Mearns. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 142, August 9, 1901. 

105930. Skin only. Adult. Yohaltun, Campeche, Mexico. Janu- 
ary 5, 1901. Received from E.. A. Goldman. Catalogued June 
18, 1901. 


The skin is a tanned pelt, without feet, in good condition. 


Felis hippolestes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XT, p. 219, July 15, 1897. 

57936. Skin and skull. Old male. Wind River Mountains, near 
head of Big Wind River, Wyoming. November, 1892. ° Collected 
by John Burlingame. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken audital 
bullee and right pterygoid. 
Felis limitis Mearns. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, pp. 146-148, August 9, 1901. 
=Felis pardalis albescens Pucheran. See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
XXII, pp. 219-221, July 25, 1906. 
#+3. Skin and skull. Adult male. Brownsville, Texas. March 4, 
1892. Collected by F. B. Armstrong. Original number 102. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


ti 


Felis hippolestes olympus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 220, July 15, 1897. 

77973. Skin and skull. Adult male (7). Lake Cushman, Olympic 
Mountains, Washington. April 18,1896. Collected by T. Hayes. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





FELIS—ARCTOGALIDIA. 209 


Felis puma patagonica Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, pp. 598-600, December 11, 1901. 
108693. Skin and skull. Young adult male. East base Andes Moun- 
tains (lat. 47° 30’), Patagonia. 1899. Collected by J. B. Hatcher. 
Original number 3020x. 


Tanned skin in good condition, claws missing; skull perfect, except for 
absence of one lower incisor. 


Family VIVERRID/4. 
Genus ARCTOGALIDIA. 


Arctogalidia fusca Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 269, September 11, 1906. : 
122920. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Kundur, Rhio-Linga 


Archipelago. June 22, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2540. Catalogued January 22, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arctogalidia inornata Miller. 
Proce. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 131, March 26, 1901. 


104859. Skin and skull. Old adult male. Bunguran Island, Natuna 
Islands. June 23, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 


number 502. Catalogued December 20, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition. Skull perfect, very old; teeth much worn 
and many of them lost, due to age. 


Arctogalidia major Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 25, February 26, 1906. 

83510. Skin and skull. Young (permanent dentition in place, but 
unworn; sutures of rostrum and brain case plainly visible) adult 


male. Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. September 3, 1896.  Col- 
lected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued April 28, 1897. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Arctogalidia minor Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 599, December 18, 1906. 

124984. Skinand skull. Adult female. Buding Bay, Billiton Island, 
between Sumatra and Borneo. August 3, 1904. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 3532. Catalogued December 
6, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for shot hole in right 
half of cranium and loss of right m?. 
45336—08 14 





210 ARCTOG ALIDIA—PARA DO XU RUS—HEMIGALE. 


Arctogalidia simplex Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 156, June 11, 1902. 
113069. Skin and skull. Adult male. Linga Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelogo. August 30, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1254. Catalogued January 28, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus PARADOXURUS. 


Paradoxurus brunneipes Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 269, September 11, 1906. 
122886. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Kundur, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. June 24, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2549. Catalogued January 21, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Paradoxurus canescens Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 597, December 18, 1906. 

124943. Skinand skull. Adult male. Tanjong Batu, Billiton Island, 
between Sumatra and Borneo. July 19, 1904. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original number 3520. Catalogued December 6, 
1904, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Paradoxurus lignicolor Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 44, pl. 4, fig. 1; pl. 5, fig. 1, 
November 6, 1903. 
121645. Skin and skull. Adult male. North Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. November 19, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2068. Catalogued July 31, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Paradoxurus robustus Miller. : 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 26, February 26, 1906. 
86796. Skin and skull. Adult female. Khow Sai Dow (2,000 feet), 
Trong (or Tarang), lower Siam. February 13,1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued July 20, 1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus HEMIGALE. 


Hemigale minor Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 43, pl. 3, fig. 2, November 6, 1903. 
121651. Skin and skull. Adult female. South Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. December 27, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2173. Catalogued July 31, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


UROCYON. : 211 
Family CANIDX. 
Genus UROCYON. 


Urocyon cinereoargenteus borealis Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 74, May 29, 1903. 

119725. Skin and skull. Adult male. Marlboro, 7 miles from 
Monadnock, New Hampshire. November 17, 1902. Collected 
by A. Hl. Thayer. Original number 3847x 

Well-made skin in good condition. Skull perfect, except for two perforations 
of palate and absence of three left upper incisors, first right and left upper pre- 


molars, first right lower premolar, and last left lower molar; postorbital proc- 
esses broken. 


Urocyon cinereoargenteus californicus Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Lynx, Urocyon, Spilo- 
gale, and Mephitis from the Mexican Boundary Line, p. 2, January 12, 1897. 
(Reprinted in Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1126, p. 459, December 24, 1897. ) 


=Urocyon californicus (Mearns). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 16, 
p. 103, October 28, 1899. 
62873. Skin and skull. Old adult male. San Jacinto Mountains 
(altitude 8,000 feet), Riverside County, California. July 6, 1895. 
Collected by A. W. Anthony. Original number 41.  Catalogued 
August 27, 1895. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, two upper and three lower 
incisors lost, apparently due to age. 
Urocyon cataline Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 74, May 29, 1903. 
$3333. Skin and skull. Adult male. Catalina Island, Santa Barbara 
Islands, California. April 14, 1892. Collected by C. P. Streator. 
Original number 1801. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Urocyon clemente Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 75, May 29, 1903. 

92034. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Clemente Island, Santa 
Barbara Islands, California. June 5, 1897. Collected by H. A. 
Gaylord. Original number 1163x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of two 
right lower premolars and one upper and one lower incisor. 


Urocyon guatemale Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 1899, pp. 278-280, July 26, 1899. 

76723. Skin and skull. Adult male. Nenton, Guatemala. Decem- 
ber 16, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 8801. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, 


S12 UROCYON. 


Vulpes (Urocyon) littoralis Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 148, pls. 1 and 35, fig. 2, 1857. 


=Urocyon littoralis (Baird). See Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., IV, p. 135, 
February 18, 1888. 


2}. Skin and skull. Adult. San Miguel Island, Santa Barbara 
Islands, California. January, 1856. Collected by Lieut. W. P. 
Trowbridge, U. S. A. Catalogued February 18, 1856. 


Specimen was remade in January, 1902, into a modern study skin, and is in 
good condition, except a few slight imperfections about head. Skull perfect, 
except for a V-shaped piece of bone out of basioccipital. Second and third left 
upper incisors and last left upper molar are missing. 

Baird listed two specimens, each designated by number, the one mentioned 
above, and No. 3442. The latter is an alcoholic specimen, with skull removed. 
The alcoholic specimen itself can not now be found. No. }}21 is regarded as the 
type because on Plate 35 of Baird’s Mammals, the skull, No. 2154, is figured. 


13 
21 


Urocyon parvidens Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1899, p. 276, July 26, 1899. 


73. Skin and skull. Adult male, somewhat young. Merida, 


? 


4 
4 

Yucatan, Mexico. Collected by Dr. A. Schott. Original number 
385. Skin catalogued in 1873; skull, May 4, 1899. 

Specimen made into a modern study skin and skull removed May, 1899. Skin 


in good condition; skull perfect except that both upper canines are broken off 
nearly to the alveoli, and foramen magnum has been slightly enlarged. 


a2. 
34 


Urocyon littoralis santacruzze Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 


Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 75, May 29, 1903. 


$4522. Skin and skull. Adult female. Santa Cruz Island, Santa 
Barbara Islands, California. July 11, 1892. Collected by C. P. 
Streator. Original number 1914. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right upper 
canine. 


Urocyon cinereoargenteus texensis Mearns. 


Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Lynx, Urocyon, Spilogale 
and Mephitis, from the Mexican Boundary Line, p. 2, January 12, 1897. 
(Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1126, p. 459, December 24, 1897. ) 


fy’s. Adult skin and skull. San Pedro, near Eagle Pass, Texas. 
January, 1851. Collected by Dr. A. Schott, Mexican Boundary 
Survey, under Lieut. W. H. Emory, U.S. A. Catalogued March 
31, 1858. 
Specimen has been made into a modern study skin in good condition. All 


parts of the skull posterior to the tooth rows have been cut away; anterior parts 
perfect, 


UROCYON—-VULPES. 213 


Urocyon californicus townsendi Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 16, p. 103, October 28, 1899. 
14130. Skin. Adult. Baird, Shasta County, California. November 
11, 1893. Collected by C. H. Townsend. Original number 49. 


Well-made skin in good condition. Although Townsend collected skulls at 
Baird, there is no record of a skull for this skin. Catalogued January 19, 1884. 


Genus VULPES. 


Vulpes alascensis abietorum Merriam. Biological Survey co'd. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, pp. 669-670, December 28, 1900. 
71197. Skull only. Adult male. Stuart Lake, British Columbia. 
Winter, 1893-4. Collected by A. C. Murray. 
Skull perfect, except for absence of pterygoid processes and broken leit upper 
canine. 


Vulpes alascensis Merriam. 
Proce. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 668, December 28, 1900. 

1420. Skull only. Old male. Andreafski, Alaska. February, 1880. 
Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 180. Catalogued 
July 24, 1884. 

Skull perfect. Some of the teeth rather worn from age, especially the left 
upper canine and the first two pairs of upper premolars. 


Vulpes beringensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 171-172, August 6, 1902. 

47109. Skull only. Young adult female. Bering Island, Bering 
Sea. June 3, 1892. Collected by Dr. B. W. Evermann. Original 
number 19. 

Skull perfect, except for absence of oneupper incisor and first right and left 
lower premolars. 


Vulpes cascadensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, pp. 665-666, pl. 36, fig. 3, December 28, 1900. 
92767. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Trout Lake, base of 
Mount Adams, Washington. March 3, 1898. Collected by P. 
Schmid. Original number 1518x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Vulpes hallensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proce. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, pp. 15-16, March 14, 1900. 

98067. Skin and skull. Adult female. Hall Island, Bering Sea. 
July 14,1899. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. Shot by W. B. 
Devereaux. Original number 2177 (Dr. A. K. Fisher). 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken left upper 
canine. 


914 VULPES. 


Vulpes harrimani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, pp. 14-15, March 14, 1900. 
99626. Skin only. Adult. Kodiak Island, Alaska. 1899. Collected 
by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. 


Cased skin, tanned; in good condition; feet missing. 


Vulpes velox hebes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 73-74, March 22, 1902. 
108255. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Calgary, Alberta, 
Canada. October 8, 1900. Collected by W. G. Mackay and G. F. 
Dippie. Original number 560 (2890x). 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Vulpes lagopus innuitus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 170, August 6, 1902. 

107626. Skinand skull. Adult female. Korogaro River, near Point 
Barrow, Alaska. June 27, 1898. Collected by E. A. MecIlhenny. 
Original number 831 (2877x). 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of first 
left lower premolar. 


Vulpes kenaiensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 670, pl. 36, fig. 5, December 28, 1900. 
96145. Skullonly. Old male. Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, 1898. Col- 
lected by Dall De Weese. 


Skull perfect, except for absence of first left upper premolar. 


Vulpes macrourus Baird. 
Stansbury’s Exped. to Valley of Great Salt Lake, Utah, p. 309, May, 1852. 
4107. Skin only. Adult. Valley of Great Salt Lake, Utah. 1849 

or 1850. Collected by Captain Stansbury’s Expedition. Original 
number ‘‘A”. The specimen was purchased from hunters in the 
Salt Lake Valley. Catalogued June 26, 1860. 

Specimen made over into modern study skin in fair condition. The left fore 
foot is the only foot having claws. The right ear is broken and rather mutilated. 
It is in an envelope attached to the skin. 

In Baird’s Mammals of North America, p. 131, the type is designated by the 
original number ‘‘A.”’ 


Vulpes muticus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 74, March 22, 1902. 
75828. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tracy, San Joaquin Valley, 
California. November 5, 1895. Collected by G. Leonard.  Origi- 
nal number 6, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly fractured 
left audital bulla and broken right outer upper incisor. 


VULPES—CANIS. 215 


Vulpes necator Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, pp. 664-665, pl. 36, fig. 2, December 28, 1900. 

$8732. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Whitney Meadows, 
near Mount Whitney, California. September 1, 1891. Collected 
by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original number 940. 

Well-made skin in good condition. Skull with brain-case badly shattered but 
repaired, leaving a large part of the right frontal and parietal absent; audital 
bullee badly broken; palate fractured; pterygoids missing. 

Vulpes macrotis neomexicanus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 74, March 22, 1902. 
98646. Skull only. Adult male. Band’s ranch, San Andreas Range, 
New Mexico. April 4, 1899. Collected by C. M. Barber. Orig- 
inal number 2055x. 


Skull perfect, except for absence of first right upper and lower premolars. 


Vulpes pribilofensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 171, August 6, 1902. 

39631. Skin and skull. Adult male. St. George Island, Pribilof 
Islands, Bering Sea. August 10, 1891. Collected by Dr. C. Hart 
Merriam. Original number 8. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of one 
upper incisor. 
Vulpes regalis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 

Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, pp. 672-673, pl. 36, fig. 4, December 28, 1900. 

69%. Skinandskull. Adult male. Elk River, Minnesota. March 
5, 1887. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 659. 

Well-made skin in good condition. Skull perfect, except for a few small per- 
forations in rostrum; one lower incisor missing; upper incisors and right upper 
canine injured. 

Vulpes lagopus ungava Merriam. 
Proc. Biol Soc. Wash., XV, p. 170, August 6, 1902. 

23195. Skull only. Adult male. Fort Chimo, Ungava, Labrador. 
Collected by L. M. Turner. Original number 2362. Catalogued 
January 15, 1889. 

Skull nearly perfect; pterygoids chipped; third left lower premolar and second 
lower incisor broken off to roots. 


Genus CANIS. 


Canis estor Merriam. Biological Survey coilection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 31-32, March 15, 1897. 
57141. Skin and skull. Adult female. Noland ranch, San Juan 
River, Utah. .November 20, 1893. Collected by J. A. Loring. 
Original number 1379. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


216 CANIS. 


Canis frustror Woodhouse. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sei. Phila., V, p. 147. Recommended for publication February 
4, 1851. 


’ 


4105. Skin. Young. Red Fork of Arkansas River probably between 
96° and 98° longitude, now Cimarron River, Oklahoma, about 100 
miles west of the present Fort Gibson, Indian Territory. (See 
Reports Explorations and Surveys Pacific R. R., XI, 1859, 
p. 68, and map.) August 1850. Collected by Dr. 8. W. Wood- 
house on exploring expedition under command of Capt. L. Sit- 
greaves, U. S. A., and Lieut. I. C. Woodruff, U. S. A., in 1849 and 
1850. (See p. 46, Rept. Expd. Zuni and Colorado rivers, Capt. 
L. Sitgreaves, 1853.) Catalogued June 26, 1860. 


Specimen formerly mounted, but since made into a modern study skin. Baird 
in Mammals of North America and Woodhouse in the original description speak 
of skulls that have not yet lost their milk teeth. These skulls can not now be 
found nor is there any record of them in the Museum catalogue. 

No type designated. The two specimens procured by Dr. 8. W. Woodhouse, a 
male and a female, both young, do not appear to be mentioned by number in 
Baird’s Mammals, but 4105 and 4106 are undoubtedly the two specimens that 
Doctor Woodhouse had. The entry of 4105 reads: ‘‘’’ ”’ ~ [Canislatrans written 
on line above] ¢ juv., Red Fork of Ark., Aug. 1850, Capt. Sitgreaves, Dr. 
Woodhouse, Type of C. frustror,” all in the old original handwriting. The 
other specimen, 4106 9 juy., has the same data, but is not marked ‘‘Type of 
C. frustror.”’ 

leretofore the type-locality of Canis frustror has been stated to be Fort Gibson, 
Indian Territory. This is the only locality mentioned in the original descrip- 
tion, but that is where Dr. 8. W. Woodhouse ‘‘first saw’’ the animal. He does 
not state where the specimens came from. That is found only by consulting 
the Museum catalogue. 


Canis goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 157, October 6, 1904. 
133204. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Vicente, Chiapas, 
Mexico. April 25,1904. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original 
number 16725. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of first 
left upper premolar and crown of outer right upper incisor. 


Canis lestes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 25-26, March 15, 1897. 


4652. Skin and skull. Adult male. Toyabe Mountains, near 
Cloverdale, Nevada. November 21, 1890. Collected by V. Bailey. 
Original number 2223, 


were 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of one 
lower incisor and last right lower molar. 


i a i i il a ei 


CANIS. 917 


Canis mearnsi Merriam. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 30, March 15, 1897. 

59899. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Quitoboquito, Pima 
County, Arizona. February 5, 1894. Collected by Dr. E. A. 
Mearns, U. S. A., and F. X. Holzner. Original number 2925. 
International Boundary Commission. Catalogued April 13, 1894. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of first upper 
premolar, last upper and last lower molars on left side. 


Canis microdon Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
oc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 29-30, March 15, 1897. 

. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mier, Tamaulipas, Mexico. 
Ral 28, 1891. Collected by W. Lloyd. Original number 478 


Well-made skin in good condition, except for small bare space on throat; skull 
perfect. 


eon F 
jen 


Canis pallidus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 

Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 24-25, March 15, 1897. Preoccupied by Canis 
pallidus Rippell, Atlas zu Reise in nérdl. Afrika, I, p. 33, 1826. 

=Canis nebracensis Merriam. Science, new ser., VIII, p. 782, December 2, 1898. 


77093. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Johnstown, Nebraska. 
March 12, 1896. Collected by E. E. Fast. Original number 5 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Canis peninsulz Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 28-29, March 15, 1897. 

74245. Skinand skull. Adult male. Santa Anita, Lower California, 
Mexico. May 15, 1895. Collected by J. E. McLellan. Original 
number 1354. 

Well-made skin; pelage ragged; skull perfect, except for brokey right outer 
incisor. 
Canis nebracensis texensis Bailey. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No, 25, pp. 175-177, October 24, 1905. 

116277. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Forty-five miles south- 
west of Corpus Christi, Texas. December 14, 1901. Collected by 
J. M. Priour. Original number 3478x. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Canis vigilis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 338, March 15, 1897. 
$7824. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Manzanillo, Colima, 
Mexico. February 6, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Origi- 
nal number 1840. 


Well-made skin in good condition; several small bare spaces on underparts; 
skull perfect. 


218 LATAX—PUTORIUS. 
Family MUSTELID.®. 
Genus LATAX. 


Latax lutris nereis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 159, October 6, 1904. 
133508. Complete disarticulated skeleton. Adult male. San Miguel 
Island, Santa Barbara Islands, California. July 2, 1904.  Col- 
lected by G. M. McGuire. Original number 4690x. 


Skull perfect, except for absence of last right and left lower molars and first left 
lower incisor. 
Genusee Wim ORS. 


Putorius richardsoni alascensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 11, pp. 12-13, pl. 2, fig. 2, June 30, 1896. 
=Putorius cicognani alascensis (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammal- 
ium, p. 277, 1897. 
74423. Skin and skull. Adult male. Juneau, Alaska. August 22, 
1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 4806. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Putorius arcticus Merriam. 

North Amer. Fauna, No. 11, p. 15, pl. 2, figs. 2, 2a, June 30, 1896. 

sgor0- Okin and skull. Adult male. Point Barrow, Alaska. July 
16, 1883. Collected by John Murdoch, U. S. Signal Service. 
Explorations in Alaska under Lieut. P. L. Ray, U.S. A. Original 
number 1672. Skin catalogued January 16, 1884; skull July 25, 
1888. 

Well-made skin in good condition. Skull nearly perfect; left malar broken; 

and a crack runs through right frontal and nasal. 


Putorius culbertsoni Coues. Chirotypes. 
U.S. Geol. Surv. of Terr., Misc. Pub. No. 8, Fur-Bearing Animals, p. 136, 1877. 


=Putorius longicauda (Bonaparte). See Coues, loc. cit. 


goes» OKin and skull. Fort Laramie, Wyoming. December, 1859. 
Collected by Dr. F. V. Hayden. Exploration of headwaters of 
Missouri and Yellowstone, under Capt. W. F. Reynolds, U. 8, A. 
Original number 75. Skin catalogued November 22, 1860; skull, 
January 22, 1902. 

Specimen remade into a fairly good study skin in January, 1902, and skull 
removed. Tail lost, scorched about the rump; skull perfect. 

The other chirotype, 4325, can not be found. The entry in the cata- 
logue corresponding to that number is ‘* Putorius culbertsond, Ft. 
Union [now Fort Buford, North Dakota], Aug. 8.60, G. H. Trook.” 

Chirotypes designated by number. Coues gives the species as a synonym of 
Putorius longicauda, thus: ‘‘Putorius culbertsoni, Bd MSS. Mus. Smiths (labels 
of nos. 4320, 4325).’’ 


PUTORIUS. 219 


Putorius frenatus goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North. Amer. Fauna, No. 11, pp. 28-29, June 30, 1896. 

77519. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pinabete, Chiapas, Mexico. 
February 10, 1896. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original num- 
ber 9279. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull with rostrum badly injured, lacking 
most of right nasal, upper part of right maxillary and postorbital processes; 
two outer upper incisors missing. 

Putorius haidarum Preble. Biological Survey collection. 
Pros. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 169-170, August 10, 1898. 

94430. Skin and skull. Adult male. Massett, Queen Charlotte 
Islands, British Columbia. March 17, 1898. Collected by Rey. 
J. H. Keen. Original number 1800x. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 

Putorius arcticus kadiacensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 

North Amer. Fauna, No. 11, p. 16, June 30, 1896. 

65290. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Kodiak Island, Alaska. 
April 25, 1894. Collected by B. J. Bretherton.. Original number 
304, 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken supra- 
occipital, basioccipital, and right audital bulla; left outer upper incisor missing. 

Putorius kaneii Baird. 

Mammals of North America, p. 172, 1857. 

#s's)- Skin (summer pelage) and skull. Adult. Arikamtchitchi 
Island (Arikam Island), Bering Strait (see footnote in Baird’s 
Mammals of North America, p. 173), Tchuktchi Country, Siberia. 
Collected by W. Stimpson; received from Capt. J. Rodgers, U.S. N. 
Original number 358. Skin catalogued March, 1857; skull, Jan- 
uary 11, 1902. 

Specimen was made into a fairly good modern study skin and skull removed 
in January, 1902. Brain case of skull broken away, anterior parts, however, 
quite complete. 

No type specified. Baird Jisted two specimens, No. 1458 from Semipalatinsk, 
Siberia, in winter pelage, received from the Bremen Museum, through Dr. G. 
Hartlaub, and the above, No. 2330. Most of the description appears to be based 
upon summer pelages as in number 2330 and specimens from ‘‘among the col- 
lections of the North Pacific and Behring’s Straits Expedition.’’ Further on 
Baird says, ‘‘A winter specimen, 1458, from Semipalatinsk, Siberia, is very 
similar in size and the characters of the tail.’? This would indicate that 1458 
was not considered quite typical and leaves 2330 as the type. 

Putorius streatori leptus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 

Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VI, pp. 76-77, May 29, 1903. 

56800. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Silverton, Colorado. 
October 20, 1893. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original number 
1185. 


Weéll-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


220) PUTORIUS. 


Putorius frenatus leucoparia Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 11, pp. 29-30, June 30, 1896. 


$4914. Skinand skull. Adult male. Patzcuaro, Michoacan, Mexico. 


July 27, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 2960. 

Well-made skin in good condition. Skull lacking most of brain-case except a 
fragment of the parietals and supraoccipital; rostrum, left zygoma, palate, and 
dentition intact; mandible intact except for absence of right coronoid. 


Putorius xanthogenys oregonensis Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 11, pp. 25-26, June 30, 1896. 
#3232. Skin and skull. Adult female. Grants Pass, Rogue River 
Valley, Oregon. December 19,1891. Collected by C. P. Streator. 
Original number 1404. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of first left 
upper premolar. 


Putorius tropicalis perdus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 67-68, March 22, 1902. 
100041. Skin and skull. Adult male. Teapa, Tabasco, Mexico. 
March 31, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 14074. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Putorius saturatus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 11, pp. 21-22, June 30, 1896. 
65930. Skin and skull. Adult male. Siskiyou, Oregon. June 6, 
1894. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 3905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Putorius streatori Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 11, pp. 13-14, pl. 2, figs. 5-6, June 30, 1896. 
76646. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Vernon, Skagit Val- 
ley, Washington. February 29,1896. Collected by D. H. Luckey. 
Original number 3. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Putorius tropicalis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 11, pp. 30-31, pl. 3, figs. 5-6, June 30, 1896. 

54994. Skin and skull. Adult male. Jico, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
July 9, 18938. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 5195. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of four 
upper incisors; right upper canine broken. 


—_s 


PUTORLUS—LUTREOLA—MUSTELA. 991 


Putorius washingtoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fanua, No. 11, pp. 18-19, pl. 4, figs. 3-4, June 30, 1896. 

76322. Skin and skull. Adult male. Trout Lake, base of Mount 
Adams, Washington. December 15, 1895. Collected by D. N- 
Kaegi. Original number 2. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
outer upper incisor. 
Genus LUTREOLA. 


Lutreola vison ingens Osgood. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, p. 42, pl. 4, fig. 2, October 6, 1900. 

6530. Skull only. Old adult, probably male. Fort Yukon, Alaska. 
February 15, 1862. Collected by Robert Kennicott. Original 
number 262. Catalogued in spring of 1865. 

Skull perfect. 


Lutreola vison lacustris Preble. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 22, p. 66, October 31, 1902. 
L06872. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Echimamish River, 
Keewatin, Canada. September 14, 1900. Collected by E. A. and 
A. E. Preble. Original number 3518. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect, except for broken tip of left 
nasal and slight fracture of left parietal. 


Lutreola macrodon Prentiss. 
Proc. U: 8S. Nat. Mus., X X VI, No. 1336, p. 887, fig. a, July 6, 1903. 

115178. Fragments of skull. Pre-Columbian shell heaps, Brooklin, 
Hancock County, Maine. 1897. Collected by Drs. F. W. True 
and D. W. Prentiss, Jr. 

‘Condition of type.—Fragments of skull composed of the superior maxillie, 
portions of the nasals, right zygoma, and palate extending 6 mm. back of molars. 
All the teeth are present on the right side, three incisors and one premolar on 
the left side. The teeth are in excellent condition except the canine, which is 
broken at the point, and portion of enamel missing. The bones are very brittle 
and of a yellowish color on their broken surface.’’ Prentiss, loc. cit. 


Genus MUSTELA. 


Mustela americana abieticola Preble. 

North Amer. Fauna, No. 22, p. 68, October 31, 1902. 

49228. Skin and skeleton. Adult male. Cumberland House, Sas- 
katchewan, Canada. February, 1890. Collected by R. Mac Far- 
lane. Original number 54. Catalogued January 17, 1891. 

Rather poorly made skin, but in good condition. The entire skeleton is 
present. The digits of the fore feet, the middle and distal phalanges of the 
digits of the hind feet, and the last few caudal vertebrie are in the skin. The 
skull is slightly injured, posterior half of left zygoma broken, left audital bulla 
and adjoining portions of basis cranii broken, 


922 MUSTELA—SPILOG ALE. 


Mustela americana actuosa Osgood. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, p. 48, pl. 7, fig. 2, October 6, 1900. 

6043. Skull. Old adult male. Fort Yukon, Alaska. November, 
1860. Collected by Robert Kennicott. Original number 1017. 
Catalogued April 18, 1863. 

Skull nearly perfect; right malar lost, the two lower middle incisors and the 
first right upper premolar are wanting, and a U-shaped piece has been broken 


out of the basioccipital. The catalogue calls for skin 6413, but it can not be 
found. 


Mustela nesophila Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 21, pp. 33-34, pl. 5, figs. 3-4, September 26, 1901. 

78066. Skull only. Adult male. Massett, Graham Island, Queen 

Charlotte Islands, British Columbia. Collected by Rey. J. H. Keen. 


Skull earth or smoke stained; perfect, except for absence of incisors, left lower 
canine, two left and two right lower premolars, and last right lower molar. 


Mustela caurina origenes Rhoads. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 458, September 30, 1902. 
112170. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Marvine Mountain, 
Colorado. September 16, 1901. Collected by Ernest T. Seton. 
Catalogued October 14, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus SPILOGALE,. 


Spilogale ambigua Mearns. 
Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Lynx, Urocyon, Spilo- 
gale, and Mephitis, from the Mexican Boundary Line, p. 3, January 12, 1897. 
- (Reprinted in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1126, p. 460, December 24, 1897.) 
iséeg- Skin and skull. Adult male. Eagle Mountain, Chihuahua, 
Mexico, about 4 miles south of monument No. 15, Mexican 
boundary line, lat. 31° 47’, long. 30° 15’. March 23, 1892. Col- 
lected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A., and F. X. Holzner. Original 
number 1574. International Boundary Commission. Catalogued 
July 28, 1892. 

Well-made skin in good condition, Skull nearly perfect; right canine and two 

adjacent incisors somewhat broken. 


Spilogale angustifrons Howell. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 242, December 16, 1902. 

50825. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tlalpam, Federal District, 
Mexico. December 15, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
K. A. Goldman. Original number 4035. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly fractured 
nasals, 


223 


SPLLOGALE. 
Biological Survey collection. 


San Bartolomé, Chiapas, 


Spilogale angustifrons elata Howell. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 26, pp. 27-28, pl. 9, figs. 7-9, November 24, 1906. 
Origi- 


133186. Skin and skull. Adult male. ‘& 
Collected by E. A. Goldman. 


Mexico. March 19, 1904. 


nal number 16618. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Biological Survey collection. 


Spilogale gracilis Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 83-84, September 4, 1890. 
Bottom of Grand Canyon of the 


£7286. Skin and skull. Adult male. 
Colorado, at altitude of 3.500 feet, north of San Francisco Moun- 
tain, Arizona. September 12, 1889. Collected by Dr. C. Hart 
Merriam and V. Bailey. Original number 451. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a perforation of 


the inner wall of the right orbit. 


Spilogale indianola Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 10, October 8, 1890. 
Indianola, Matagorda Bay, Texas. 
Cata- 


1621. Skull only. Young adult. 
Collected by J. H. Clark, old Mexican boundary survey. 


logued February 15, 1855. 
Skull perfect. 
Spilogale phenax latifrons Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 15, October 8, 1890. 
Roseburg, Douglas County, 
Original 


Skin and skull. Old female. 
Collected by Dr, T.S. Palmer. 


Bi300" 
Oregon. July 13, 1889. 


number 216. 
Well-made skin in good condition. Skull lacking right audital bulla, basioccip- 
ital, basisphenoid, pterygoids, and most of supraoccipital; zygomata broken; 


palate fractured; mandible missing. 


Spilogale lucasana Merriam. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, p. 11, October 8, 1890. 
#$43- Skin and skull. Adult. Cape St. Lucas, Lower California, 
Mexico. Collected by John Xantus. Original number §93.  Cata- 


logued in October, 1860. 
Specimen formerly mounted, but it is now a well-made skin in good condition; 
some hair is lost from the tail; skull perfect, except right upper canine is broken 


off at alveolus. 
Spilogale microdon Howell. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 26, pp. 34-35, pl. 10, figs. 4-6, November 24, 1906. 
145887. Skin and skull. Adult male. Comondu, Lower California, 
Mexico. November 8, 1905. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 18501. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, 


294 SPILOGALE-—MFEPHITIS. 


Spilogale ringens Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 4, pp. 9-10, fig. 2 (p. 2), October 8, 1890. 
=Spilogale putorius (Linnzeus). See Howell, North Amer. Fauna, No. 26, p. 15, 
November 24, 1906. 
#3152. Skin and skull. Adult female. Greensboro, Alabama. <Au- 
gust 2, 1890. Collected by C. S. Brimley. Original number 50. 
Well-made skin in good condition. Skull with numerous shot perforations; 


right audital bulla and most of right side of brain-case absent, left audital bulla 
injured, right coronoid broken. 


Spilogale tenuis Howell. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 241-242, December 16, 1902. 
99365. Skin and skull. Adultmale. Arkins, Colorado. November 
13, 1899. Collected by R. S. Weldon. Original number 2198x. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Spilogale angustifrons tropicalis Howell. Biological Survey coll. . 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 242, December 16, 1902. 

73523. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Mateo del Mar, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. May 16, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 7958. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
mastoid bulla, interorbital region considerably injured by parasites. 


Genus MEPHITIS. 


Mephitis estor Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 81-82, pl. 10, figs. 1-4, September 4, 1890. 
$7792. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Francisco Mountain, Ari- 
zona. August 17, 1889. Collected by V. Bailey. Original num- 
ber 369. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Mephitis frontata Coues. 
3ull. U. S. Geol. and Geog. Surv. Terr., 2d ser., No. 1, p. 7, fig. 1, 1875. 

2232. Post-Pliocene skull. Old adult. Dales Cave, 3 miles from 
Lansburg, Pennsylvania. Collected by Secretary S. F. Baird. 
Catalogued March, 1856. 

Skull in good condition for a subfossil; left zygoma lacking and right some- 


what broken, two large holes in the brain-case dorsally and anteriorly, two 
upper and two lower incisors lacking. 


Chincha occidentalis major Howell. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 20, pp. 37-38, August 31, 1901. 
=Mephitis occidentalis major (Howell). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
XIV, p. 334, November 12, 1901, 


ll 


i ant ia ac i i i eet i ae ile ite 


MEPHITIS. 925 


92238. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Klamath, Oregon. Jan- 
uary 5, 1898. Colleeted by B. L. Cunningham. Original number 
80 (1188x). 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly broken left 
zygoma, 


Mephitis milleri Mearns. 
Preliminary Diagnoses of New Mammals of the Genera Mephitis, Dorcelaphus, 
and Dycotyles from the Mexican Border of the United States, p. 1, February 11, 
1897. (Reprinted in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX, No. 1129, p. 467, December 
24, 1897.) 
=Mephitis macroura milleri (Mearns). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
XIV, p. 334, November 12, 1901. 


58851. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Lowell, near Tucson, 
Arizona. November 13, 1893. Collected by F. X. Holzner. 
Original number 1109. International Boundary Commission. Cat- 
alogued December 13, 1893. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Chincha occidentalis notata Howell. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 20, pp. 36-37, pl. 3, fig. 2, August 31, 1901. 


=Mephitis occidentalis notata (Howell). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
XIV, p. 334, November 12, 1901. 


87043. Skin and skull. Adult males Trout Lake, Mount Adams, 
Washington. March 22,1897. Collected by P. Schmid. Original 
number 243x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken left mastoid 
bulla. 


Mephitis occidentalis Baird. 


Mammals of North America, p. 194, 1857. 


2617. Skull. Adult, probably male. Petaluma, California. Col- 
lected by E. Samuels. Original number 837. Catalogued Decem- 
ber 10, 1856. 


Skull perfect except for loss of 15 mm. of right zygoma. There used to be a 
skin, No. 1944, nrarked in the catalogue ‘‘ Destroyed Jan. 8, 1886.”’ 

No type designated. A table of detailed measurements is given of 33/4, and 
this one should be regarded as the type. Four specimens are listed: 2031, skull 
from Santa Clara, California; 2434, skull; }2}4, the above skin and skull both 
from Petaluma, and a fourth specimen, skin without number, from Steilacoom, 
Washington. Baird’s brief diagnosis is based upon both cranial and skin char- 
acters, so that again preference must be given to }}4, the only skin with skull 
which he had. 

Petaluma is regarded as the type locality by Miller and Rehn (Proc. Boston 
Soc. Nat. Hist., XXX, p. 214, December, 1901), and by Howell (North Amer, 
Fauna, No. 20, p. 34, August 31, 1901). 


45336—08—— 15 


926 MEPHITIS—-CONEPATUS. 


Chincha platyrhina [lowell. Biological Survey collection, 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 20, p. 39, August 31, 1901. 
—Mephitis platyrhina (Howell). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV, 
p. 3834, November 12, 1901. 
eees4. Skin and skull. Adult male. South Fork of Kern River, 25 
miles east of Kernville, California. July 5, 1891. Collected by 
V. Bailey. Original number 2998. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus CONEPATUS. 


Conepatus filipensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 163-164, August 6, 1902. 
68172. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. August 24, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 6619. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Conepatus pediculus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., p. 164, August 6, 1902. 
116953. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Sierra Guadalupe, 
Coahuila, Mexico. April 25, 1902. Collected by E. W. Nelson 
and EK. A. Goldman, Original number 15123. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Conepatus sonoriensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 162-163, August 6, 1902. 

5914. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Camoa, Rio Mayo, 
Sonora, Mexico. October 29, 1898. Collected by E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 13213. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Conepatus mesoleucus telmalestes Bailey. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, pp. 203-205, fig. 24, October 24, 1905. 
136551. Skin and skull. Adult male. Big Thicket, 7 miles north- 
east of Sour Lake, Texas. March 17, 1905. Collected by J. H. 
Gaut. Original number 3485. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Conepatus leuconotus texensis Merriam. — Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 162, August 6, 1902. 
$3. Skin and skull. Adult male. Brownsville, Texas. July 20, 
892. Collected by F. B. Armstrong. Original number 70. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly broken 
right zygoma, 


4 
7 


348 
471 
] 


CONEPATUS—TAXIDEA—PROCYON. 997 





Conepatus tropicalis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 164-165, August 6, 1902. 
63650. Skin and skull. Male(?) adult. Motzorongo, Vera Cruz, 
Mexico. February 26, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
KE. A. Goldman. Original number 5903. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of second 
left lower premolar and two lower incisors. 


Genus TAXIDEA. 


Taxidea berlandieri Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 205, 1857. 
= Taxidea taxus berlandieri(Baird). See Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat Hist., VII, 
p- 256, June 29, 1895. 
1710. Skin (no skull). Male. Llano Estacado, Texas. May 8, 1855. 
Received from Capt. J. Pope, U.S. A. Catalogued in 1856. 
Formerly mounted. Made into a fairly good study skin in February, 1902. 


Baird’s description is based upon one specimen, the above, designated by 
number. 


Taxidea americana neglecta Mearns. 
3ull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., III, p. 250, June 5, 1891. 


= Taxidea taxus neglecta (Mearns). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. 
Hist., XXX, p. 218, December 27, 1901. 


tise. Skin and skull. Adult male. Fort Crook, Shasta County, 
California. March 25, 1859. Collected by John Feilner. Original 
number 313. Catalogued in 1860. 

Well-made skin in good condition (skin remade in January, 1902). Skull 
nearly perfect, a rather large hole in right bulla; three left upper incisors, first 
right upper incisor, and last right lower molar lost. 

Family PROCYONIDZ. 
Genus, PROCYON. 
Procyon lotor insularis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XII, p. 17, January 27, 1898. 

S878. Skin and skull. Old male. Maria Madre Island, Tres Marias 
Islands, Mexico. May 10, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
Ki. A. Goldman. Original number LO985. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Procyon psora pacifica Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 16, p. 107, October 28, 1899. 

93137. Skin and skull. Adult. Kichelos Lake, Washington. Jan- 
uary 15,1898. Collected by C. Hansen. Original number 1409x. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight fracture of 
right nasal and perforation in right audital bulla. 


228 PROCYON—NASU A—BASSARISCUS. 


Procyon pallidus Merriam. | Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, pp. 151-152, June 13, 1900. 
y9272. Skinand skull. Adult female. New River, Colorado Desert, 
California. October 16,1899. Collected by F. Stephens. Origi- 
nal number 3022 (2246x),. 
Well-made skin in good condition. Skull perfect, except for absence of second 
left upper incisor and last right upper molar; right audital bulla broken. 


Procyon pygmeus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 101, July 19, 1901. 

LossL1i. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Cozumel Island, Yuca- 

tan, Mexico. April 14, 1901. Collected_ by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 14698. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus NASUA. 


Nasua narica molaris Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 68, March 22, 1902. 
$2630 Skin and skull. Adult male. Manzanillo, Colima, Mexico. 
February 7, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
1844. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of second 
right and Jeft upper premolars and three upper and four lower incisors. 


Nasua nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 100, July 19, 1901. 

108520, Skin and skull. Old male. Cozumel Island, Yucatan, 
Mexico. April 8, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A, 
Goldman. Original number 14673. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken right audital 
bulla and perforation in palate. 


Genus BASSARISCUS. 


Bassaris raptor Baird. 
Report Mexican Boundary Survey, II, Pt. 2, p. 19, January, 1859. 
Bassariscus raptor (Baird). See Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p, 186, 
July 1, 1897. 


u 


oy Skin, skull, and nearly all of the skeleton except the usual leg 
bones left in the skin. Killed in a hen roost near Washington, 
Dis Apr il 28,1852. It was supposed to have been brought from 
California and kept in captivity, whence it escaped... A collar mark 
shows plainly around the neck. Catalogued April 26, 1852. 
Specimen has been made into a modern study skin and is in fair condition, 
although the. hair has a dirty yellow color, looking as though at one time pre- 
served in alcohol. The skull is in fair condition. It 1s somewhat cracked pos- 
teriorly, the left malar is wanting, and the following teeth are missing: Third 


i i i i 


BASSARISCUS—BASSARICY ON—URSUS. 299 


upper premolar, left side; all the lower incisors and the last lower molar, right 
side. All the bones of the skeleton are apparently present except the bones 
from the forearm distally and from the leg distally. 

Type indirectly designated by number, and the collar mark and original label 
leave no doubt as to the specimen Baird had in mind. 


Bassariscus saxicola Merriam. Biological Survey collection, 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 185-186, July 1, 1897. 
79031. Skinand skull. Adultfemale. Espiritu Santo Island, Lower 
California, Mexico. August 19, 1895. Collected by J. E. McLel- 
lan. Original number 14388. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus BASSARICYON. 


Bassaricyon gabbii Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1876, p. 23, pl. 1, fig. 1, April 18, 1876; Proc. Acad. 
Nat. Sci. Phila., 1877, pp. 267, 268, and pl. 2 of what was supposed to be the 
entire animal, but what in reality is an illustration of Nasua narica. 


14214. Skull. Adult. Talamanca, Costa Rica. Collected by Prof. 
W. M. Gabb. Original number 44. Catalogued November 19, 
LS74. 


A U-shaped piece is lacking from the basioccipital, and there is a large hole in 
the basisphenojd between the pterygoids. The following teeth are present in 
the upper jaw: The last three teeth on the right side, the last tooth and the sec- 
ond from the last and the third from the last on the left side. The following 
teeth are missing in the lower jaw: In the left side the last molar, the third 
premolar, and the third incisor; on the right side the second incisor. 

According to the catalogue there should be a skin bearing No. 12237. It has 
never been found in the Museum collection. In a letter dated May 12, 1908, 
Dr. J. A. Allen remarks: ‘‘In reference to the type of Bassaricyon gabbii, I never 
saw askin belonging to the type skull. Through some error in cataloguing a 
skin of Nasua narica purported to belong to the skull, and I figured it as such, 
being at that time unfamiliar with the species of Nasua. Careful search was 
made for the missing skin after the error was discovered, but I am sure it was 
never found. My knowledge of the external characters of Bassaricyon is based 
ona living specimen of B. alleni which I saw some yearsago in the London Zoo.” 

Type designated by number on page 20 of the original description. 


family URSID. 
Genus URSUS. 


Ursus horribilis alascensis Merriam. Cotypes. Biol. Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, p. 74, April 13, 1896. 

In the description of this subspecies no type was designated. In 

the collection are 6 skulls from Norton Sound, Alaska, which Dr. 

C. Hart Merriam had at the time the original description was 

written. Three of them were left unlabeled and one of these des- 

ignated by No. 76470 is mentioned as not typical. The 3 remain- 


230 URSUS. 


ing skulls bear the name Ursus alascensis in Doctor Merriam’s 
handwriting and are therefore considered as cotypes of this form. 
These 3 skulls are: 

76465. Skull only. Young adult female. Shaktolik River, Norton 
Sound, Alaska. Received January, 1896. Original number 1. 

Skull perfect, except for repaired fracture of right zygoma, broken right upper 
and left lower canines, and loss of second right upper and first right lower 
premolars. 

76467. Skull only. Adult male. Head of Koyuk River, Norton 
Sound, Alaska. Collected May, 1893. Original number 3. 

Skull perfect, except for loss of 4 middle upper incisors, first and second right 
and first left upper premolars, 3 lower incisors, first and second right and first 
left lower premolars. 

This is the only adult male skull labeled as Ursus alascensis by Doctor Merriam 
at the time the description was published and is the only one showing all the 
characters mentioned. 

76469. Skullonly. Young (permanent dentition in place but entirely 
unworn). Probably male. Shaktolik Hills, Norton Sound, Alaska. 
June, 1890. Original number 5. 

Skull perfect, except for loss of 2 upper and 1 lower incisors, first and second 
right and left upper premolars, and first right and left lower premolars. 

Ursus horribilis californicus Merriam. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, p. 76, fig. 15, April 18, 1896. 4 

3630. Skull only. Old adult. Monterey, California. Collected by 
A. 5. Taylor. Catalogued October 7, 1859. 

Skull in good condition. It isold and most of the teeth are much worn. The 
canines are split and cracked in the usual way of large teeth; the second lower 
molar on the left side is nearly decayed away. The whole ascending ramus of 
the right half of the mandible and the right pterygoid bone are lacking, proba- 
bly shot away; otherwise skull perfect. 

No type designated, but a skull is figured (fig. 15) in the original description, 
and this skull is regarded as the type. The number 3630 on the skull is quite 
legible in the figure. 


Ursus (Euarctos) carlottze Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 21, pp. 30-82, pl. 4, fig. 1, September 26, 1901. 

87620, Skull only. Adult male. Massett, Graham Island, Queen 
Charlotte Islands, British Columbia. November, 1896. Collected 
hy Rey. J. H. Keen. Original number 47x. 

Skull perfect, except for absence of first right lower incisor and first right upper 
premolar. 
Ursus dalli Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, pp. 71-73, pl. 5, fig. 1; pl. 6, fig. 5; figs. 8-9 in text, 
April 13, 1896. 

75048. Skull only. Old male. Yakutat Bay, Alaska. September 
8, 1895. Collected by chief of Yakutat Indians. Original num- 
her 2. 


Skull perfect. 


URSUS. Pal 


Ursus americanus eremicus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, pp. 154-155, October 6, 1904. 
116952. Skinand skull. Adult female. Sierra Guadalupe, Coahuila, 
Mexico. April 21, 1902. Collected by E. W. Nelson and EF. A. 
Goldman. Original number 15111. 


Well-made skin in good condition, except for bare spot on abdomen; skull 
perfect except slightly injured second and third upper incisors; canines cracked. 


Ursus eulophus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 153, October 6, 1904. 

81102. Skull only. Adult male. Admiralty Island, Alaska. 1896. 
Collected by G. T. Emmons. 


Skull perfect, except for large bullet hole passing from left parietal through 
brain-case and out of right frontal. 


Ursus floridanus Merriam. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, p. 81, April 13, 1896. 


3484. Skull only. Old adult (male, wde Merriam). Key Biscayne, 
Dade County, Florida. May 21, 1858. Collected by G. Wurde- 
mann. Original number 4. Catalogued March 4, 1859. 

Skull without lower jaw, left zygoma entirely broken away, also anterior half 
of right zygoma. <A large hole through the interorbital region, but without 
injury to the frontal region above it or the palate below it. The second upper 
incisor of the right side and the small second premolar on both sides lacking, 
left upper canine somewhat broken. 


Ursus dalli gyas Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 78, March 22, 1902. 


#1669. Skull only. Adult male. Pavlof Bay, Alaska Peninsula. 
1897. Collected by W. Pavlof. Original number 1052x. 
Skull perfect, except for absence of first right and left upper premolars, second 
left upper incisor, and first and second right lower incisors. 


Ursus horribilis horreus Baird. Lectotype. 


teport Mexican Boundary Survey, II, Pt. 2, p. 24, January, 1859. 


990. Skull only. Adult male. Old copper mines, near the Rio 
Mimbres, Grant County, New Mexico, near the present location 
of Georgetown. Collected by J. H. Clark. Catalogued November 
1, 1852. 

Skull perfect, except for loss of 3 upper incisors, 3 of the small upper pre- 
molars, 5 lower incisors, and first left lower premolar; both upper canines, and 
left lower canine, and last right lower molar broken off to alveoli; absence of 
right coronoid process of mandible, and repaired fracture of right angular and 
condyloid processes. 

No type was designated in the original description. The above specimen was 
designated as ‘‘the type’’, that is a lectotype, by Dr. C. Hart Merriam (Proc. 


232 URSUS. 


Biol. Soe. Wash., X, p. 75, April 13, 1896). Secretary Baird had two other 
specimens in his hands at the time the subspecies was described, No. 995, skull 
only, a young male, with same data as the leetotype, and figured op. cit., pl. 
20; and No. }$4% (incorrectly designated by Secretary Baird as No. 147), an 
adult male from Los Nogales, Sonora, Mexico. In many respects No. 1047 
might be considered the type, as the diagnosis of the form and much of the 
description is based upon this specimen. The skin was in poor condition in 
Secretary Baird's time and has apparently been destroyed; the skull is in fair 
condition. This specimen was evidently considered the type by Miller and Relin 
(Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., XXX, p. 233, December, 1901) as the type-locality 
given by them is Los Nogales, Sonora, Mexico. 

Written on the skull in old writing is: | ‘‘Said to have a | touch of the Grizzly 
| by an old hunter | hair brown however’’ | J. H. C. | ‘Probably a cross’? | 


Ursus kenaiensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVII, p. 154, October 6, 1904. 
128672. Skull only. Adult female. Cape Elizabeth, Kenai Penin- 
sula, Alaska. 1903. Collected by C. A. Lambert. Original num- 
her 4205x. 


Skull perfect. 


Ursus kidderi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, pp. 78-79, March 22, 1902. 


116562. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Chinitna Bay, Alaska’ 


Peninsula, Alaska. June 9, 1901. Collected by J. H. Kidder. 
Original number 3661x. 


Tanned skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Ursus middendorffi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X, pp. 69-71, pl. 4, figs. 2-3; pl. 5, fig. 2; pl. 6, fig. 2; 
fig. 7 in text, April 13, 1896. 
54793. Skull only. Adult male. Kodiak Island, Alaska. July 5, 
1893. Collected by B. J. Bretherton. Original number 176. 


Skull perfect, except for fractured left squamosal and left audital bulla and a 
small bullet hole passing from the left frontal through the brain-case and out of 
the right parietal. 


Ursus horribilis pheonyx Merriam. — Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VII, p. 154, October 6, 1904, 
133231. Skin and skull. Old female. Near head of Comet Creek, 
tributary of Fortymile Creek, Alaska. July 12, 1903. Collected 
hy W. H. Osgood. Original number 2684. 


Tanned skin in good condition; foot pads missing; skull perfect, except for 
absence of first left lower incisor; most of molariform teeth worn to roots. 


itt ll 


PODOGYMNURA—SCAPANUS 233 


Order INSECTIVORA. 
Family ERINACEID. 
Genus PODOGYMNURA. 


Podogymnura truei Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 437, May 13, 1905. 

125286. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Mount Apo (at 
6,000 feet), southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. June 25, 
1904. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. 8. A. Original number 
5667. Catalogued December 13, 1904. 

Alcoholic in good condition; anterior half of skull in good condition; brain- 
case badly broken and in many fragments. 


Family TALPID-®. 
Genus SCAPANUS. 


Scalops zneus Cassin. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VI, p. 299, this paper was reported favorably for 
publication February 22, 1853. 
—Scapanus townsendi (Bachman). See True, Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., NIX, 
No. 1101, p. 51; pp. 58 and 64. December 21, 1896. 
3725. Skin (no skull). Oregon. Collected by the U.S. Exploring 
Expedition. Catalogued December 20, 1859. 
In good state of preservation, but rather badly made up. As Dr. True states 
(loc. cit.), the specimen has every appearance of having been discolored by 
immersion in alcohol or other preserving fluid. 
The original description says, ‘‘A single specimen, apparently fully adult, is 
in the collection of the Exploring Expedition, labeled as having been obtained 
in Oregon.’? No. 3725 is undoubtedly this ‘‘single specimen.”’ 


Scapanus alpinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 102, April 26, 1897. 

79967. Skin and skull. Adult male. Crater Lake, Mount Mazama, 
Oregon. August 18, 1896. Collected by VY. Bailey. Original 
number 5784. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Scalops californicus Ayres. 
Proc. California Acad. Nat. Sei., I, 1854-1857, p. 54, description presented May 
21, 1855. 
—Scapanus latimanus (Bachman). See Osgood, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XX, p. 
52, April 18, 1907. 
3111. Skeleton. Adult. San Francisco, California. Collected by 
Dr. W. O. Ayres. Catalogued ]*ebruary, 1857. 
A partially cleaned skeleton, in fair condition, all parts of which appear to be 
present except the right manus and forearm. Skull is well cleaned and perfect 


934 SCAPANUS—DYMECODON——NEU ROTRICHUS. 


except loss of last left upper molar. The side view of this skull is figured by 
True (Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1101, pl. 3, fig. 3). 

This skeleton is one of Dr. Ayres’s original specimens, and probably the 
only one of them now in existence. It seems well to treat it as a type, although 
it was not so indicated by the original describer. 


Scapanus orarius True. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XIX, No. 1101, December 21, 1896, p. 52. 
gefy,. Skin and skull. Adult female. Shoalwater Bay, Washing- 
ton. August 30, 1855. Collected by Dr. J. G. Cooper. Skin 
catalogued February 26, 1856; skull, May 28, 1898. 
Specimen recently made into a good study skin. The posterior half of the 
cranium is broken off, though most of it is still present; the part of the skull 


anterior to the middle of the cranium and the mandibles, perfect. 
Type designated by number 381, an error for 1381. 


Scapanus truei Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 102, April 26, 1897. 


79290, Skin and skull. Adult. Lake City, Modoc County, Califor- 
nia. June 15, 1896. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original num- 
ber 5289. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight irregularity 
ot foramen magnum. 


Genus DYMECODON. 


Dymecodon pilirostris True. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., IX, p. 97, September 25, 1886. 


$3734. Alcoholic (skull removed). Immature male. Mouth of Yeddo 


i 

Bay, Yenosima, Japan. Collected by Prof. E.'S. Morse. Received 
from the Boston Society of Natural History February 19, 1878. 
Catalogued December 21, 1885. 

The alcoholic is in rather bad condition. Considerable hair has slipped from 
the belly. It has been split open from the chin nearly to the anus, to permit 
the removal of the skull and shoulder girdle. The right zygoma is lacking and 
the left basal portion of the brain case is injured, both ascending rami of the 
mandible broken. 

The single specimen is referred to by number in the original description. 


Genus NEUROTRICHUS. 


Urotrichus gibbsii Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 76, pl. 28, 1857. 
—Neirothrichus gibbsii (Baird). See Giinther, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1880, 
pl. 42, June 1, 1880. 
fees. Skin and skull. Immature. White River, Cascade Moun- 
tains, Washington. July 15, 1854. Collected by George Gibbs. 





NEU ROTRICHUS—CROCIDURA. 235 


Original number 15. Received from Dr. George Suckley. Cata- 
logued May 7, 1855. 

Skin in rather poor condition, badly made, and left fore foot detached. Skull 
quite fragmentary and of value only to show the teeth, some of which are of the 
deciduous set. All the tooth rows are intact. 

Baird had but one specimen, which he designated by number. 

Neirotrichus gibbsi major Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 16, p. 88, October 28, 1899. 

65321. Skinand skull. Adult male. Carberry ranch, Shasta County, 
California. May 18, 1894. Collected by C. P. Streator. Orig- 
inal number 3789. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Family SORICID.®. 


Genus CROCIDURA, 


Crocidura andamanensis Miller. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 777, pl. 41, 6, 6a, 6b, May 28, 1902. 
111825. Skinand skull. Adult male. South Andaman Island, Anda- 
man Islands. January 16, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 851. Catalogued August 15, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Crocidura caudata Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 42, April 25, 1901. 

103302. In alcohol (skull removed). Young adult female. Palermo, 
Sicily. June 21, 1900. Collected by Dane Coolidge. Original 
number 1365. Catalogued October 3, 1900. 

Alcoholic in fair condition ; intestines have been removed, some hair has 
slipped from lefteleg. ‘Tip of tail is flattened by some accident. Skull rather 
badly broken about the right posterior half of brain-case. 

Crocidura lignicolor Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 39, March 30, 1900. 

62180. Skin (skull lost). Adult female. Jungles east of Maralbashi 
on the Yarkand River, Eastern Turkestan. January 10, 1894. Col- 
lected by Dr. W. Le Abbott. Catalogued May 16, 1895. 

Well-made skin in good condition. The Museum catalogue calls for a skull, 
which can not be found. 

Crocidura mimula Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 95, fig. 1b, June 27, 1901. 

105801. Skin and skull. Adult female. Zuberwangen, St. Gallen, 
Switzerland. December 1, 1900. Collected by Ernst H. Zolli- 
kofer. Original number 192. Catalogued June 4, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of right tym- 
panic ring. 


236 CROCIDURA——-MYOSOREX—NEOMYS. 


Crocidura nicobarica Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 776, May 28, 1902. 
{11788. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Great Nicobar, 


Nicobar Islands. March 15,1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 931. Catalogued August 14, 1901. 


Specimen well preserved. It contains a large fetus. Tip of tail, hind /eet 
and ankles, left fore foot and tip of snout have been somewhat nibbled, probably 
by ants. Skull perfect. 

Crocidura shantungensis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 158, August 9, 1901. 


86151. Skin and skull. Adult. Chimeh, Shantung, northern China. 
June, 1898. Collected by Paul D. Bergen. Catalogued January 
19, 1899, 


Well-made skin in good condition. Skull was formerly in the skin, but has 
been removed; all the parts posterior to the upper tooth rows are broken away; 
anterior portion and mandible complete. 


Crocidura sicula Miller. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 41, April 25, 1901. 


103301. Skin and skull. Adult male. Palermo, Sicily. June 20, 
1900. Collected by Dane Coolidge. Original number 1332. Cata- 
logued October 3, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus MYOSOREX 


Myosorex muricauda Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 645, fig. 42, December 28, 1900. 


s3809. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Mount Coffee, 
Liberia, West Africa. April 5, 1897: Collected by R. P. Currie. 
Original number 32. Catalogued September 23, 1897. 


Alcoholic, in good condition; skull removed and perfect. 


Genus NEOMYS. 


‘Neomys fodiens minor Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XIV, p. 45, April 25, 1901. 

101311. Skinandskull. Adult male. Montréjeau, Hautes Pyrennes, 
France (in foothills of Pyrennes). July 8,1899, Collected by Rob- 
ert T. Young. Original number 641. Catalogued October 11, 1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of both 
tympanic rings. 


BLARINA. 2937 
Genus BLARINA. 


Blarina alticola Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


North. Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 27-28, December 31, 1895. 


52047. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Popocatepetl, Mexico. 
February 25, 1893. Collected by EK. W. Nelson. Original num- 
ber 4396, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Blarina angusticeps Laird. 


Mammals of North America, p. 47, 1857. 
=Blarina brevicauda (Say). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 6 and 
10, December 31, 1895. 


$¢$6. Skin and skull. Burlington, Vermont. Collected by Prof. Z. 
Thompson. Original number 203. Catalogued February, 1856. 


Skin in fair condition; some hair has sloughed from the sides and_ belly. 
Skull has several teeth lacking from the upper jaw, and the tympanic, periotic, 
and mastoid bones of both sides absent. 

Baird had but one specimen, which he specified by number. 


Blarina berlandieri Baird. 


Mammals of North America, p. 53, pl. 28, No, 2159, 1857. 


2159. In alcohol, skull not removed. Vicinity of Matamoras, Mex- 
ico. Probably collected by Dr. J. L. Berlandier. Received from 
Lieut. D. N. Couch, U.S. A. Catalogued February 14, 1857. 


In good condition, save for some sloughing of hair about the belly. The skull 
remains inside. Baird’s figure of the skull must have been made from one of 
the paratypes, but the lips have been loosened in order that teeth may be seen. 

Four specimens, ;°¢,, ;";, 2159, and 2160, all from the same locality, are 
listed in the original description. Of these 2159 is here regarded as the type, 
since it is figured on pl. 28. 


Blarina exilipes Baird. 


Mammals of North America, p. 51, pl. 28, No. 2157, -1857. 


=Blarina parva (Say). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 6-7 and 17, 
December 31, 1895. 


2157. Inalcohol, skull not removed. Washington, Mississippi. Col- 
lected by Col. B. L. C. Wailes, U.S. A. Catalogued February 14, 
L857. 

No specimen is designated as the type; eight specimens are listed by Baird, of 
which No. 2157 is figured on pl. 28. For that reason it is considered as the type. 

Specimen rather the worse for shedding of hair on the posterior parts of 
body. The skull has not been removed, so that a skull of one of the paratypes 
is probably figured. 


938 BLARINA. 


Blarina floridana Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 19, pl. 1, fig. 7, December 31, 1895. 
$6518. Tn alcohol, skull removed. Chester Shoal, 11 miles north of 
Cape Canaveral, Florida. April 22, 1889. Collected by M. M. 
Green. Original number 44. 


Specimen in good condition. Skull perfect, except for broken supraoccipital; 
angular processes of mandible missing. 


Blarina fossor Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 28, December 31, 1895. 

68545. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Zempoaltepec, Oax- 
aca, Mexico. July 10, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
KE. A. Goldman. Original number 6419. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Blarina mexicana goldmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 25, December 31, 1895. 


7TO244. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Mountains near Chil- 
2 
pancingo, Guerrero, Mexico. December 23, 1894. Collected by 
Ky. Nelson and EK. A. Goldman. Original number 7251. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Blarina mexicana machetes Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. I’'auna, No. 10, p. 26, December 31, 1895. 

71456. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mountains near Ozolotepec, 
Oaxaca, Mexico. March 26, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson 
and E. A. Goldman. Original number 7723. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Blarina magna Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 28-29, pl. 1, fig. 10, December 31, 1895. 

68575. Skin and skull. Adult male. Totontepec, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
July 24, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and KE. A, Goldman. 
Original number 6495. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Blarina mayensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sei., III, p. 559, November 29, 1901. 
LOSOST. Skin and skull. Adult female. Chichenitza, Yucatan, 
Mexico. February 5, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
kK. A. Goldman. Original number 14495. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of basi- 
occipital and part of supraoccipital. 


il ee ee 


BLARINA. 239 


Blarina (Sor.ciscus) mexicana Coues. 
Bull. U. 8. Geol. and Geog. Surv., III, p. 652, May 15, 1877. 

$525. Skin and skull. Jalapa, Vera Cruz, Mexico. Collected by R. 

443 : 
Montis d@Oca. Skin catalogued March 18, 1859; skull September, 
1861. 

Skin in fair condition, considering the time at which it was collected; skull 

perfect, except the posterior part of the cranium. 


Blarina nelsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection, 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 26-27, December 31, 1895. 

65437. Skin and skull. Adult female. Volcano of Tuxtla, Vera 
Cruz, Mexico. May 13, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 
E. A. Goldman. Original number 6253. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Blarina obscura Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 23, December 31, 1895. 

55634. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Tulancingo, Hidalgo, 
Mexico. » August 27, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original 
number 5377. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly broken 
exoccipital, angular process of left mandible missing. 


Blarina carolinensis peninsule Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 14-15, December 31, 1895. 
=Blarina brevicauda peninsule (Merriam). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mam- 
malium, p. 188, 1897. 

TOST4. Skin and skull, Adult male. Miami River, Dade County, 
Florida. March 2, 1895. Collected by J. A. Loring. Original 
number 2777. 

Well-made skin, with small abdominal patch of hair sloughed; skull perfect, 
except for absence of left audital bulla. 
Blarina mexicana peregrina Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 24-25, December 31, 1895. 

68317. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mountains 15 miles west of 
Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico. September 12, 1894. Collected by 
K. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 6748. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. : 
Blarina soricina Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 22-23, pl. 1, fig. 9, December 31, 1895. 

50762, Skin and skull. Adult male. Tlalpam, Valley of Mexico, 
Mexico. December 5, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson, Original 
number 3989, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


240 BLARINA—NOTIOSORE X—SOREX. 


Blarina telmalestes Merriam. Biological Survey collection, 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 15-16, pl. 2, fig. 5, December 31, 1895. 

T1823. Skin and skull. Adult female. Lake Drummond, Dismal 
Swamp, Virginia. June 6, 1895. Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. 
Original number 1775. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus NOTIOSOREX. 


Sorex (Notiosorex) crawfordi Coues. 
Bull. U.S. Geol. and Geog. Surv., III, pp. 646 and 651, May 15, 1877. 

=Notiosorex crawfordi (Coues). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 32, 

December 31, 1895. 

7934. In alcohol, skull removed. Fort Bliss, New Mexico (near El 
Paso, Texas). Collected by Dr. S. W. Crawford, U.S. A. Alco- 
holic catalogued April 28, 1857; skull, September, 1861. 

3o0dy in alcohol in very poor condition. At some time the alcohol had been 


allowed to evaporate, so that everything about the specimen is now hard and 
shrunken. It is practically a mummy preserved in alcohol. Skull perfect. 


Sorex (Notiosorex) evotis Coues. 

Bull. U.S. Geol. and Geog. Sury., III, p. 652, May 15, 1877. 

= Notiosorex crawfordi evotis (Coues). See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, 

p. 34, December 31, 1895. 

9066. Skin (no skull). Along the Rio Mazatlan, Sinaloa, Mexico. 
February, 1868. Collected by Ferdinand Bischoff. Explorations 
in the North Pacific. Catalogued May 31, 18638. 

All parts of skin present but it is poorly made up; tail not skinned out; left 
hind foot and right fore foot present, but broken off from the skin. The specimen 
looks as if it had originally been made up with part of the skull in it, which had 
subsequently been removed and lost. Coues evidently had the skull, but no 
mention of it is made in the Museum Catalogue. 


Notiosorex gigas Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 227-228, July 15, 1897. 


Ss012. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mountains at Milpillas, near 
San Sebastian, Jalisco, Mexico. March 15, 1897. Collected by 
K. W. Nelson and EK. A Goldman. Original number LO706. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus SOREX. 
Sorex obscurus alascensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 76-77, December 31, 1895. 

73539. Skin and skull. Young adult female. Yakutat, Alaska. 
July 10, 1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 
4676. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





SOREX. 241 


Sorex navigator alaskanus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 18, March 14, 1900. 


#7713. Skin and skull. Adult male. Point Gustavus, Glacier Bay, 
Alaska. June 12,1899. Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original 
number 2058. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Neosorex albibarbis Cope. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1862, p. 188, ordered published April 29, 1862. 
=Sorex albibarbis (Cope). See Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, p. 25, April, 

1892. 

11239. In alechol, skull not removed. Adult female. Protile Lake, 
New Hampshire. September, 1859. Collected by Prof. E. D. 
. Cope. Catalogued between February and May, 1873. 

Specimen in fair condition. Skull not removed. 

No type designated. Cope took two specimens. The above seems to be one 
of them. The entry in the original catalogue reads: ‘‘Neosorer albi****is (the 
omitted letters belong to a word root probably intended to mean ‘cheek’ instead 
of ‘beard’), Profile Lake, N. H., type.’”’? The handwriting is entirely different 
from any of the other handwritings in the catalogue. 

Sorex (Atophyrax) bendirii albiventer Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 97-98, December 31, 1895. 


66198. Skin and skull. Adult male. Lake Cushman, Olympic Moun- 
tains, Washington. July 7, 1894. Collected by C. P. Streator 
Original number 4021. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex (Microsorex) alnorum Preble. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 22, pp. 72-73, October 31, 1902. 


107014. Skin and skull. Adult female. Robinson Portage, Keewatin, 
Canada. June 27, 1900. Collected by E. A. and A. E. Preble. 
Original number 2662. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
I 


Sorex araneus alticola Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 43, April 25, 1901. 
-Sorex araneus nuda Fatio. See Mottaz, Mém. Soc. Zool. France, XX, p. 26, 
September, 1907. 

55930. Skin and skull. Adult male (not female as in original 
description). Meiringen, Switzerland. October 17, 1898.  Col- 
lected by J. A. Loring. Original number 5731 (not 5781, as in 
original description). Catalogued December 27, 1898. 


Well-made skin in good condition, except small bare spot on right flank; skull 
perfect. 





45336—08 16 


942 SOREX. 


Sorex amcenus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 69-70, December 31, 1895. 


—=Sorex vagrans amoenus (Merriam). See Merriam, op. cil., No. 16, p. 87, 
October 28, 1899. 

d$4. Skinand skull. Adult male. Mammoth Pass, head of Owens 
River, east slope Sierra Nevada, California. July 22, 1891. Col- 
lected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 1129. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


29 
41 


Sorex personatus arcticus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 17, March 14, 1900. 

99305. Skin and skull. Adult female. St. Michael, Alaska. Sep- 
tember 14, 1899. Collected by W. H. Osgood. Original number 
910. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex bairdi Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 77-78, pl. 7, figs. 3-3a, December 31, 1895. 
$7444. Skin and skull. Adult female. Astoria, Oregon. August 
2, 1889. Collected by Dr. T. S. Palmer. Original number 270. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex californicus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 80-81, pl. 12, figs. 6-7, December 31, 1895. 
638. Skin and skull. Adult male. Walnut Creek, Contra Costa 
County, California. February 15, 1892. Collected by C. P. 
Streator. Original number 1583. 


32 
44 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex saussurei caudatus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 84-85, December 31, 1895. Preoccupied by 
Sorex caudatus Hodgson, Horsfield’s Cat. Mamm. Mus. EF. India Co., p. 135, 1851. 
=Sorex saussurei mutabilis Merriam. Science, new ser., VIII, p. 782, Decem- 
ber 2, 1898. 
69600. Skinandskull. Youngadult female. Reyes, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
October 21, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 
6963. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex dobsoni Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 33-34, pl. 4, fig. 2, July 30, 1891. 
=Sorex vagrans dobsoni (Merriam). See Merriam, op. cit., No. 10, p. 68, De- 
cember 81, 1895. 


244. Skinandskull. Adultfemale. Sawtooth (also called Alturas) 
Lake, Idaho. October 83,1890. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam 
and V. Bailey. Original number 1929. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull lacking entire brain-case and left 
angular process of mandible, otherwise complete. 


EE 


SOREX. 943 


Sorex longicauda elassodon Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 21, pp. 85-86, September 26, 1901. 


100597. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Cumshewa Inlet, 
Moresby Island, Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia. June 
13, 1900. Collected by W. H. Osgood and E. Heller. Original 
number 1030, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex araneus euronotus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 44, April 25, 1901. 


101321. Skinandskull. Adult male. Montréjeau, Hautes Pyrennes, 
France (in foothills of Pyrennes). July 8, 1899. Collected by 
Robert T. Young. Original number 642. Catalogued October 11, 
1899. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex (Microsorex) eximius Osgood. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 21, p. 71, September 26, 1901. 


107126. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tyonek, Cook Inlet, Alaska. 
September 14, 1900. Collected by W. H. Osgood and E. Heller. 
Original number 1395. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex fimbripes Bachman. 


Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, Pt. 2, p. 391, pl. 24, fig. 8, 1837. 


=Sorex personatus |. Geoffroy. See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 53, 
December 31, 1895. 


84556. In alcohol, skull not removed. ‘* Was found [by Prof. Wal- 
ter kK. Johnson] on the high table-land on a branch of Drury’s Run 
| Pennsylvania], a tributary of the west bank of the Susquehannah 
River.” Catalogued April 29, 1898. 


Condition of the specimen poor; most of the hair on the posterior half of body 
lacking, and the cheeks have been split open in order to expose the teeth. 

The specimen was found in the collection in the early part of 1898 in a bottle 
with an old-style Museum label, without number, tied around the top, bearing 
the name ‘‘ Sore. fimbripes (type).’’? Tied on the specimen itself is an old parch- 
ment label with the words ‘‘Sorex fimbripes. Type’’ written on it. The writing 
is perfectly legible, but very faint, and is not likely to last another quarter or 
half a century. The parchment has to be dried in order to read it. On April 29, 
1898, this specimen was entered in the Museum catalogue and given the present 
number, 84556. No original data accompany the specimen to show where it 
came from, so that the locality has to be taken from Bachman’s description. 
The writing of the old Museum label and parchment tag is unidentifiable; both 
labels were written many years ago and evidently by some one who knew the 
history of the specimen, 


944 SOREX. 


Sorex fisheri Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 86, pl. 4, fig. 4, December 31, 1895. 
75166. Skin and skull. Adult male. Lake Drummond, Dismal 


Swamp, Virginia. October 11, 1895. Collected by Dr. A. K. 
Fisher. Original number 1800. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex glacialis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 16, March 14, 1900. 

97709. Skin and skull. Adult male. Point Gustavus, Glacier Bay, 
Alaska. June 12,1899. Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original 
number 2056, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex godmani Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, pp. 229-230, July 15, 1897. 


77044. Skin and skull. Adult femgle. Volcan Santa Maria, Quezal- 
tenango, Guatemala. January 28, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nel- 
son and E. A. Goldman. Original number 9239. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex haydeni Baird. 


Mammals of North America, p. 29, ‘pl. 27, 1857. 
—Sorex personatus I[. Geoffroy. See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 53, 
December 31, 1895. 


1685. In alcohol, skull not removed. Fort Union, Nebraska (now 
Fort Buford, North Dakota). 1855. Collected by Dr. F. V. Hay- 
den. Catalogued October 23, 1856. 


Specimen in fair condition; lips loosened and left cheek cut in order to expose 
all the teeth. 

No type designated. Baird mentions three specimens, Nos. 1684 and 1685, 
from Fort Union, and No. 2048 from Fort Pierre, Nebraska; No. 1685 is here 
regarded as the type because it is figured on pl. 27. 


Sorex hoyi Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 32, pl. 28, No. 1688, 1857. 


1688. In alcohol. Adult male. Racine, Wisconsin. Collected by 
Dr. P. R. Hoy. Catalogued October 23, 1856. 


Specimen is rather stiff and more or less shrunken, but it is otherwise in good 
condition. Theskull has never been removed, but the lips have been loosened 
in order to expose the front teeth. 

No type designated. Two specimens are listed by number in the original de- 
scription, 1688 and ,',*2,. As the former is figured on pl. 28, it is regarded as the 
type. 





SOREX. 245 
Sorex idahoensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 32-33, pl. 4, fig. 1, July 30, 1891. 
=Sorex personatus |. Geoffroy. See Merriam, op. cit., No. 10, p. 54, December 31, 
1895. 


a 
w 


23629. Skinand skull. Adult female. Timber Creek, Salmon River 
Mountains, Idaho. August 26, 1890. Collected by Dr. C. Hart 
Merriam and VY. Bailey. Original number 1674. 


cous 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex obscurus longicauda Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 74, December 31, 1895. 
74711. Skinand skull. Youngadult male. Wrangel, Alaska. Sep- 
tember 9, 1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 
4891. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex tenellus lyelli Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 75, March 22, 1902. 
109530. Skinand skull. Youngadult male. Mount Lyell, Tuolumne , 
County, California. August 29, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. K. 
Fisher. Original number 2275. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex macrodon Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 82, pl. 7, figs. 2-2a; pl. 12, figs. 12-18, December 
31, 1895. 
58272. Skin and skull. Young adult male. Orizaba, Vera Cruz, 
Mexico. January 26,1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 5759. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex macropygmeus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 158, August 9, 1901. 

84012. Skin and skull. Adult male. Petropaulski, Kamchatka. 
September 23, 1897. Collected by Marie Stejneger (Mrs. Leon- 
hard Stejneger). Original number 8019 (Dr. L. Stejneger).  Cata- 
logued February 28, 1898. 

Fairly well-made skin, much contracted posteriorly; skull perfect. 
Sorex montereyensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 79, December 31, 1895. 


iste. Skin and skull. Adult male. Monterey, California. Ovcto- 
her 1, 1891. Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 3336. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for fractured supra- 
occipital. 


946 SOREX. 


Sorex monticolus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 48-44, fig. 1, September 4, 1890. 

=Sorex vagrans monticola (Merriam). See Merriam, op. cit., No. 10, p. 69, 
December 31, 1895. 

$7232. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Francisco Mountain, 
Arizona. August 28, 1889. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and 
V. Bailey. Original number 406. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for a small perfora- 

tion in the palate and a larger irregular one in the upper side of the brain-case; 
angular processes of mandible missing. 


Sorex tenellus myops Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 76, March 22, 1902. 
24232. Skinand skull. Adultfemale. White Mountains, California. 


41634° 


July 13,1891. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original number 1101. 


Well-made skin; tail complete, but detached at base; skull perfect. 


Sorex tenellus nanus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 81-82, pl. 8, figs. 5-5a, December 31, 1895. 


73773. Skin and skull. Adult female. Estes Park, Colorado. Au- 
gust 8, 1895. Collected by E. A. Preble. Original number 567, 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken supra- 


occipital. 


Neosorex navigator Baird. 


Mammals of North America, p. 11, pl. 26, 1857. 

=Sorex (Neosorex) palustris navigator (Baird). See Merriam, North Amer. 

Fauna, No. 10, p. 92, December 31, 1895. 

(22). Skin and skull. Fort Vancouver, Washington. According to 
labels and record in catalogue. Probably northern Idaho. See 
Merriam, /oc. c/t. Collected by Dr. J. G. Cooper. Northern 
Pacific Railroad Survey. Catalogued April 18, 1855. 

Skin in bad condition, almost broken in two in the middle, anterior portion 
alone showing the hair; feet intact, also tail, which has never been skinned out; 
skull in good condition except for a break in the right occipital region. 

saird’s single specimen is designated by number. 


Sorex nevadensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 71-72, December 51, 1895. 


248°). Skinandskull. Adultmale. Reese River, Nevada. Novem- 
ber 20, 1890 (not November 24, 1890, as in original description). 
Collected by V. Bailey. Original number 2150. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of angular 


processes of mandible. 





SOREX. 247 


Sorex oreopolus Merriam. ~ Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, p. 173, September 29, 1892. 

$3663. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sierra Nevada de Colima, 
Jalisco, Mexico; altitude, 10,000 feet. April 92, 1892. Collected 
by E. W. Nelson. Geteaaal number 2517. 


Well-made skin in good condition, skull perfect. 


Sorex orizabze Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 71, December 31, 1895. 


? 


53633. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Orizaba, Puebia, 
Mexico. April 24, 1898. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original 
number 4733. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull practically complete, although bisected 
in the interorbital region. 


Sorex ornatus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10; pp. 79-80, pl. 8, figs. 3-3a, December 31, 1895. 
$4734. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Emigdio Canyon, Mount 


Pinos, California. October 19,1891. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Original number 1328. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
audital bulla, basioecipital and some adjacent parts. 


Sorex pachyurus Baird. 


Mammals of North America, p. 20, pl. 27, 1857. 
=Sorex richardsoni Bachman. See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 48, 
December, 1895. 

1674. Skeleton, formerly in alcohol. Pembina, North Dakota (not 
Minnesota, as stated by Baird, /oc. e7t.). Collected by Charles 
Cavileer. Catalogued October 23, 1856. 

Skeleton in fair condition; all parts of it seem to be present. 

No type designated by Baird, who mentioned three specimens, the above, in 
alcohol at that time, and two skins, 626 from Pembina, and 638 from Ripley, 
Minnesota. As no, 1674 is figured on pl. 27, it is here considered the type. 


Sorex at Coues. 
Bull. U. 8. Geol. and Geog. Sury., III, p. 650, May 15, 1877. 

3266. Skin with fragment of skull inside. Fort Umpqua, Oregon. 
Received from Dr. E. B. Vollum. Catalogued in March, 18538. 


Skin in poor condition; torn about the mouth so as to expose what teeth are 
present, the unicuspids only; no filling; tail not skinned out; hair everywhere 
intact. 


248 SOREX. 


Sorex (Atophyrax) bendirii palmeri Merriam. Biol. Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 97, pl. 12, figs. 1-8, December 31, 1895. 

88. Skin and skull. Old female. Astoria, Oregon. July 29, 

889. Collected by Dr. T. S. Palmer. Original number 256. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
audital bulla. 


mesg 
24 


3 
2 
1 


Sorex longicauda prevostensis Osgood. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 21, p. 35, September 26, 1901. 

100618. Skin and skull. Adult male. Prevost Island, Queen Char- 
lotte Islands, British Columbia. July 83,1900. Collected by W. H. 
Osgood and E. Heller. Original number 1089. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of left 
audital bulla. 
Sorex pribilofensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 87, pl. 9, figs. 83-3a, December 31, 1895, 
30911. In alcohol. Adult female. St. Paul Island, Pribilof Islands, 
Bering Sea. July 29,1891. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. 
Specimen in good condition; skull not removed, apparently slightly fractured. 
Sorex salvini Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 229, July 15, 1897. 

77035. Skin andskull. Adult female. Calel, Guatemala, 10,200 feet 
altitude. January 12, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 9057. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





Sorex saussurei Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., VII, pp. 173-174, September 29, 1892. 
$3669 Skin and skull. Adult female. Sierra Nevada de Colima, 
Jalisco, Mexico; altitude, 8,000 feet. April 23, 1892. Collected i 
by E. W. Nelson. Original number 2538. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. | 
Sorex sclateri Merriam. Biological Survey collection. | 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 228, July 15, 1897. 

75872. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tumbala, Chiapas, Mexico. 
October 23, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelsonand E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 8567. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Sorex shastensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 16, p. 87, October 28, 1899. 

95450. Skin and skull. Adult. Wagon camp, Mount Shasta, Cali- 
fornia. September 26, 1898. Collected by W. H. Osgood. Orig- 
inal number 317. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


SOREX. 249 
Sorex alascensis shumaginensis Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 18, March 14, 1900. 
—Sorex obscurus shumaginensis (Merriam). See Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, 
No. 24, p. 50, November 23, 1904. 
97993. Skin aud skull. Adult male. Popof Island, Shumagin 
Islands, Alaska. July, 1899. Collected by De Alton Saunders. 
Original number 2210 (Dr. A. K. Fisher). 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
audital bulla. 
Sorex vagrans similis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 5, pp. 34-35, pl. 4, fig. 3, July 30, 1891. 
=Sorex obscurus Merriam. See Merriam, loc. cit., No. 10, pp. 72-73, pl. 8, figs. 
1-la, December 31, 1895. 
23525. Skinandskull. Adult female. 
Mountains, Idaho. August 26, 1890. 
Original number 1670. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken supra- 


Timber Creek, Salmon River 
Collected by Dr. B. H. 


Dutcher, U. 8S. A. 


occipital. 


Sorex sphagnicola Coues. 
Bull. U. S. Geol. and Geog. Surv., ITI, p. 650, May 15, 1877. 
6361. Skin (no skull). Vicinity of Fort Liard, British Columbia, 
Canada. Collected by W. L. Hardisty. Catalogued in April, 
1863. 
Specimen in very poor condition; skin without filling and completely torn in 
two at the middle; both front feet missing; tail and hind feet present. 
Sorex stizodon Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 98, December 51, 1895. 


75885. Skin and skull. Adult female. San Cristobal, Chiapas, 
Mexico. September 25, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and 


EK. A. Goldman. Original number 8473. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Sorex personatus streatori Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 62-63, December 51, 1895. 
73537. Skin and skull. Adult male. Yakutat, Alaska. July 9, 
1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 4674. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
= 


Sorex suckleyi Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 18, pl. 27, No. 1677, 1857. 
—Sorex vagrans Baird. See Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 67, Decem- 
ber 31, 1895. 
1677. Inalcohol. Fort Steilacoom, Puget Sound, Washington. 1856. 
Collected by Dr. George Suckley. Northern Pacitic Kk. Rh. Survey. 
Catalogued October 23, 1856. 


250 SOREX. 


Specimen is in fair condition; some hair has fallen from the back. The skull 
has not been removed (and the skull of a paratype is the one probably figured), 
but the lips have been cut loose and the left cheek split so that all the teeth may 
be seen. 

Baird had seven specimens from four different localities. The description is 


a 


based upon nos, 362 and 1677. As the latter is figured on pl. 27 it is here taken 
as the type. 


Sorex tenellus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 81, pl. 12, figs. 8-9, December 31, 1895. 

239583. Skin and skull. Adult. Summit of Alabama Hills, near 
Lone Pine, California. December 22,1890. Collected by KE. W. 
Nelson. Original number 131. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull complete, but with a large section of 
the brain-case broken away. 


Sorex thompsoni Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 34, pl. 27, No. 1686, 1857. 
=Sorex hoyi Baird. See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 36 and 43, 

December 31, 1895. 

1686. Inalcohol. Burlington, Vermont. Collected by Prof. Zadock 
Thompson. Catalogued October 23, 1856. 

Alcoholic in fair condition; some sloughing of hair about the belly; skull not 
removed, but lips loosened to expose the teeth. 

No type designated. Three specimens listed, the above, and 247 from. Zanes- 
ville, Ohio, and 2062 from Halifax, Nova Scotia. 

As 1686 is figured on pl. 27, it is here regarded as the type. The skull figured 
on the same plate is probably one of the paratypes. 

Sorex trowbridgii Baird. Cotypes. 
Mammals of North America, p. 13, pl. 26, 1857. 
gis. Skin and skull. Astoria, mouth of Columbia River, Oregon. 
Collected by James Wayne. Received from Lieut. W. P. Trow- 
bridge, U.S. A. Skin catalogued July, 1855, skull January, 1857. 

All parts of the skin are present, but it is poorly made up and not in good 
condition. The skull is badly cleaned and more or less broken about the cra- 
nium, andthe right half of the mandible is missing. 

967. Skin (no skull). Same data as the above, with the addition that 
it was collected on June 10, 1855. Catalogued November, 1855. 

The skin of the second cotype is even worse than that of the first. It evi- 
dently contained a skull, which has been removed and lost. 

Baird lists four specimens by number, the above two and two from Steila- 
coom, Washington. From his remarks on page 15 itis clear that the first two form 
the basis of his description. On pl. 26 one of the Oregon specimens is figured 
(see explanation of plates, p. 742). 

Sorex tundrensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, pp. 16-17, March 14, 1900. 
99286. Skin and skull. Adult. St. Michael, Alaska. September 
13, 1899. Collected by W. H. Osgood. Original number 902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


SOREX—TUPAIA. 951 


Sorex vagrans Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 15, pl. 26, No. 1675, 1857. 
1675. In alcohol. Adult male. Shoalwater Bay, Washington. 

Received from Dr. J. G. Cooper. Catalogued October 23, 1856. 
Specimen entirely devoid of hair, otherwise its preservation is good. The 

skull has not been removed (so that the skull of a paratype is probably the one 

that is figured), but the lips have been loosened in order to expose the teeth. 
No type designated. Baird had seven specimens from four different localities. 

The above being figured on pl. 26, is here taken as the type. 


Sorex vancouverensis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, pp. 70-71, December 31, 1895. 
71913. Skinand skull. Adult male. Goldstream, Vancouver Island, 
British Columbia. May 10, 1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. 
Original number 4592. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
2 | 


Sorex obscurus ventralis Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 10, p. 75, December 31, 1895. 

68342. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, 
Mexico. August 26, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and EF. A. 
Goldman. Original number 6636. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of angular 
processes of mandible. 


FAMILY TUPAIID. 
Genus TUPATIA. 


Tupaia ferruginea batamana Lyon. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1502, p. 656, January 16, 1907. 

142151. Skin and skull. Adult female. Senimba Bay, Batam Island, 
Rhio-Linga Archipelago. September 15, 1905. Collected by C. 
Boden Kloss. Original number 2. Catalogued January 8, 1906. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tupaia bunoe Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 229, August 20, 1900. 
101640. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Bunoa, Tambelan Islands, 
South China Sea. August 5, 1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tupaia carimate Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1481, p. 61, July 23, 1906. 
125123. Skin and skull. Adult male. Telok Edar, Karimata Island, 
off west coast of Borneo. September 2, 1904. Collected by Dr. 


952 TUPATA. 


W. L. Abbott. Original number 3716. Catalogued December 8, 
L904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of ascending por- 

tion of left half of mandible, loss of left m!, and a few shot holes in cranium. 
Tupaia castanea Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 54, November 6, 1903. 

115608. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Bintang, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. August 11, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1872. Catalogued December 31, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except that most of the 
ascending portion of right half of mandible is broken away and the last two 
teeth in right half of mandible are missing. 

Tupaia cervicalis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 59, November 6, 1903. 

121754. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, off 
west coast of Sumatra. February 14,1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2294. Catalogued August 1, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tupaia chrysogaster Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 58, pl. 10, fig. 1, November 6, 1903. 
121572. Skinand skull. Adult female. North Pagi Islands, off west 
coast of Sumatra. November 21, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2078. Catalogued July 29, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tupaia chrysomalla Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 232, August 20, 1900. 
101710. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Siantan, Anamba 
Islands, South China Sea. August 24, 1899. Collected by Dr. 4 
W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tupaia discolor Lyon. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 602, December 18, 1906. 
124703. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tanjong Rengsam, island 
of Banka, east of Sumatra. May 24,1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 3262. Catalogued November 29, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tupaia inflata Lyon. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1498, p. 600, December 18, 1906. 
124709. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tanjong Rengsam, island of 
Banka, east of Sumatra. May 20, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 3241. Catalogued November 29, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





TUPAILA—UROGALE. 253 


Tupaia pheura Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 157, June 11, 1902. 

113148. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sinkep Island, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. September 4, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. Li. Abbott. 
Original number 1275. Catalogued February 1, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Tupaia pulonis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 56, November 6, 1905. 

112449. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Aor, off coast of 
Johore. June 7, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Origi- 
nal number 1023. Catalogeued November 13, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tupaia sirhassenensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 133, March 26,-1901. 

104712. Skin and skull. Adult male. Sirhassen Island, Natuna 
Islands. June 5, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Origi- 
nal number 442. Catalogued December 18, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tupaia sordida Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 231, August 20, 1900. 

101747. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Tioman, off south-east 
coast of Malay Peninsula. October 2, 1899. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 20, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Tupaia nicobarica surda Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 774, May 28, 1902. 

111757. Skinandskull. Adultmale. Little Nicobar, Nicobar Islands. 
March 1, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original num- 
ber 899. Catalogued August 12, 1902. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Tupaia tephura Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 57, November 6, 1903. 

121752. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, off 
west coast of Sumatra. February 12,1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2276. Catalogued August 1, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus UROGALE. ° 
Urogale cylindrura Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 435, May 18, 1905. 


125387. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mount Apo, at the Bagobo 
village of Todaya (altitude 4,000 feet), southern Mindanao, Philip- 


254 GALEOPTERUS. 
pine Islands. July 12, 1904. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, 
U.S. A. Original number 5727. Catalogued December 13, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of left my. 


Order DERMOPTERA. 
Family GALEOPTERID.®. 
Genus GALEOPTERUS 


Galeopithecus aoris Miller. 


Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 47, November 6, 1903. 
=Galeopterus aoris (Miller). 


112428. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Aor, off coast of Jo- 
hore. June 8, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 1028. Catalogued November 12, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Galeopithecus gracilis Miller. 


Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 49, pl. 6, fig. 2, November 6, 1903. 
=Galeopterus gracilis (Miller). 


104601. Skin and skull. Adult female. Sirhassen Island, Natuna 
Islands. June 7, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 461. Catalogued December 15, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Galeopithecus natune Miller. 


Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 50, November 6, 1906. 
—Galeopterus natune (Miller). 
104602. Skin and skull. Adult female. Bunguran, Natuna Islands. 
July 16, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 
573. Catalogued December 15, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Galeopithecus pumilus Miller. 


Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 46, pl. 6, fig. 3, November 6, 1903. 
—=Galeopterus pumilus (Miller). 
L04448, Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Adang, Butang Islands, 
off west coast of Malay Peninsula. December 17, 1899. Collected 
e , 57, : 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 165. Catalogued Novem- 
ber 7, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





bo 
qn 
qn 


GALEOPTERUS——CYNOPTERUS. 


Galeopithecus saturatus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 51, pl. 7, figs. 8 and 4; pl. 8, figs. 
3 and 4; pl. 9, figs. 3 and 4, November 6, 1903. 
—Galeopterus saturatus (Miller). 
121750. Skin and skull. Adult female. Tana Bala, Batu Islands, off 
west coast of Sumatra. February 12,1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2278. Catalogued August 1, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Galeopithecus tuancus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 58, November 6, 1903. 

—Galeopterus tuancus (Miller). 

114375. Skin and skull. Adult female. Pulo Tuanku, Banjak 
Islands, west coast of Sumatra. January 22, 1902. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 1454. Catalogued August 28, 
1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Order CHIROPTERA. 
Family PTEROPIDZ:. 
Genus CYNOPTERUS. 


Cynopterus angulatus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, p. 316, July 25, 1898. 

83569. In alcohol, skull not removed. Adult male. Trong (or 
Tarang), lower Siam. 1896. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued April 28, 1897. 


Condition good. 


Cynopterus major Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 62, May 1, 1906. 
141236. Skin and skull. Adult male. Mojeia River, Nias Island, 
off west coast of Sumatra. March 11, 1905. Collected by Dr. 
W.L. Abbott. Original number 4021. Catalogued July 21, 1905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Cynopterus minutus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 63, May 1, 1906. 
141240. Skin and skull. Adult male. Nias Island, off west coast of 
Sumatra. March 11, 1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott 
Original number 4043. Catalogued July 21, 1905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 





256 CY NOPTERUS—NIADIUS—PTEROPUS. 


Cynopterus pagensis Miller, 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XTX, p. 62, May, 1, 1906. 

121581. Skinand skull. Adult female. North Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. November 12, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2028. Catalogued July 30, 1903. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of right 
premaxilla, 


Genus NIADIUS. 


Cynopterus princeps Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 61, May 1, 1906. 
=Niadius princeps (Miller). See Miller, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 83, 
June 4, 1906. 


141235. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mojeia River, Nias Island, 
off west coast of Sumatra. March 10, 1905. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Original. number 4020.  Catalogued July 21, 
L905. 

Well-made skin in good condition, except a bare spot over left thigh; skull 
pertect. 


Genus PTEROPUS. 


Pteropus aldabrensis True. Cotypes. 
Description of a new species of Fruit Bat, Pteropus aldabrensis, from Aldabra 
Island, p. 1, July 14, 1893. Reprinted in Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., X VI, No. 948, 
p. 533, October 21, 1893. 
20984 and 20985, Skins and skulls. Adult males. Aldabra Island, 
northwest of Madagascar. September 26 and October 5, 182. 
Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued June 30, 1893. 


Well-made skins in good condition, except proximal extremities of bones of 


forearm have been cut off, so that measurements of the forearm can not be 
obtained; skulls perfect. 

No type is specified in the original description, but these two specimens are 
mentioned by number and are here regarded as cotypes. 


Pteropus baveanus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XTX, p. 63, May 1, 1906. 

125482. Skin and skull. Adult male. Bawean Island, Java Sea. 
July 19, 1904. Collected by W. Grasshoff. Original number 16. 
Catalogued March 20, 1905. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of two last 
upper molars and both tympanic rings. 


Pteropus cagayanus Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXVIII, No. 1402, p. 433, May 13, 1905. 
125289, Skinandskull. Adult male. Cagayan Sulu Island, near west 
side of the Sulu Sea, Philippine Islands. February 25, 1904. Col- 


PTEROPUS. 257 


lected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. 5. A. Original number 5755. 
Catalogued December 13, 1904. 
Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of tympanics 
and left upper canine. 
Pteropus enganus Miller. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXX, No. 1472, p. 822, June 4, 1906. 

140966. Skinandskull. Adult male. Pulo Dua, Engano Island, west 
of Sumatra. November 4, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 3774. Catalogued July 17, 1905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Pteropus faunulus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 785, May 28, 1902. 

111730. Skin and skull. Adultmale. Car Nicobar, Nicobar Islands. 
January 23, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 864. Catalogued August 12, 1901. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull much damaged by shot, but glued 
together so that practically only the anterior half of the right zygoma is missing. 
Pteropus geminorum Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 60, November 6, 1903. 

104464. Skinand skull. Adultfemale. South Twin Island, Mergui 
Archipelago. January 28, 1900, Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 283. Catalogued November 7, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of tympanic 
rings. 
Pteropus lanensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXVIII, No. 1402, p. 432, May 13, 1905. 

123291. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pantar, near Lake Lanao 
(altitude, 1,907 feet), Mindanao, Philippine Islands. September 7, 
1903. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 
5626. Catalogued January 28, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of tympanics, left 
m®, left pm,, and ms. 
Pteropus lanigera H. Allen. 


Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., XX VIII, p. 70, May 10, 1890. 
=Pteropus insularis Hombron and Jacquinot. See Matschie, Flederm. des Ber- 
liner Mus. fiir Naturk., p. 28, 1899. 


42066. Skin and skull. Said to be from the Samoan Islands, but 


this locality is undoubtedly incorrect. Purchased from Ward’s 
Natural Science Establishment, Rochester, N. Y., bearing No. 4397. 
Catalogued August 21, 1890; skull, November 14, 1899. 

Well-made skin (remade and skull removed in November, 1899) in good con- 


dition. Skull somewhat broken about the foramen magnum; two teeth are 
missing from the mandible. 


45336—08——17 


258 PTEROPUS. 


Dr. H. Allen fails to specify the type by number, but speaks of only one speci- 
men in his description, and that as being in Ward’s Natural Science Establish- 
ment. The specimen was purchased from Ward’s in August, 1890, shortly after 
Doctor Allen’s description appeared. On the original label is written ‘‘ Pteropus 
lanigera sp. nov. Samoa Is.,’’ the italicized part being in Dr. H. Allen’s hand- 
writing. 


Pteropus lepidus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 237, fig. 16, August 20, 1900. 
101670. Skinandskull. Adult female. Kaju Ara, or Saddle Island, 
Tambelan Islands, South China Sea. August 15,1899. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Pteropus niadicus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 64, May 1, 1906. 
141233. Skinand skull. Adult male. Teliwaa, Nias Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. March5,1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 3981. Catalogued July 21, 1905. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except loss of tympanic rings. 


Pteropus samoensis Peale. Cotypes. 
U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 20, 1848. 
This species is based upon material brought back by the U.S. 
Exploring Expedition. No type is designated, and there is nothing 
to show that one specimen is more typical than any other. It is 
inconvenient to regard all the Samoan Pteropus brought back by 
the Expedition as cotypes. Those specimens from Tutuila are 
here regarded as the cotypes of the species, the following quotation 
from the original description seeming to justify this selection: 
**This species was first discovered on the island of Tutuila, and 
subsequently on all the islands of the Samoan group; we obtained 
numerous specimens.” 
The specimens from Tutuila are as follows: 
2'ss's9. Collected by James Gibson. The catalogue, under remarks, 
says: ** Specimen turned over to Dept. Comp. Anat. for exhibition.” 
Only the skull can now be found. It has the posterior part of 
brain-case cut away. Skin catalogued July 30, 1866; skull, Feb- 
ruary 7, 1887. 
gies» Female. Original number 14. Recently made into a modern 
study skin in fair condition and skull removed. Posterior part of 
brain-case cut away, all molars of upper left hand side broken away, 
otherwise skull in good condition. Skin catalogued July 30, 1866; 
skull, February 21, 1900. 
33's. Collected by W. Elliott. Recently made into a modern study 
skin, in fair condition, and skull removed. Skull nearly perfect, 





! 
i 


PTEROPUS—-EMBALLONURA. 259 


both tympanic bones and posterior half of right zygoma missing; 
right half of mandible broken into two portions. Skin catalogued 
July 30, 1866; skull, February 26, 1900. 


Pteropus vociferus Peale. 

U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 19, 1848. 

3961. Skin. Adult male. Island of Mangsi, straits of Balabac. 
Collected by U. S. Exploring Expedition (1838-1842). Original 
number 7. Catalogued May 31, 1860. 

Specimen once mounted and on exhibition, then packed away in storage, but 

taken out March 31, 1902. It is in fair condition for an old specimen, evidently 
bleached. It had no skull inside, nor is there any record of one. 


Peale speaks of but one specimen, a male, and unquestionably it is No. 3961, 
catalogued as Pteropus macklotii Temminck from Mangsi. 


‘amily EMBALLONURID. 
Genus EMBALLONURA. 


Emballonura anambensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 236, fig. 15, August 20, 1900. 

101716. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Pulo Mobur, 
Anamba Islands, South China Sea. August 26, 1899. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 20, 1900. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Emballonura peninsularis Miller. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, p. 323, July 12, 1898. 


83575. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Trong (or Tarang), 
lower Siam. November, 1896. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued April 28, 1897. 


Posterior portion of the brain-case largely broken away; skull otherwise com- 
plete; alcoholic in good condition. 


Vespertilio semicaudatus Peale. 
U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 23, 1848. 
—=Emballonura semicaudata (Peale). 


See Wagner, Suppl. Schreber’s Satigeth., 
V, p. 698, 1855. 


3727. Mummy, dried from alcohol. No skull. Samoan Islands. 
Collected by the U. 8. Exploring Expedition, 1838-42. Cata- 
logued December 20, 1859. 


Skin with wings spread and wing-membranes torn in places. Skin of head 
badly torn and mutilated, probably due to a clumsy extraction of the skull, 
which has been lost. Right ear missing. 

There is very little doubt that the above is the type. The description is based 
upon a single specimen collected by the U. 8. Exploring Expedition from the 
Samoan Islands. 


260 MEGADERMA—LAVIA—RHINOLOPHUS. 


Family MEGADERMIDZ. 
Genus MEGADERMA. 


Megaderma carimatz Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1481, p. 63, July 23, 1906. 

125185. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Tanjong Kari- 
mata Tua, Karimata Island, off west coast of Borneo. August 31, 
1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 38709. 
Catalogued December 9, 1904. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus LAVIA. 
Lavia rex Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, p. 227, December 9, 1905. 
=Lavia frons frons (Geoffroy). See Andersen and Wroughton, Ann. Mag. Nat. 
Hist. (7th ser.), XIX, p. 189, February, 1907. 

18923, Tn alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Taveta, German 
East Africa. 1889. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Alcoholic 
catalogued June 24, 1890; skull, February 18, 1904. 

Aleoholie in good condition; skull badly broken, mandible and rostrum per- 
fect, and three fragments of brain-case present. 


Family RHINOLOPHID. 
Genus RHINOLOPHUS. 


Rhinolophus circe Andersen.“ 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X XIX, No. 1440, p. 657, March 7, 1906. 
141343. In alcohol. Adult male. Pulo Nias, off west coast of Su- 
matra. March 15, 1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Orig- 
inal number 4094. Catalogued July 24, 1905. 


Rhinolophus hirsutus Andersen.“ 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (7th ser.), XVI, p. 289, September, 1905. 
105487. In alcohol. Adult female. Guimaras Island, Philippine 
Islands. December, 1887. Collected by Prof. J. B. Steere. 
Catalogued May 14, 1901. 


Rhinolophus inops Andersen.“ 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (7th ser.), X VI, p. 284, September, 1905. 

125314. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Todaya, Mount 
Apo (4,000 feet), southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. July 
8,1904. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original num- 
ber 5713. Catalogued December 13, 1904. 


“See footnote, page VIII, 


RHINOLOPHUS. 261 


Rhinolophus minutus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 285, August 20, 1900. Preoccupied by Vespertilio 
minutus Montagu. Applied to the British race of Rhinolophus hipposideros. 
(See Andersen, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1905, II, p. 129.) 
=Rhinolophus minutillus Miller. See Proc. Biol. Soe. Wash., XIX, p. 41, Feb- 
ruary 26, 1906. 

101715. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Pulo Siantan, 
Anamba Islands, South China Sea. September, 1899. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 

Alcoholic in good condition; skull in good condition, except posterior portion 
of brain-case much broken, represented by a few small fragments. 
Rhinolophus nereis Andersen.“ 
Proe. Zool. Soc. London, 1905, II, p. 90, October 17, 1905. 

101714. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Pulo Siantan, 
Anamba Islands, South China Sea. September, 1899. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 20, 1900. 


Rhinolophus affinis nesites Andersen. 
Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1905, I], p. 104, October 17, 1905. 

104753. In aleohol. Adult female. Bunguran, Natuna Islands. 
July 24, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued 
December 18, 1900. 


Rhinolophus trifoliatus niasensis Andersen.@ 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X XIX, No. 1440, p. 658, March 7, 1906. 

141350. In alcohol. Adult male. Pulo Nias, off west coast of 
Sumatra. March 15, 1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 4088. Catalogued July 24, 1905. 


Rhinolophus solitarius Andersen.¢ 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (7th ser.), X VI, p. 250, August, 1905. 

124767. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Tanjong Pamuja, 
island of Banka, between Sumatra and Borneo. June 18, 1904. 
Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 3415.  Cata- 
logued December 2, 1904. 


Rhinolophus spadix Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., III, p. 136, March 26, 1901. 

104752. Inalcohol (skull removed). Adultfemale. Sirhassen Island, 
Natuna Islands. June 5, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued December 18, 1900. 


Alcoholic in good condition, right forearm broken; skull perfect. 


Rhinolophus virgo Andersen.?@ 
Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1905, II, p. 88, October 17, 1905. 
101966. In aleohol. Adult female. Southern coast of Luzon, proy- 
ince of South Camarines, Philippine Islands. 1899-1900. Coll- 
lected by L. M. MeCormick. Catalogued February 19, 1900. 








262 HIPPOSIDEROS——CHILON YCTERIS——MORMOOPS. 
Family HIPPOSIDERID®. 
Genus HIPPOSIDEROS. 


Hipposideros barbensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., Il, p. 233, August 20, 1900. 

101625. Skinand skull. Adult male. Ste. Barbe Island, South China 
Sea. August 1,1899. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Catalogued 
January 19, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except posterior portion 
somewhat broken. 


Hipposideros nicobarulz Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 781, May 28, 1902. 

111874. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Little Nicobar, 
Nicobar Islands. March 2, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued August 17, 1901. 

Alcholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Family PHYLLOSTOMID. 
Genus CHILONYCTERIS. 


Chilonycteris mexicana Miller. Biological Survey collection: 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, pp. 401-403, September 12, 1902. 
=Chilonycteris rubiginosa mexicana (Miller). See Rehn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. 
Phila., 1904, p. 203, March 29, 1904. 


89277. Skin and skull. Adult male. San Blas, Tepic, Mexico. 
June 9, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 11132. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


‘Chilonycteris portoricensis Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 400, September 12, 1902. 

102358. Skin and skull. Adult female. Cave near Pueblo Viejo, 
Porto Rico, West Indies. March 19, 1900. Collected by Drs. L. 
Stejneger and C. W. Richmond. Original number *‘G.”  Cata- 
logued June 2, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for loss of right malar. 
Genus MORMOOPS. 


Mormoops intermedia Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 160, October 31, 1900, 

102174. In alcohol (skull not removed). Adult female. Cave at 
Hatto, on the north coast of Curacao, West Indies. April 29, 
1900. Collected by Leon J. Guthrie. Catalogued May 22, 1900. 


Specimen is in ‘‘brown phase” and in fairly good condition; skin broken on 
the back over lumbar vertebrie; skull not removed. 








MICRON YCTERIS—OTOPTERUS—TON ATI A—GLOSSOPHAGA. 263 


Mormoops megalophylla senicula Rehn. 
Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 169, June 11, 1902. 
84801. Skin and skull. Adult female. Fort Clark, Kinney County, 
Texas. December 3, 1897. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. 
Original number 4273. .Catalogued August 23, 1898. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus MIGRONYOTERTS. 


Micronycteris megalotis mexicanus Miller. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, pp. 329-330, July 27, 1898. 
52105. In aleohol (skull not removed). Adult female.  Plantinar, 
Jalisco, Mexico. April4,1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Orig- 
inal number 2389. 


Specimen in good condition; skull not removed. 


Micronycteris microtis Miller. 

Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, p. 328, July 12, 1898. 
46366. Skin and skull. Adult male. Greytown, Nicaragua. Col- 

lected by Dr. L. F. H. Birt. Catalogued February 2, 1889, as an 
alcoholic; skull catalogued April 16, 1889. There is no record 
showing at what time the alcoholic was made into a skin. 

Wing membranes considerably torn, but skin otherwise in good condition 
(see Lyon, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 7th, XVIII, November, 1906, p. 371); 
skull perfect. 

Genus OTOPTERUS. 
Macrotus californicus Baird. See page 290. 
Genus TONATIA. 


Lophostoma venezuelz Robinson and Lyon. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1246, p. 154, October 3, 1901. 
=Tonatia venezuele (Robinson and Lyon). See Lyon, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., 
XV, p. 248, December 16, 1902. 

102919. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Macuto, 8 miles 
east of La Guaira, Venezuela. August 4, 1900. Collected by Dr. 
M. W. Lyon, jr., and Major Wirt Robinson, U.S. A. Original 
number 199. Catalogued September 24, 1900. 

Alcoholic in good condition, except for a small bare patch on back; skull 
perfect. 
Genus GLOSSOPHAGA. 
Glossophaga elongata Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 124, April 6, 1900. 

101871. Skin and skull. Adult female. Willemstad, Curacao, West 
Indies. December 4, 1899. Collected by Leon J. Guthrie. Cata- 
logued January 3f, 1900. 

The specimen was originally preserved in forinalin, but on February 27, 1900, 
was made into a study skin, in good condition; skull perfect. 





264 GLOSSOPHAG A—MONOPHYLLUS. 
Glossophaga mutica Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XII, pp. 18-19, January 27, 1898. 

89271. Skin and skull. Adult male. Maria Madre Island, Tres 
Marias Islands, Mexico. May 8, 1897. Collected by E. W. 
Nelson and E. A. Goldman. Original number 10976. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Glossophaga villosa H. Allen. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XVIII No. 1100, p. 779, October 27, 1896. Preoccupied 

by Glossophaga villosa Rengger, Naturgesch, Siiugeth. Paraguay, p. 80, 1830. 

=Glossophaga truei H. Allen, Science, new ser., V, p. 153, January 22, 1897. 

gys'3- Skin in alcohol, and skull. The specimen has no original 
label, and bears only a small tag ae 9523, which cor responds 
in the catalogue to a small bat, ** Vespert//io,” marked in the origi- 
nal catalogue as coming from ‘‘Guyana, Venezuela.” No other 
data are given. It was catalog ued some time between February 12, 
and March 17, 1870; skull, April 21, 1898. Dr. H. Allen, in his 
description of Glossophaga villosa, says that the locality is probably 
La Guayra, Venezuela. This mistake was probably made by his 
referring to the copied volume of the original catalogue, where 
the locality is given as ‘‘ Guyara, Venezuela,” which might be taken 
to mean La Guayra; but in the original catalogue itself the writ- 
ing is quite plainly ‘*Guyana, Venezuela.” Whether the locality 
in the catalogue is meant to be the eastern end of Venezuela bor- 
dering on Guiana or in the old spelling, Guyana, or whether it 
means that the specimen came from the general region of Vene- 
zuela and Guiana, itis impossible to say. A second specimen which 
Dr. H. Allen had, No. 9524, has no data whatever, and it may or 
may not have come from the same locality. 

Skin in alcohol in good condition, skull with left posterior basal portion and 
zygoma broken away. The type is designated by number, ‘‘9522,’’ an error 
for 9523. 

Genus MONOPHYLLUS. 
Monophyllus clinedaphus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 36, March 30, 1900. 
3770's. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Specimen me no 
history. Alcoholic catalogued October 80, 1861; skull May 2, 1898. 
Alcoholic in good condition; skull with right zygoma missing and right con- 
dyloid process of mandible broken. 
Monophyllus cubanus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 410, September 12, 1902. 
113674. Skin and skull. Adult male. Baracoa, eastern Cuba, West 
Indies. February 6, 1902. Collected by W allie Palmer. Original 
number 645. Catalogued April 17, 1902. 


Well-raade skin in good condition; skull perfect, except slight break in left 
zygoma. 





A. 


hs i ara alee i 


MONOPHYLLUS—-LEPTON YCOTERIS—-HEMIDERMA. 265 


Monophyllus lucie Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 411, September 12, 1902. 

106095. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Santa Lucia 
Island, West Indies. February 4, 1901. Collected by H. Selwyn 
Branch. Catalogued June 25, 1901. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Monophyllus plethodon Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 85, March 30, 1900. 

101530. In alcohol (skull removed). “Adult male. St. Michael’s 
Parish, Barbados, West Indies. August, 1899. Collected by P. 
McDonough. Catalogued January 2, 1900. 

Alcoholic in good condition; skull somewhat injured, both zygomata incom- 
plete, bullze detached, but present. 


Monophyllus portoricensis Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 34, March 30, 1900. 

86261. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Cave near Baya- 
mon, Porto Rico. January 18, 1899. Collected by Paul Beck- 
with. Catalogued March 16, 1899. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus LE PEON YCTLTERIS: 


Leptonycteris curasoz Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 126, April 6, 1900. 

101851. In aleohol (skull removed). Adult male. Willemstad, 
Curagao, West Indies. November to December, 1899. Collected 
by Leon J. Guthrie. Catalogued January 31, 1900. 

Considerable hair has sloughed from alcoholic and viscera are soft; skull 
perfect. 
Genus HEMIDERMA. 
Carollia castanea H. Allen. 
Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., XXVIII, p. 19, February 25, 1890. 
—Hemiderma castaneum (H. Allen). See Millerand Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. 
Hist., XXX, p. 283, December 27, 1901. 
42244. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Costa Rica. 
Probably 1876. Collected by José C. Zeledon. Alcoholic cata- 
logued June 23, 1878; skull, November 11, 1893. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Hemiderma subrufum Hahn. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VIII, pp. 247-248, December 9, 1905. 
75127. Skinand skull. AduJtmale. Santa Ifigenia, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
July 29, 1895. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
igerenal number 8235. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for broken zygomata. 


266 BRACHYPHYLLA—URODERMA—VAMPYEOPS—EOTOPHYLLA. 


Hemiderma tricolor Miller. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 408, September 12, 1902. 
—=Hemiderma perspicillatum (Linnzeus). See Hahn, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 
XXXII, No. 1514, p. 108, February 9, 1907. 


114005. Skinand skull. Adult female. Cave at Sapucay, Paraguay. 
December 5, 1901. Collected by William T. Foster. Original 
number 589. Catalogued May 10, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


? 


Genus BRACHYPHYLLA. 


Brachyphylla nana Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 409, September 12, 1902. 

103828. Skull. Adult. Taken from pellets of Cuban Barn Owl, El 
Guama, Cuba. March 10, 1900. Collected by William Palmer 
and J. H. Riley. Original number 108. Catalogued October 13, 
1900. 

No lower jaw present; all the teeth missing except the first molar on each 
side; posterior right-hand part of brain-case broken away. 


Genus URODERMA. 


Uroderma convexum Lyon. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 83, April 25, 1902. 
111722. In alcohol (skull removed). Young adult female. Colon, 
Panama. May 28, 1901. Collected by J. W. Humphreys. 
Catalogued July 30, 1901. 


Alcoholic im good condition, but rather shrunken from action of formalin and 
subsequent drying; skull somewhat damaged about the foramen magnum, 
especially to the right of it. 


Genus VAMPYROPS. 


Vampyrops fumosus Miller. 
Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 405, September 12, 1902. 

105530. Skin and skull. Adult female. Hyutanaham, Purus River, 
Brazil. March 24,1901. Collected by Prof. J. B. Steere. Origi- 
nal number 83. Catalogued May 15, 1901. 

Well-made skin in good condition; most of the skull posterior to the roots of 
the zygomata broken away, anterior parts perfect. 


Genus ECTOPHYLLA. 


Ectophylla alba H. Allen. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XV, No. 913, p. 442, October 26, 1892. 
15950. Skin (without skull) preserved in alcohol. Segovia River,. 
eastern Honduras. July 1, 1887. Collected by C. H. Townsend. 
Original number 313. Catalogued November 10, 1887. 


Specimen in good condition except for some mutilation about the lower lip. 





ARTIBEUS. 267 


No type designated. Dr. H. Allen had but one specimen, readily seen to be 
the above from his opening paragraph, where he speaks of its condition, locality, 
etc. He says, ‘‘believed to be from the vicinity of the Segovia River, eastern 
Honduras.’”’ A note from Mr. C. H. Townsend of February 1, 1902, who has 
referred to No. 313 in his catalogue, writes, ‘‘ No. 313 (bat) was killed July 1/8 
on Segovia R.”? Evidently a slip of the pen for ’87, as the specimen was cata- 
logued November 10, 1887. 


Genus ARTIBEUS. 


Artibeus aztecus Andersen. Biological Survey collection. 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 7th ser., X VIII, p. 422, December, 1906. 


52050. Skin and skull. Adult male. Tetela del Volean, Morelos, 
Mexico. February 12, 1893. Collected by E. W. Nelson. 
Artibeus hirsutus Andersen.@ Biological Survey collection. 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 7th ser., X VIII, pp. 420-421, December, 1906. 
126449. Skin and skull. Adult male. La Salada, Michoacan, Mex- 
ico. May 22, 1908. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Gold- 
man. Original number 16168. 


Dermanura pheotis Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 405, September 12, 1902. 
=Artibeus phzotis (Miller). See Miller, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 57, p. 161, June 
29, 1907. 
108176. Skin and skull. Adult female. Chichenitza, Yucatan, Mex- 
ico. February 10, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 14537. 


Well-made skin, with epidermis about joints of wings and feet damaged by in- 
sects; skull perfect. 


Artibeus jamaicensis preceps Andersen.@ 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 7th ser., X VIII, p. 421, December, 1906. 
115503. In alcohol. Adult male. Guadeloupe, West Indies. Jan- 
uary 22, 1902. Collected by H. Selwyn Branch. Catalogued 
April 12, 1902. 


Dermanura rava Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 404, September 12, 1902. 
=Artibeus ravus (Miller). See Miller, Bull. U.8. Nat. Mus., No. 57, p. 162, June 
29, 1907. 
113338. Skinand skull. Adult male. San Javier, northern Ecuador. 
August 10, 1900. Collected by G. Flemming. Original number 
12. Catalogued March 3, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


“See footnote, page vir. 


268 ARDOPS—CENTURIO—EROPHYLLA. 
Genus ARDOPS. 


Stenoderma lucie Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 407, September 12, 1902. 
=Ardops lucie (Miller). See Miller, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 84, 
June 4, 1906. 
110921. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Santa Lucia 
Island, West Indies. February 4, 1901. Collected by H. Selwyn 
Branch. Catalogued June 26, 1901. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus CENTURIO. 


Centurio mcemurtrii H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1861, p. 360, ordered published November 26, 1861. 

=Centurio senex (Gray). See Rehn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1901, p. 297, 

June 8, 1901. 

3289,. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Mirador, Vera 
Cruz, Mexico. Collected by Dr. C. Sartorius. Catalogued in 
1865; skull, November 14, 1899. 

Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 
Type not designated by number, but see Rehn, loc. cit. 


Genus EROPHYLLA. 


Phyllonycteris bombifrons Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 36, May 29, 1899. 
=Erophylla bombifrons (Miller). See Miller, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, p. 
84, June 4, 1906. 

86274. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. In a limestone 
cave near Bayamon, San Juan Province, Porto Rico, West Indies. 
January 18, 1899. Collected by Paul Beckwith. Catalogued 
March 16, 1899. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Phyllonycteris planifrons Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 34, May 29, 1899. 
=Erophylla planifrons (Miller). See Miller, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XTX, p. 84, 
; June 4, 1906. 
62517. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Nassau, New 
Providence, Bahama Islands. March 18, 1886. Collected by Dr. 
James E. Benedict. Catalogued July 13, 1895. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


a ee eee eee 


Se oe rl 7 


NATALUS—PHODOTES—CHILONATALUS. 269 


Family NATALIDZ. 


Genus NATALUS. 

Natalus major Miller. 

Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 398, September 12, 1902. 

101395. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Savaneta, Santo 
Domingo, West Indies. Collected by Prof. W. M. Gabb. — Cata- 
logued November 3, 1899. Received in exchange from Academy 
of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 


Aleoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Natalus mexicanus Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, pp. 899-400, September 12, 1902. 

96496. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Santa Anita, 
Lower California, Mexico. July or August, 1897. Collected by 
J. F. Abbott. Original number 1953x. 


Specimen in good condition; skull perfect, except for slightly fractured brain- 
case. 
Genus: PHODOTES:. 


Natalus tumidirostris Miller. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 160, October 31, 1900. 
=Phodotes tumidirostris (Miller). See Miller, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIX, 
p- 85, June 4, 1906. 


102106. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Ina cave at Hatto, 
north side of Curacao, West Indies. May 1, 1900. Collected by 
Leon J. Guthrie. Catalogued May 22, 1900. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect, except right tympanic bone missing. 
Genus CHILONATALUS. 


Natalus (Chilonatalus) brevimanus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, p. 328, July 12, 1898. 
=Chilonatalus brevimanus (Miller). See Miller, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XVI, 
p- 119, September 30, 1903. 
15835. Inalcohol (skull not removed). Adult male. Old Providence 
Island, Caribbean Sea. Collected by C. B. Cory. Catalogued May 
25, 1887. 


Specimen in good condition; skull not taken out. 


Chilonatalus tumidifrons Miller. 
Proc. Biol Soc. Wash., X VI, p. 119, September 30, 1903. 
122024. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Watling Island, 
Bahama Islands. July 12, 1903. Collected by J. H. Riley. 
Original number 157. Catalogued August 19, 1903. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


270 MYOTIS. 


Family VESPERTILIONID 2. 
Genus MYOTIS. 


Vespertilio affinis H. Allen. 


Monograph Bats of North America, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., No. 165, p. 53, 
June, 1864. 
=Myotis lucifugus (Le Conte). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, p. 20, 
October 16, 1897. 

5342. In alcohol (skull removed and lost). Adult female. Fort 
Smith, Arkansas. Collected by Dr. G. G. Shumard. Cata- 
Jogued October 30, 1861. 

Specimen in fair condition; all the hair of belly and lower back has slipped 
off; skull lost. 
Species based on one specimen, the above, designated by number. 


Myotis lucifugus alascensis Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, pp. 63-64, fig. 13d, October 16, 1897. 

77416. Inalcohol (skull not removed). Adult female. Sitka, Alaska. 
August 5, 1895. Collected by C. P. Streator. Original number 
4754, 


Specimen in good condition; skull not removed. 


Myotis carimate Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1481, p. 62, July 23, 1906. 

125154. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Telok Edar, 
Karimata Island, off west coast of Borneo, August 28, 1904. Col- 
lected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 3673. Catalogued 
December 9, 1904. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Myotis californicus caurinus Miller. Biological survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, p. 72, October 16, 1897. 

72219. Inalcohol (skull not removed). Adult male. Massett, Graham 
Island, Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia. 1895.  Col- 
lected by Rev. J. H. Keen. 


Specimen in good condition, except for slight injury to abdomen; skull not 
removed, 


Myotis dominicensis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 243, December 16, 1902. | 
113564. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Dominica, West 
Indies. July 20, 1901. Collected by H. Selwyn Branch. Cata- 
logued April 12, 1902. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 





. 
| 


MYOTIS. 271 


Vespertilio subulatus keenii Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Amer. Nat., X XIX, pp. 860-861, September 1, 1895. 
=Myotis subulatus keenii (Merriam). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, 
p- 77, October 16, 1897. 
72922. Inalcohol (skull not removed). Adult female. Massett, Gra- 
ham Island, Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia. Summer, 
1894. Collected by Rev. J. H. Keen. 


Specimen in good condition; skull not removed. 


Myotis longicrus True. 
Science, VIII, p. 588, December 24, 1886. 
=Myotis lucifugus longicrus (True). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, 
p- 64, October 16, 1897. 
$3933. In alcohol (skull removed). Young adult female. Region 


of Puget Sound. Collected by Dr. D. S. Jordan. Catalogued 
December 16, 1886. 


The hair has slipped off from the lower dorsal and ventral regions and the 
skin has been incised along the midventral line to permit removal of skull; skull 
periect. 

Type not designated by number. The description implies but a single speci- 
men, unquestionably the above. The word ‘‘ Type”’ is written in the ‘‘remarks”’ 
column of the catalogue. 


Vespertilio macropus H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 288, ordered published August 28, 1866. 
= Myotis yumanensis (H. Allen). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, pp. 

66 and 67, October 16, 1897. 

84549. Skin without skull. Adult male. Colorado River, near Fort 
Mohave, Arizona. November 1, 1866. Collected by Dr. Elliott 
Coues. Catalogued April 21, 1898. 

Specimen a flat skin with expanded wings and much of the membrane between 
the fingers broken out. 

The specimen bears the following label: Private collection. Expl. in Rocky 
Mts. Dr. Elliott Coues U. 8. A. [in print] V. macropus. Noy. Typg [in what 
seems to be Dr. H. Allen’s handwriting]. Near Fort Mojave, Colorado R., Nov. 
1, 1866 [in what seems to be Doctor Coues’s handwriting].’? Mojave is so writ- 
ten that it resembles Majaor as given in the original description. The above 
label agrees in every respect with the data given by Dr. H. Allen in the original 
desc.iption of the single specimen that he had. It was found in the Museum 
collecion unnumbered, and was catalogued as No. 84549, April 21, 1898. 


Vespertilio melanorhinus Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 3, pp. 46-47, September 4, 1890. 
=Myotis californicus (Audubon and Bachman). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, 
No. 13, p. 69, October 16, 1897. 
18684. In alcohol (skull not removed). Adult male. San Francisco 
Mountain, Arizona. August 4, 1889. Collected by Dr. C. H. 
Merriam and V. Bailey. Original number 275. 


Specimen in good condition; skull not removed, 


272 MYOTIS. 


Myotis nesopolus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 123, April 6, 1900. 


101849. Skin and skull. Adult male. Punda, Curacao, West Indies. 
November 4, 1899. Collected by Leon J. Guthrie. Catalogued 
January 31, 1900. 


Specimen cmginally preserved entire in formalin, but made into a dry skin 
on February 8, 1900. 
Well-made skin, in good condition; skull perfect. 


Vespertilio nitidus H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1862, p. 247, ordered published April 29, 1862. 
= Myotis californicus (Audubon and Bachman). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, 

No. 13, p. 69, October 16, 1897. 

23; Skinand skull. Adult. Fort Steilacoom, Puget Sound, Wash- 
aa toe Collected by Dr. George Suckley, ‘SN. Pacific R. R. 
Survey, Gov. I. I. Stevens.” First catalogued February 26, 1855; 
again catalogued October 31, 1861, as No. 5447. 

The specimen is a skin almost falling to pieces, made up with wings expanded. 
Skull has lost right tympanic bone, most of right zygoma, and left half of 
mandible. Parts of occipital about foramen magnum have been broken away. 

No type designated. A table of measurements accompanies the original 
description and five specimens are mentioned. Measurements of these five 
specimens are given in Allen’s Monograph of Bats of North America, p. 61, 
1865. There it is readily seen that the measurements given in the Oriental 
description are not those of the average of the original five specimens, nor do 
they agree with those of any particular one, but they more nearly represent 
the measurements of No. 523 than they do any of the others. For that reason 
No. 523 is here regarded as the type. It may be contended, however, that 1981 
being the first mentioned in the original description should be taken as the type; 
but No. 1981 apparently was an alcoholic and the original description is evidently 
based upon askin and skull. Moreover, the greater number of the specimens, 
four, came from Fort Steilacoom, and these should be taken to represent the 
species better. Of the original five specimens, the type, No. 523, No, 522, a 
skin, and skulls, 49/7 and 1594, seem to be the only ones extant. 


Vespertilio obscurus H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 281, ordered published August 26, 1866. 
—Myotis californicus (Audubon and Bachman). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, 
No. 13, p. 69, October 16, 1897. 
8223. In alcohol (skull not removed). Adult male. Lower Calitor- 
nia, Mexico. Collected by John Xantus. Catalogued in 1865. 
Left wing lacking entirely and only the bones of the right wing remaining. 
The rest of the specimen is in good condition. 


Vespertilio oregonensis H. Allen. Cotypes. 


Monograph Bats North America, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., No. 165, p. 61, June, 
1864. 
—Myotis californicus (Audubon and Bachman). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, 
No. 13, p. 69, October 16, 1897. 


Four cotypes. See Miller, doc cit., p. 33. 


MYOTIS. 273 


5402. Catalogued earlier as No. 4977. Inalcohol. Male. Cape St. 
Lucas, Lower California, Mexico. Collected by John Xantus. 
Original number 3895. Catalogued May 31 and later October, 1861. 
Can not be found. 

5405. In alcohol. Female. Fort Yuma, California. Collected by 
Maj. G. H. Thomas, U. 8. A. Catalogued October 31, 1861. 
Specimen can not be found. 

5537. Inalcohol. Male. Fort Yuma, California. Collected by Maj. 
G. H. Thomas U.S. A. Catalogued February 6, 1862. Specimen 
can not be found. 

geste; Catalogued earlier as No. 4740. Labeled ‘* Vespertilio oregon- 
ensis U. States Major Le Conte.” Catalogued April 13, and No- 
vember 1, 1861; skull, March 2, 1898. 

A mummified skin with wings spread out, in rather poor condition. Skull 
with zygomata broken and injured about foramen magnum and left otic region. 


Myotis californicus pallidus Stephens. Biol. Surv. Coll. See p. 291. 


Myotis yumanensis saturatus Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, pp. 68-69, October 16, 1897. 
$7399. Skin and skull. Adult male. Hamilton, Washington. Sep- 
tember 13,1889. Collected by Dr. T.S. Palmer. Original number 
392. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Vespertilio tenuidorsalis H. Allen. See p. 291. 


Myotis thysanodes Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, pp. 80-85, pl. 1, fig. 5; pl. 11, fig. 5; figs. 11b, 126, 
15d, 16-17 in text, October 16, 1897. 
29827. In alcohol (skull not removed). Adult female. Fort Tejon, 
California. July 5, 1891. Collected by Dr. T.S. Palmer. Origi- 
nal number 235. 


Specimen in good condition; skull not removed. 


Vespertilio volans H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 282, ordered published August 28, 1866. 
= Myotis californicus (Audubon and Bachman). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, 
No. 13, p. 69, October 16, 1897. 
3°'3'35,. In alcohol (lost), and skull. Cape St. Lucas, Lower Cali- 
fornia, Mexico. Collected by John Xantus. Catalogued October 
31, 1861; skull, March 1, 1898. 
The alcoholic specimen can not be found; skull perfect. 
Dr. H. Allen had but one specimen, designated by number. 


Vespertilio yumanensis H. Allen. Cotypes. See page 291. 
45336—08——18 


274 PIPISTRELLUS. 


Genus PIPISTRELLUS. 


Pipistrellus hesperus australis Miller. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, p. 90, October 16, 1897. ; | 

52112. In alcohol (skull not removed). Adult female. Barranca 
Ibarra, Jalisco, Mexico. May 14, 1892, Collected by E. W. 
Nelson. Original number 2614. 

Specimen in fair condition; viscera protruding and somewhat mutilated; right 
humerus broken; skull not removed. 
Pipistrellus camorte Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 779, May 28, 1902. 

111897. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Kamorta, Nico- 
bar Islands. February 12, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued August 17, 1901. 

Alcoholic in good condition; skull slightly injured just above the foramen 
magnum. 
Pipistrellus cinnamomeus Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, pp. 390-392, September 12, 1902. 

100231. Skin and skull. Adult female. Montecristo, Tabasco, 
Mexico. May 4, 1900. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 14136. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Scotophilus hesperus H. Allen. 


Monograph North American Bats, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., No. 165, p. 48, 

June, 1864. 
=Pipistrellus hesperus (H. Allen). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, 

p. 88, October 16, 1897. 

aitfes- In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Old Fort Yuma, 
San Diego County, California. 1855. Collected by Maj. G. H. 
Thomas, U.S. A. Catalogued October 31, 1861; skull, May 3, 1898. 

Hair on lower back and belly sloughed off; otherwise alcoholic in good con- 
dition; skull with central part of each zygoma broken out, right orbital region 
and right side of rostrum injured. 

This specimen may be considered as the type because it is the first one men- 
tioned in the list of three individuals that Dr. H. Allen gives, and the only alco- 
holic among them. Miller [North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, p. 88] has definitely 
chosen the above specimen as the type. Again, Miller and Rehn [Proc. Bost. 
Soc. Nat. Hist., XXX, p. 259] regard Old Fort Yuma, California, as the type- 
locality. The other two of the original three specimens Nos. 5509 and 5910, 
came from Poso Creek, Kern County, California, and are dry skins. 


Pipistrellus minusculus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I], p. 647, fig. 48, December 28, 1900. 

84500. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Mount Coffee, 
Liberia, West Africa. May, 1894. Collected by O. F. Cook. 
Catalogued April 11, 1898. 


Alcoholic in good condition except for an area of sloughed hair on back; skull 
perfect. 


PIPISTRELLUS—EPTESICUS—NYCTICEIUS. 275 


Pipistrellus subflavus obscurus Miller. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, p. 98, October 16, 1897. 

67723. Skin and skull. Adult female. Lake George, Warren 
County, New York. September 6, 1894. Collected by Dr. W. K. 
Fisher. Original number 198. 

Well made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of poste- 
rior portion of left mandibular ramus. 


Pipistrellus subulidens Miller. 
Proce. Wash. Acad. Sci., II, p. 184, March 26, 1901. 

104758. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Sirhassen 
Island, Natuna Islands. June 3, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Catalogued December 18, 1900. 


Aleoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus EPTESICUS. 


Vespertilio fuscus bahamensis Miller. Biological Survey coll. 


North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, pp. 101-102, figs. 24a, 25a, 266, October 16, 1897. 
=Eptesicus fuscus bahamensis (Miller). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Bost. Soe. 
Nat. Hist., XXX, p. 260, December, 1901. 

76537. In alcohol (skull not removed). Adult male. Nassau, New 
Providence, Bahama Islands. Spring, 1894. Collected by C. J. 
Maynard. 

Specimen in good condition; skull not removed. 
Scotophilus miradorensis H. Allen. See page 291. 


Genus NYCTICEHIUS: 


Nycticea crepuscularis Le Conte. Cotypes. 
M’ Murtrie’s Cuvier, Animal Kingdom, I, p. 432, 1831. 
=Nycticeius humeralis (Rafinesque). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 13 

p- 24, October 16, 1897. 

4735 and 4736: Skins with skulls inside. ‘* U. States, Maj. Le Conte.” 
Catalogued April 13, 1861. 

Specimens in poor condition. 

These specimens are regarded as cotypes, more from tradition than anything 
else. There is nothing in the early description to show that they are cotypes. 
They were presented to the Museum years ago by Major Le Conte as typical, or 
perhaps as original specimens. The specimens bear two old labels each, one 
marked ‘‘Crepuscularis,”’ the other ‘ Vespertilio ‘crepuscularis,’’’ each in dif- 
ferent handwriting. The latter is probably Secretary Baird’s handwriting and 
seems to be identical with that of the entry in the catalogue. 


’ 


276 RHOGEESSA—LASIURUS. 


Genus RHOGEESSA. 


Rhogeéssa gracilis Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, pp. 126-128, pl. 1, figs. 7, 12; text fig. 40b, October 16, 
1897. 


70694. In alcohol. Adult male. Piaxtla, Puebla, Mexico. Novem- 
ber 24, 1894. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 7099. 


Specimen in fair condition; right humerus and ulna broken; skull attached 
to body, but separated from skin. 


Rhogeéssa minutilla Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 189, May 13, 1897. 


63216. Skin with skull. Adult male. Margarita Island, Venezuela. 
July 8, 1895. Collected by Maj. Wirt Robinson, U.S. A. Orig- 
inal number 463. Catalogued March 25, 1896. 

Skin in good condition. Skull with zygomata broken away; audital bulle 
missing and posterior basal portion injured. 


Rhogeéssa parvula H. Allen. See page 292. 


Rhogeéssa tumida H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 286, ordered published August 28, 1866. 
84021. Skull. Adult male. Mirador, Vera Cruz, Mexico. Collected 
by Col. A. J. Grayson, U.S. A. Catalogued March 1, 1898. 
The skin is said to be in alcohol, but can not be found; skull complete except 
for the loss of both malar bones. 
The specimen is accompanied by these two notes signed G. 8. M. [iller], jr. 
“Tn the orig. descr. the number of this sp. is said to be 8195. This is an error. 
[This number in the Museum catalogues does not refer to a bat; it may be an 
original number.| Specimen recatalogued 3.1.98.” 
“There is no doubt that this is the type skull. It was returned by H. A.|Ilen] 
with no. given in orig. deser.”’ 


Genus LASIURUS. 


Atalapha semota H. Allen. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XIII, No. 807, p. 173, September 9, 1890. 

—Lasiurus semota (H. Allen). See Miller, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 57, p. 222, 

June 29, 1907. 

15631. In alcohol (skull not removed). Adult female. Hawaiian 
Islands. Collected by Valdemar Knudsen. Catalogued January 
4, 1887. 

Specimen in good condition. 

No type designated. The above specimen is selected as the type, because a 
great part of the description is based upon it. A table of measurements is given 
of it; it heads the list of nine specimens, is the first specimen mentioned by 
Dr. H. Allen, and it is the only one that he considers a “‘ perfect adult specimen.” 


e 





LASIURUS—DASYPTERUS—CORYNORHINUS—KERIVOULA. 277 


Atalapha teliotis H. Allen. 
Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., X XIX, p. 5, April 10, 1891. 
=Lasiurus borealis teliotis (H. Allen). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, 

p- 110, October 16, 1897. 

84555. In alcohol (skull removed and lost). Probably from the south- 
ern part of California. Sent to Dr. H. Allen by Dr. J. G. Cooper, 
of the California Academy of Sciences. It was not catalogued until 
April 27, 1898. 

As Dr. H. Allen remarks in the original description, the specimen is in poor 
condition. The skin of the head has been split open in order to take out the 
skull; most of the hair has sloughed from the back. 

No type designated. It was unique at the time of the description. The above 
has always been regarded as the specimen that Dr. H. Allen had and answers to 
his description in so far as condition is concerned. It bears an original label 
marked ‘‘Atalapha teliotis, Cal. Acad. U. 8.” 


Genus DASYPTERUS. 


Dasypterus floridanus Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 392, issued September 12, 1902. 
111379. Skin and skull. Adult female. Lake Kissimmee, Florida. 
March 28, 1901. Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Orig- 
inal number 5183. Catalogued June 28, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 
Lasiurus intermedius H. Allen. See page 292, 
Genus CORYNORHINUS. 


Corynorhinus macrotis pallescens Miller. Biological Survey coll. 
North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, pp. 52-53, pl. 11, fig. 2; fig. 10 in text, October 16, 
1897. 

66534 (not 65534, as in original description). Skin and skull. Adult 
female. Keam Canyon, Navajo County, Arizona. August 3, 1894. 
Collected by Dr. A. K. Fisher. Original number 1715. 

Well-made skin in good condition. Skull in four fragments, the largest includ- 
ing part of the frontals and the right parietal, two fragments of maxillaries 
bearing three and five teeth, respectively, left mandibular ramus intact. 


Genus KERIVOULA. 


Kerivoula depressa Miller. 

Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XTX, p. 64, May 1, 1906. 

ii: In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Biapo, Carin 
Hills, northeast Tounghoo, southern Burma. Collected by L. Fea. 
Original number 29. Catalogued May 2, 1890; skull, February 4, 
1904. 


Alcoholic, in good condition; skull perfect. 


18 
38 


278 KERIVOULA—PHONISCUS—ANTROZOUS. 


Kerivoula engana Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXX, No. 1472, p. 825, June 4, 1906. 

141020. In alcohol (skullremoved). Adult male. Pulo Dua, Engano 
Island, west coast of Sumatra. November 3, 1904. Collected by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 3766. Catalogued July 19, 
1905. 


Alcoholic, in good condition; skull perfect. 


Kerivoula minuta Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1898, p. 321, July 12, 1898. 

83547. Inalcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Trong (or Tarang), 
lower Siam. September, 1896. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Catalogued April 28, 1897. 


Alcoholic, in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus PHONISCUS. 


Phoniscus atrox Miller. 
Proce. Biol. Soc. Wash., X VITI, December 9, 1905, p. 230. 

123141. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult female. Vicinity of the 
Kateman River, eastern Sumatra. September 9, 1903. Collected 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 2781. Catalogued Jan- 
uary 24, 1904. 


Alcoholic, in good condition; skull perfect. 
Genus ANTROZOUS. 


Antrozous minor Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, pp. 889-390, September 12, 1902. 
79096. Skin and skull. Comondu, Lower California, Mexico. Sep- 
tember 20, 1895. Collected by J. E. McLellan. 

Well-made skin in good condition, except for slight mutilation of border of 
interfemoral membrane. Skull lacks entire basal portion of brain-case, other- 
wise perfect. 

Antrozous pallidus pacificus Merriam. Biological Survey coll. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XI, p. 180, July 1, 1897. 
29815. In alcohol (skull not removed). Adult female. Fort Tejon, 
California. June 28, 1891. Collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. 
Original number 208. 


Specimen in fair condition; hairs on back slipping; skull not removed. 


Vespertilio pallidus Le Conte. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VII, p. 437, this paper was reported favorably for 
publication December 25, 1855. 
=Antrozous pallidus (Le Conte). See H. Allen, Monograph Bats of North Amer- 
ica, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., No. 165, p. 68, June, 1864. 
152 and 5467. Skin without skull. El Paso, Texas, 1851. Collected 
by J. H. Clark during the U.S. and Mexican Boundary Survey. 


NYOCTINOMUS. 279 


The specimen is entered in the Museum catalogue twice: First on 
May 19, 1853, as No. 152, and having skull No. 1134, which is now 
lost. This entry was made as a deposit, ‘‘ Dep.” Second as No. 
5457, with original number marked 152 and no skull number indi- 
cated; column for date marked ‘‘ 8-11.34 (4).” 

Specimen in good condition, recently made into a modern study skin. 

Dr. Harrison Allen, Joc cit., p. 69, in second table, regarded this specimen as 
the type. Baird, U. 8. and Mexican Boundary Survey, Report, II, 1859, p. 5, 
writes ‘‘the one described by Major Le Conte was taken at El Paso.’’ 


‘Family MOLOSSIDZE. 
Genus NYCTINOMUS. 


Nyctinomus antillularum Miller. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 398, September 12, 1902. 
113188. In alcohol (skull removed). Adult male. Roseau, Dominica, 
West Indies. August 5, 1901. Collected by H. Selwyn Branch. 
Catalogued February 6, 1902. 


Aleoholie in good condition; skull perfect. 


Dysopes aurispinosus Peale. 
U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 21, 1848. 
=Nyctinomus macrotis (Gray). See Dobson, Catalogue Chiroptera British Mu- 
seum, p. 435, 1878. 

3726. Skin preserved in alcohol. Adult male. Peale says: ‘‘This 
remarkable bat flew on board the U. 8. ship Peacock, off the coast 
of Brazil, on the 18th of November, when the ship was about one 
hundred miles from land, south of Cape St. Roque.” This speci- 
men is undoubtedly No. 3726, catalogued December 20, 1859, as 
Molossus aurispinosustrom Brazil. It was recatalogued as No. 5476, 
October 31, 1861. There is no record of a skull in either of the 
entries. 

The specimen was a dry skin until September 27, 1899, when it was placed in 
alcohol by Mr. Gerrit S. Miller, jr., who made a note of the color at that time, 


viz, ‘‘belly wood brown, back between wood brown and russet. 9, 27, 799.”? It 
is in good condition. 


Type not designated by number, but there is not the slightest doubt that this 
is the specimen mentioned by Peale. 
Nycticea cynocephala Le Conte. 
MeMurtrie’s Cuvier, Animal Kingdom, I, p. 452, 1831. 
=Nyctinomus cynocephalus (Le Conte). See Miller, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., 
XXVIII, p. 218, March, 1898. 

4742. Skin with skull inside. Collected by Major J. E. Le Conte, 
probably on the Le Conte plantation, near Riceboro, Georgia. 
Catalogued April 13, 1861. 

Skin in good condition, but with wings spread out. 


No type designated. The above seems to be an original specimen, and has 
**Cynocephalus’’ written on two old labels, and is so entered in the catalogue. 


280 NYCTINOMUS. 


Nyctinomus jobensis Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., X V., p. 246, December 16, 1902. 
43542. Inalcohol (skull removed). Female. Ansus, Island of Jobie, 
northwestern New Guinea. Collected by Dr. D. Beecari. Origi- 
nal number 33. Catalogued May 2, 1890; skull, October 15, 1902. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Nyctinomus macrotis nevadensis H. Allen. 
Monograph Bats of North America, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 48, p. 171, March 


14, 1894. 
=Nyctinomus depressus (Ward). See Miller, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV., p. 
250, December 16, 1902; and Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 57, p. 258, Thine 29, 1907. 


43178. In alcohol (skull removed). Immature female. California 
(exact locality not known). Collected by John Mullan. Alcoholic 
vatalogued August 31, 1885; skull, November 22, 1893. 


Aleoholie in fair condition, rather shrunken and skull badly extracted from 
top of head; skull is in good condition, right tympanic bone lost, and right half 
of mandible in two pieces. 

For regarding the above as type see J. A. Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
VI, December 16, 1902, footnote, p. 326 


Nyctinomus orthotis H. Allen. 
Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., X XVI, p. 561, December 18, 1889. 

37;. Skin (preserved inalcohol) and skull. Spanishtown, Jamaica, 
West Indies. Collected by W.'T. March. Probably August, 1868. 
Skin catalogued May 4, 1869; skull, August 17, 1898. 

Skin in good condition; a good deal of the posterior parts of the skull broken 
away. 


Nyctinomus pusillus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 245, December 16, 1902. 

29294. Tn aleohol (skull removed). Adult female. Aldabra Island, 
Indian Ocean. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Alcoholic cata- 
logued June 30, 1893; skull, February 12, 1900. 


Alcoholic in good condition; left half of posterior part of brain-case of skull 
broken away. 
Type designated by No. $4552, an error for 22224. 


Nyctinomops yucatanicus Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, pp. 393-395, September 12, 1902. 
=Nyctinomus yucatanicus (Miller). 
108166. Skin and skull. Adult female. -Chichenitza, Yucatan, Mex- 
ico. February 9, 1901. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. 
Goldman. Original number 14521. 


Well made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


MOLOSSUS—NYOTICEBUS. 281 
Genus MOLOSSUS. 


Molossus nigricans Miller. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, pp. 895-396, September 12, 1902. 

90941. Skin and skull. Adult male. Acaponeta, Tepic, Mexico. 
August 2, 1897. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 11433. . 

Well made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for absence of right 
angular process of mandible. 


Molossus pretiosus Miller. 
Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 396, September 12, 1902. 

102761. Skin and skull. Adult male. La Guaira, Venezuela. July 
13, 1900. Collected by Maj. Wirt Robinson, U. S. A., and 
Dr. M. W. Lyon, jr. Original number 106. Catalogued Septem- 
ber 20, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Molossus pygmeus Miller. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 162, October 31, 1900. 
102104. In aleohol (skull removed). Adult female. In an attic of a 
house near Willemstad, Curacao, West Indies. January 16, 1900, 
Collected by Leon J. Guthrie. Catalogued May 22, 1900. 


Alcoholic in good condition; skull perfect. 


Order PRIMATES. 
Family LEMURID4. 
Genus NYCTICEBUS. 


Nycticebus bancanus Lyon. \ 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1494, p. 536, November 9, 1906. 
124907. Skin and skull. Adult female. Klabat Bay, island of 
Banka, east of Sumatra. June 24, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 3432. Catalogued December 5, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Nycticebus borneanus Lyon. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1494, p. 535, pl. xu, fig. 4, November 9, 
1906. 

142254. Skin and skull. Adult male. Along the Sakaiam River, a 
tributary of the Kapuas River, Sanggau district, western Borneo. 
August 15, 1905. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original 
number 4322. Catalogued January 20, 1906, 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except small upper right 
incisor broken off at alveolus. 


282 NYCTICEBUS—LEONTOCEBUS—ALOUTTA—MACOAOA. 


Nycticebus coucang natunz Stone and Rehn. 
Proce. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1902, p. 140, June 4, 1902. 
=Nycticebus natunz (Stone and Rehn). See Lyon, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 
XXXI, No. 1494, p. 534, November 9, 1906. 
104599. Skin and skull. Adult male. Bunguran, Natuna Islands. 
July 28, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original num- 
ber 602. Catalogued December 15, 1900. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Family CALLITRICHID. 
Genus LEON TOCEBUS. 


Midas elegantulus Slack. 

Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1861, p- 463, ordered printed December 31, 1861. 

=—Leontocebus rufiventer (Gray). 

g732,. Skin and skull. Adult male. Amazon River. Collected by 
Lieut. W. L. Herndon, U.S. NN. Skin catalogued between Novem- 
ber 18, 1861, and February, 1862; skull, March 12, 1900. 

Skin with tip of tail missing and skull with greater portion of the occipital 

bone broken away; specimen otherwise complete and in good condition. 


Type not designated by number. The above is the only specimen in the col- 
lection with the data of ‘‘the typical specimen.’’ 


Family CEBID 4. 
Genus ALOUATTA. 


Alouatta palliata mexicana Merriam. Biological Survey collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, p. 67, March 22, 1902. 

79398. Skinand skull. Adult male. Minatitlan, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 
April 23, 1896. Collected by E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman. 
Original number 9551. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except for slight injury to 


angle of right mandibular ramus. 


Family CERCOPITHECID 2. 
Genus MACACA. 


Macaca adusta Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XIX, No. 1436, p. 559, pls. xi, fig. 2; xrv, fig. 2; 
xv, fig. 2; xvi, fig. 2; February 3, 1906. 
124023. Skin and skull. Adult male. Champang, Tenasserim. 
December 22, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott.. Original 
number 2929. Catalogued July 26, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


MACACA. 283 


Cynomolgus mindanensis apoensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X X VIII, ‘No. 1402, p. 429, May 13, 1905. 
=Macaca mindanensis apoensis (Mearns). 

125321. Skin and skull. Adult female. Mount Apo (altitude of 
6,000 feet), southern Mindanao, Philippine Islands. June 25, 1904. 
Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. S. A. Original number 5670. 
Catalogued December 14, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Macaca broca Miller. a 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., X XIX, No. 1436, p. 558, February 3, 1906. 

$9211) Skin and skull. Adult male. Along the Sapagaya River, 
northeastern Borneo. November 21, 1887. Collected by C. F. 
Adams. Skin catalogued December 2, 1890; skul!, December 5, 
1890. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Cynomolgus cagayanus Mearns. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX VIII, No. 1402, p. 431, May 13, 1905. 

= Macaca cagayana (Mearns). 

125325. Skin and skull. Adult male. Cagayan Sulu Island, Sulu 
Sea (near Borneo). February 25, 1904. Collected by Dr. E A. 
Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 5771. Catalogued December 
14, 1902. 2 

Well-made skin in fair condition ; several bare spots on arms and legs and on 
belly ; originally preserved for some months in alcohol, but now a dry skin. 
(See under heading ‘‘Color’’ in the original description.) Skull perfect except 
loss of right ¢,, 7,, and left 7’. 


Macacus fuscus Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX VI, No. 1317, p. 476, February 3, 1903. 

-114164. Skin and skull. Old male. Simalur Island, northwestern 
Sumatra. November 20, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 1348. Catalogued August 26, 1902. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Macaca insulana Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X XTX, No. 1436, p. 560, February 3, 1906. 
104441, Skinand skull. Adult male. Chance Island, Mergui Archi- 
pelago. January 1, 1900. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 199. Catalogued November 6, L900, 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


284 MACACA. 


Cynomolgus mindanensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXVIII, No. 1402, p. 428, May 13, 1905. 

— Macaca mindanensis ( Mearns). 

123450. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pantar (altitude 1,900 feet), 
Mindanao, Philippine Islands. August 26, 1908. Collected by 
Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 5620. Catalogued 
April 5, 1904. 

Well-made skin in fair condition; bare spots on forehead and arms; skull 
perfect except loss of right c', ¢,, left pm,, and ing. 


Macacus pagensis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 61, November 6, 1903. 
121653. Skin and skuil. Adult female. South Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. November 17, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2053. Catalogued July 31, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Macacus phzura Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 63, November 6, 1903. 
121870. Skin and skull. Adult male. Siaba Bay, Nias Island, off 
west coast of Sumatra. March 20, 1903. Colleeted by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2399. Catalogued August 2, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, except shot hole in base of 
cranium. > 


Macacus pumilus Miller. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., I, p. 241, August 20, 1900. 

101639. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Bunoa, Tambelan 
Islands, South China Sea. August 6, 1899. Collected by Dr. 
W. L. Abbott. Catalogued January 19, 1900. 

Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect ; an old specimen, teeth worn, 
especially the canines, the left lower one of which is lost from age, and the two 
middle lower incisors also lost from age. 


Cynomolgus suluensis Mearns. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXVIII, No. 1402, p. 430, May 13, 1905. 

= Macaca suluensis (Mearns). 

125324. Skull (no skin). Adult male. Foot of Crater Lake 
Mountain, island of Sulu, Philippine Islands. November 16, 1903. 
Collected by Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S. A. Original number 5750. 
Catalogued December 14, 1904. 


Skull perfect, except slight deformity of incisors. 


MACACA—PRESBYTIS. 285 





Macacus umbrosus Miller. 
Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XXIV, No. 1269, p. 789, May 28, 1902. 
111795. Skin and skull. Adult male. Little Nicobar, Nicobar 
Islands. February 25, 1901. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 888. Catalogued August 14, 1901. 


Well-made skin in good condition ; skull perfect. 


Macacus rhesus villosus True. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., X VII, No. 976, p. 2, May 8, 1894. 


0 


3$433- Skin and skull. Adult male. Lolab, Kashmir. September 


0 

5 

1891. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect, but evidently at one time in 
some pickling fluid, as it is slightly decalcified, especially the enamel of the 
teeth. 


L 
4 
5, 


Genus PRESBYTIS. 


Presbytes batuanus Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 65, November 6, 1903. 

121810. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Pinie, Batu Islands, off 
west coast of Sumatra. March 4, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2369. Catalogued August 2, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Presbytis cana Miller. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1485, p. 275, September 11, 1906. 
122915. Skin and skull. Adult male. Pulo Kundur, Rhio-Linga 
Archipelago. June 28, 1903. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 2558. Catalogued January 22, 1904. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Presbytis carimate Miller. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XX XI, No. 1481, p. 65, July 23, 1906. 

125157. Skin and skull. Adult female. Telok Edar, Karimata 
Island. September 2, 1904. Collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Original number 3717. Catalogued December 9, 1904. 

Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 

Type designated as No. 125158. It should have been 125157. The skull 
selected as type and marked as such and measured by Mr. Miller is No. 125157. 
The skin on which he tied the red label was No. 125158. As the skin of No. 
125157 is exactly like that of 125158, and as the skull of No. 125157 is the only 
one carefully measured, No. 125157 is here considered the type. 


Presbytes rhionis Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 64, November 6, 1903. 

115665. Skin and skull. Adult female. Telok Pemudong, Pulo 
Bintang, Rhio-Linga Archipelago. August 15, 1902. Collected 


286 SIMIAS—SYMPHALANGUS., 
by Dr. W. L. Abbott. Original number 1888. Catalogued Jan- 
uary 5, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Genus SIMIAS. 
Simias concolor Miller. 


Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 67, pls. xiv, xv, xvi, November 
6, 1903. 
121659. Skin and skull. Adult male. South Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. December 3, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2103. Catalogued July 31, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


Family HYLOBATIDE. 
Genus SYMPHALANGUS. 


Symphalangus klossii Miller. 
Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., XLV, No. 1420, p. 70, pls. xvit and xvin, fig. 2, and 
pl. x1x, fig. 1, November 6, 1903. 
121678. Skin and skull. Adult male. South Pagi Island, off west 
coast of Sumatra. November 13, 1902. Collected by Dr. W. L. 
Abbott. Original number 2032. Catalogued July 31, 1903. 


Well-made skin in good condition; skull perfect. 


MISSING TYPE-SPECIMENS. 287 


TYPE-SPECIMENS THAT SHOULD BE IN THE NATIONAL MUSEUM 
COLLECTION, BUT NO PART OF WHICH CAN NOW BE FOUND. 
Berardius bairdii Stejneger. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus , VI, p. 75, June 22, 1883. 

20992. Skull. Immature. Stare Gavan, eastern shore of Bering 
Island. Autumn of 1882. Collected by Dr. L. Stejneger. Original 
number 1520. Catalogued November 24, 1883. 

Skull in good condition. 
Type designated by the original number. 


There is something wrong about the record of this skull. While it appears 


correct, the measurements do not agree with Doctor Stejneger’s original measure- 
ments.—F. W. True. 


Phoczna australis Peale. 


U. 8. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 33, pl. v1, fig. 
2, 1848. 


=?Lagenorhynchus obscurus (Gray). See True, Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 
104, 1889. 


Type-locality.—South Atlantic Ocean, off coast of Patagonia. 
Nothing is known about this specimen. It is not included in Peale’s list of 
specimens, loc. cit., p. 205. 


Delphinus albirostatus Peale. 
U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 34, pi. vu, fig. 
2, 1848. See True, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 62, 1889. 
Type-locality.—Pacitic Ocean, lat. 2° 47’ 5’ S., long. 174°13’ W. 
Nothing is known about this specimen. It is not in Peale’s list of specimens, 


loc. cit., p. 305. Cassin says: ‘‘We find no specimen in the collection of the 
expedition.”” (U.S. Explor. Exped. Mamm. and Ornith., p. 32, 1858. ) 


Delphinapterus borealis Peale. 


U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 35, pl. v1, fig. 
2, 1848, 
=Tursio borealis (Peale). See True, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, p. 80, 1889. 
Type-locality.—Pacitic Ocean, lat. 46° 6’ 50” N., long. 184° 5’ W. 
Nothing is known about this specimen. It is not included in Peale’s list of 
specimens, /oc. cit., p. 305. Cassin remarked that he had ‘‘no specimens for 
examination.’’ (Cassin, U.S. Explor. Exped., Mamm. and Ornith., p. 30, 1858. ) 
Delphinus bairdii Dall. Cotypes. 
Proc. California Acad. Sei., V, p. 12, printed in advance January 29, 1873. 
=Delphinus delphis Linnzeus. See True, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus., No. 36, pp. 45, 53, 
1889. 
Two females. Point Arguello, California. 1872. Collected by 
Capt. C. M. Scammon. ‘‘One entire skeleton has been forwarded 
to Washington.” 


A search through the Museum collection and catalogues fails to reveal these 
specimens. They may never have reached the Museum. 
The cotypes were not designated by numbers. 


288 MISSING TYPE-SPECIMENS. 


Delphinus lateralis Peale. 
U. 8. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 35, pl. v1, 
fig. 1. 
=Prodelphinus (?) lateralis (Peale). See True, Bull. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., No. 36, 
p- 69. 
Type-locality.—Pacific Ocean, lat. 13° 58’ N., long. 161° 22’ W. 
Nothing is known about this specimen. It is not in Peale’s list of specimens, 


loc. cit., p: 805. Cassin remarks, ‘‘ We find no specimen in the collection of the 
expedition.’’ (U.S. Explor. Exped., Mamm. and Ornith., 1858, p. 33.) 


Cervus macrotis californicus Caton. 
Amer. Nat., X, p. 464, August, 1876. 


=Odocoileus hemionus californicus (Caton). See Thompson, Forest and Stream, 

LI, p. 286, October 8, 1898. 

Type-locality.—Near Gaviota Pass, 40 miles up the coast from 
Santa Barbara, California. 

Caton, p. 468, says, “‘As soon as the deer reached camp I selected a fair 
specimen, a buck, which I judged to be four years old, and prepared the skin 
and necessary parts of the skeleton for mounting. This I subsequently sent to 
the Smithsonian Institution. Professor Baird has expressed much interest about 
it, and assured me that it would be mounted and added to the collection of 
American quadrupeds at the Centennial [Exposition, Philadelphia, 1876], when 
those who take an interest in these studies may examine and compare it with 
others.”? Specimen killed March 22, 1876, probably. 

An examination of the catalogue for 1875-76 shows the specimen to be +2333, 
catalogued in the spring of 1876. Nothing further is known of it. 


Cervus lewisii Peale. 
U. 8S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 39, 1848. 
=Odocoileus columbianus (Richardson). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, 
p. 894, 1897. 
There should be two cotypes, one from Feather River, upper 
California, the other from San Francisco Bay. 
Nothing is known of their whereabouts; not even numbers are 
known. 


Lepus audubonii Baird. 
Mammals of North America, p. 608, pls. x11 (animal) and tyrit (skull). 

3163. Skin and skull, both lost. San Francisco, California. Received 
from Lieut. R. S. Williamson; collected by Dr. J. S. Newberry. 
Catulogued December 31, 1855. 

No type was designated in the original description, and in the description 
itself there is nothiug to show that Baird had in mind any particular one of the 
five specimens coming from three separated localities. (The specimens labeled 
‘*Presidio’”’ probably came from Monterey, as is seen by reading the original 
labels and the entry in the catalogue. On pl. xur Baird figures the entire animal, 
but does not state which specimen; however, on pl. tvuta skull is figured and 
referred to by number, 2045. As this specimen seems to be mentioned more 
particularly than any other specimen, it seems well to take it as the type. The 
type-locality is thus restricted to San Francisco, California, as is done by Miller 
and Rehn. (Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., XXX, p. 185, December, 1901. ) 


MISSING TYPE-SPECIMENS. 289 


Cricetodipus parvus Peale. 
U. S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 53, 1848. 
=Perognathus parvus (Peale). See Cassin, U. 8. Exploring Expedition, Mam- 
malia and Ornithology, p. 48, 1858. 
Type-locality.—Oregon. Assumed to be The Dalles. See 
Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, No. 18, pp. 34-36, September 20, 
1900. 


Specimen should be in the Museum with the U.S. Exploring Expedition 
material. Nothing is known of it; not even number can be traced. 


Mus vitiensis Peale. 
U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 49, 1848. 
=Mus musculus vitiensis (Peale). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, p. 487, 
1897. 
Type-locality.—F¥iji Islands. 
Specimen should be in the Museum, with other U. 8. Exploring Expedition 


material. It is probably No. 3731, an old mounted specimen that can not now 
be found. Catalogued December 20, 1859. 


Mus peruvianus Peale. 
U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 51, 1848. 
=?Oryzomys peruvianus (Peale). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, p. 528, 

1897. 

Type-locality.—Callao, Peru. 

The specimen should be in the Museum, with other U. 8. Exploring Expedition 
material. It is probably No. 4955, an alcoholic, entered in the catalogue May 
30, 1861, as Mus musculus from Callao, which can not be found. 


Arvicola montana Peale. 
U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 44, 1848. 
=Microtus montanus (Peale). See Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium, p. 563, 
1897. 
Peale says, ‘‘Our specimen was obtained on the 4th of October, 
near the headwaters of the Sacramento River, in California.” 
The specimen can not be found. Its number is not known. 


Arvicola (Pitymys) pinetorum quasiater Coues. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1874, p. 191, December 15, 1874. 
=Microtus quasiater (Coues). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 12, p. 60, 
July 23, 1896. 


3524. Skin. Jalapa, Vera Cruz, Mexico. Collected by R. 
Montis d’Oca. Catalogued March 18, 1859. 
The specimen can not found. There is no record of a skull. Dr. Kk. Coues 


says he had not seen the skull. 
Type designated by number. 


45336—08——19 


290 MISSING TYPE-SPECIMENS. 


Sciurus fossor Peale. 
U.S. Exploring Expedition, VIII, Mammalia and Ornithology, p. 55, 1848. 
Type-locality.—Probably southern Oregon. 

The specimen should be in the Museum, with other U.S. Exploring Expedition 
material, but nothing is known of it. Cassin, U. 8. Explor. Exped. Mamm. 
and Ornith., 1858, says specimens are in Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadel- 
phia, and in National Museum and mentions it in list on page 424. 


Macrotus californicus Baird. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., X, p. 116, presented for publication May 4, 1858. 
=Otopterus californicus (Baird). See Miller and Rehn, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. 

Hist., XXX, p. 278, December 27, 1901. 

2347. In alcohol. Fort Yuma, California. Collected by Maj. 
G. H. Thomas, U. 8. A. Catalogued March 27, 1857. 

Specimen can not be found. Dr. H. Allen evidently had it in 1894. See p. 39, 
Monograph Bats North America, March 14, 1894. 

Type not designated by number in original description. One specimen is 
implied, and a table of measurements is given agreeing exactly with those given 
for No. 2347 in Baird’s Report U.S. and Mex. Bound. Survy., II, Pt. 2, p. 4, 1859. 


Vespertilio agilis H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 282, ordered published August 28, 1866. 
Dr. H. Allen says, ‘* One individual. 9. No. ¢ Mus. 
of Smithsonian Institution. Alcohol. Doctor Sartorius. Mira- 
dor, Mexico.” 


Nothing is known of the specimen. 


Vespertilio evotis H. Allen. Lectotype. 


Monograph of Bats of North America, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., No. 165, p. 48, 
June, 1864. 
=Myotis evotis (H. Allen). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, No. 13, p. 77, 
October 16, 1897. 


5389. In alcohol. Monterey, California. Collected by A. 5. 
Taylor. Catalogued October 31, 1861. 


The following quotation from Miller, Joc. cit., p. 77, is the reason for consider- 
ing this specimen the type: 

** Type-locality.—Not stated, and no type designated. In the original descrip- 
tion specimens are mentioned from the upper Missouri River and the Pacific 
coast from Puget Sound to Cape St. Lucas. Monterey, Cal. (one of the locali- 
ties given), may be selected as the type locality.” 

No, 5389 is the only specimen from Monterey, and Monterey haying been 
chosen as the type-locality, 5389 should be considered as the type. The speci- 
men can nowhere be found in the collection. 


Vespertilio exiguus H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 281, ordered published August 28, 1866. 


5373. In alcohol. Aspinwall, New Granada, the present Colon, 


i cite ei ae i a i i et it i i i 


Se Se ea eS 7. 


i 





eee ee en 


MISSING TYPE-SPECIMENS. 291 


Panama. Received.from Dr. 5S. Hayes. Catalogued October 30, 
1861. 

Dr. H. Allen had but one specimen, a female in alcohol, designated by num- 
ber. It can not be found. 


Vespertilio mundus H. Allen. . 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 280, ordered published August 28, 1866. 
5547. In alcohol. Maracaibo, Venezuela. Young female. Cata- 
logued February 6, 1862. 


Dr. H. Allen had but one specimen designated by number. The specimen 
can not be found. 


Myotis californicus pallidus Stephens. Biol. Survey Collection. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, p. 153, June 13, 1900. 
99829. Skin and skull. Male. Vallecito, San Diego County, 
California. April 1, 1895. Collected by F. Stephens. 
Specimen probably mislaid temporarily; formerly in collection, but not found 
at present. 


Vespertilio tenuidorsalis H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 283, ordered published August 28, 1866. 
=Myotis californicus (Audubon and Bachman). See Miller, North Amer. Fauna, 

No. 13, p. 36, October 16, 1897. 

Dr. H. Allen says, **One individual. 9. No.5533. Mus. Smith- 
sonian Institution. Alcohol. Cape St. Lucas, Lower Cal. John 
Xantus.” There is some mistake in the number, as the catalogue 
number 5533 calls for a ** VW. nztédus, Puget Sound.” 

This specimen can not be found in the National Museum. Mr. James A. G. 


Rehn has informed us it is now in the collection of the Academy of Natural 
Sciences, Philadelphia. 


Vespertilio yumanensis H. Allen. Cotypes. 
Monograph Bats North America, Smithsonian Miscell. Coll., No. 165, p. 58 

June, 1864. 

=Myotis yumanensis (H. Allen) Miller, North Amer. Fauna No. 13 

October 16, 1897. 

No type designated. Four specimens are measured 5367, 6019, 
6020,-6021, and all must be considered as cotypes; no preference 
for one over the other is shown, and all come from one locality, 
Fort Yuma, California, collected by Maj. G. H. Thomas, U.S. A., 
in 1855. All were inalcohol. None of the specimens can be found. 
In his ** List of Specimens” Allen says 36 individuals were under 
number 5367. The catalogue says 8 bore that number. 


, 


p. 66, 


) 


Scotophilus miradorensis H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 287, ordered published August 28, 1866. 
=Eptesicus fuscus miradorensis (H. Allen). See Miller, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., 
No. 57, p. 209, June 29, 1907. 


292 MISSING TYPE-SPECIMENS. 


No type mentioned. Dr. H. Allen says, ‘One individual. 9. 
Mus. of Smithsonian Institution. Alcohol. Mirador, Mexico. 
Dr. Sartorius.” It is undoubtedly No. 5411, catalogued October 31, 
1861, along with other bats that Dr. H. Allen was working with 
at the time; 5411 has the same data that Doctor Allen gives. Also 
see his second Monographs of Bats of North America, 1893, p. 121, 
where 5411 is given inthe list of specimens of Adelonycteris fuscus. 


It can not be found. 


Rhogeéssa parvula H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, p. 285, ordered published August 28, 1866. 
7841. Adult male. In alcohol. Tres Marias Islands, Mexico. 
Received from Col. A. J. Grayson, U.S. A. Catalogued in first 
half of 1865. 
The specimen can not be found in the National Museum. Mr. James A. G. 


Rehn informs us it is in the collection of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural 
Sciences, and in very bad condition. 


Lasiurus intermedius H. Allen. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1862, p. 246, ordered published April 29, 1862. 
=Dasypterus intermedius (H. Allen). See H. Allen, Monograph, Bats of North 
America, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 43, p. 187, March 14, 1894. 


6136. In alcohol. Matamoras, Tamaulipas, Mexico. Received 
from Lieut. D. N. Couch, U. 8. A. (Berlandier collection). Cata- 
logued February 7, 1863. 

The specimen can not be found. 

In the original description a table of measurements is given, and by referring 
to p. 26 of H. Allen’s Monograph of Bats of North America, June, 1864, it is seen 
that those measurements refer to the last specimen in the table of measurements 
there given. Unfortunately it is not numbered. By checking off the six pre- 
ceding numbers in the ‘‘ List of specimens” it is seen that the single unnum- 
bered specimen in the table of measurements must have been 6136, Since that 
was the specimen measured in the original description, it is here regarded as 
type. Of the seven bats listed in the original description, 5328 is the only one 
that can be found. 


SUMMARY OF THE TYPE-SPECIMENS OF MAMMALS IN THE UNITED 
STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM, GROUPED BY AUTHORS AND BY 
COLLECTORS. 


The total number of type-specimens of mammals in the United States National 
Museum, as shown by the foregoing catalogue, is 1,405. Of these, 692 are in the col- 
lection of the Division of Mammals and 713 in the Biological Survey Collection. 

As a matter of some interest, the following tables have been prepared. They show 
the respective number of type-specimens described by different authors, and similarly 
the number collected by different persons. 

A large proportion of the types have been described by recent authors, who have 
worked with large series of specimens and with careful as well as modern methods of 
discrimination. Nearly every prominent worker in the history of American mam- 
malogy is represented. Thus, the list includes such well-known names as Audubon, 
Bachman, Baird, Cassin, Cope, Coues, Kennicott, LeConte, and Peale, and others 
equally prominent among the living zoologists. The list of collectors also includes 
many highly honored names, especially of those connected with early government ex- 
ploring expeditions and surveys. The large number of type-specimens of African 
and Malayan mammals is due almost entirely to the enthusiasm of Dr. W. L. Abbott, 
who has devoted the best years of his life to exploring regions previously but little 
known. He has generously presented his collections to the National Museum. Dr. 
E. A. Mearns, U.S. A., has also been a generous contributor of specimens, especially 
from the region of the Mexican boundary and from the Philippines. All the types 
in the Biological Survey collection are the result of recent work, and a great majority 
of them were collected and described by mammalogists on the staff of the Survey. 

Type-specimens not at present existing in the National Museum are not taken 
into account in the following lists. The discrepancy between the number of authors 
and the number of collectors is caused by the inclusion of cotypes described by one 
author, but collected by more than one person. 


AUTHORS WHO HAVE DESCRIBED TYPE-SPECIMENS OF MAMMALS IN THE UNITED STATES 
NATIONAL MUSEUM, EXCLUSIVE OF THE BIOLOGICAL SURVEY COLLECTION. 


Wrektarrison Allen: .2.=.-<.-=.-2:--- ye, lr. theodore Gill: 2 25 wo ace ote e se 6 
rmemer Miler. 746452) 2... 2) | Dri Ve, Hayden... 3.2 oe cs l 
Dr Knud Andersen. .......--..-.--- J.) Ober SenniCpbte 26 s0cc.5c- 22 0t.- 5) oA 
John James Audubon and Rey. John Major John Eatton LeConte, U.S.A. 11 
Bachman. ........25-.2.J.-..2-..- 1 | Dr: Marcus..W.. Lyon, jr. (see also 
BRPMMN ee) AVIS os. S35 set est) Vd Robinson and Lyon). .:-. <<. ..-'..- 7 
Rey. John Bachman (see also Audu- Dr he :AY Mearns; UGS; Avs -2.22.. ... 77 
bon and Bachman)................ ie eOreGiblart Merriam: 9-5.4-s262--25- 28 
Secretary ©, EP. Baird.........2..-. PD e Greriunere UU er en Taree se = oes 2c ccc OLY 
Peers tiie SCTIAMGICN 5s ence wars (Pie eINOM cee celeb kee yt 
AGHMMGARAINE eee Sk She od Tai WiltvedwiisOseood=....0--2c2-c.222. 4 
iranian Ohapman 2.2. -a.sen-—- =. HE | SASSI APES ae] RA od e212 pe ea eee 
Dea eOOOpela-asss---cecesee-- ol) Bdward A. Preble...........2.-..%..- | 
Efe i 2 Oe co Pia ree. We-Lrentiss; Jt. 4.20. c6e ce | 
Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S. A........... 12 | James A. G. Rehn (see also Stone and 
EEE S VE AN a x iam a Wes erat El sseig 521 5111) EE ne rena ae aoe eS Le 1 


293 


994 SUMMARY OF TYPE-SPECIMENS. 


Samuel N: Rhoads 7252 28-2. feces L | Frank Stephens *."./2: t+ eee f 
Major Wirt Robinson, U. 8. A., and Witmer Stone and James A. G. Rehn.* 1 

Dro Me W. Lyon} qre2. 2s =. ---- 2 (OldheldBhomasse ss eee ee 1 
Hon. Walter Rothschild. ........... Lele Lownsendss te oe eee ee l 
Capt..0.-M. Scammon<. -.-2. .2-se.< Ls eR We ines ie 34 
Dr: Rw OW: Shuteldt,, U. 8)As.. 2. . 2.21 pp. 9. Ww Wiaodhousell.t oso 
Dr adil slacks 245-2 ee Mat 
Dr. Leonhard Stejneger. .-...--.--.- 1 692 
COLLECTORS OF TYPE-SPECIMENS OF MAMMALS IN THE COLLECTION OF THE UNITED 


STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM,:- EXCLUSIVE OF THE BIOLOGICAL SURVEY COLLECTION. 


Dr Weslo bbotte a2 ese 286 
Gol-syeyJ seal ert, WU tis san eee a 1 
Gabe dsims'.*5=,55 case eerie ae Se 2 
Dr. decAeeAllenne 22 < se eee eee L 
ALS Nie ACMGM OM Were e, aerate ees eee 2 
BB, Ams trone: aoe eee a ee 

Draw OPsA Tess cee eee ee oe 2 
Seciptary’ S. i) bawds 3250005. 2 
Go Bates eo shee Se see 1 
GoW Bammer. 52 eons see ee ise 1 
Drs DS CCCaris, Ba tee eee 1 
PauliBeckwithac---s-be be cele 2 
Dr James Hebenedict.55 es. 4-- 8 
Paul Da bersenes ee ie acess ] 
Drees Berlandicrs:=. a. 2. eee 3 
reel elegy en ae er ae 1 
Herdinand, Bischoiey ae. e see eee il 
DrnCsG. Boyles eco. edessewstone 1 
BH. Selwyn Branch. «<0 6525 2... 22 5 
De Me Brewerson ee oeeette oa 1 
Ric By Garsoni420.". scree See oa 1 
Charles’ Cawileeri- 2c cote eee ae ee 
Hon. William Astor Chanler.......- 2 
Hon. William Astor Chanler and 


Capt. Ludwig Ritter von Héhnel, 

Austro-Hungarian Navy. ......-.-.- 
i: ec SOM tS the eR aces 
Our? Cooks de aes hee acne seems 
Mane Woolidee seanasessenee coe cae 
Dra (Qi: Coopercscs- senate eer 
UMMA COOPET = poets. cee ere ote ee 
Walltam Cooper. 2 2c... aoe 
Prot By el); Copeses- eas snes) ee eee 
COOLS = antes sees. eee Ree 
Ferns DeN i CouCHNy Ueto. iss aseee 
Dr. Elliott Coues, U.S. A........... 
Dr iB Wiss CIS WAONe cans ec ee tiogc dee 


Dr: Wests ae pect ohare 
Lieut. John Davison...-2------_---- 
Dall (De Weése2 ce -ectea- seas ee 
RiMOnNtISN OGs io sie- nee eas 
Captrd. ML Dowsceas- eo ere eee 
Charles Drexler. sJcecc sees ce ee 
Guatay Bisen. 255. oes te eee eee 


_-- 


poe bee eset OD 





| 


Exploring Expedition, United States. 
vzlainly collected by T. R. Peale.) 
Jamies Haiti Gases eis a oe 
LeonardotReahthi ee! ee ee 
JohnsReilners- 2st sea eee 
G. Flemmimna® |. 0 igo eects Sebe ee 
William:'Ts Rosterses.-32 eee 
Prof. William M. Gabb........----- 
George: Gibbs $32. te <2 ae ee 
BA. Goldimain.s2 5." 3c etaaeene 
1B 0 Goss Si o5 aol ae 
W. (Grasshoiis <<. -fee = sas ee eee 
Col. an Je Grayson. Uns oanileeeeae eee 
Guatemala Exhibit, World’s Colum- 
bian Exposition, Chicago, 1893... - 
eon diwGuithrie: 42) 22255 eee 
Drv. Hammonds 252s ee eee 
Dr 'W. A. Hammond. (UU. SaAe a eee 
W. oz Bardisty. oc ata eee 
Dr. EW, Hayden us eet aera 
Lieut. W. L. Herndon, U.S. N......- 
Capt. Ludwig Ritter von Héhnel, 
Austro-Hungarian Navy. (See 
Chanler and von Héhnel.) 
I’. X. Holzner (see also Mearns and 
Hol Zner) eter. ee ae ee 
Charles (Hosein 22 Ue ee 2 ee 
Ernest and Charles Hose...........- 
Ee Ss Howland ese oe eee 
Dr PB. Gye. cbse eee 
J. W.. Elumpbreye:t sta ren ee 
ColvB: Jewett: x22. +6. eee ee 
Prof. Walter R. Johnson........--..- 
Dr: David Stam Jordan’. = 4222-052 
Pe Jou ys. eee eee eee 
Dr..C Bs Rennerlycre ae ba: ete 
Robert: Kennicottsse ee eee eee 
C;-Boden-Wiloss. 2233-2600 oe 
Valdemar -Knitdsene-.27-0-. soot eee 
BR, Krewtzieldi ae eee 
Maj. John Eatton LeConte, U.S. A.- 
Dr. John Lawrence LeConte. -..--- - 
J, Alden Worinreses eae ee ee 
Dr. M. W. Lyon, jr. (See Robinson 
and Lyon.) 


13 


ee 


Ke wor Oe w 


oO 


oe eR RK ROO eC 


mR orbs w 


woe © 


~ & we eee» i el i Oh Eh is, 


SUMMARY OF TYPE-SPECIMENS. 





Nees) McCarthy 2222 220 2te eee: <2 - Le GG. Bbumard.< 2... 332.2224... l 
ie McCormicksce) 2 seo) ee 3s = TOW ONME SUNT SOM): 5-3 = Bees Le A So ott 2 
ave Donoughast. 22.22 2 tee PP yewWilliannGvomilthe ce... soec~ aoe 2 = l 
fre. MeWiroy 2.5. 252200n ne -~ <: 1 | Capt. Howard Stansbury’s Expedi- 
Pr WidiMcGees. 224-1 -.-22eeteoe oe 1 tion to Great Salt Lake..........- l 
nevactanlane 2.22 ote ee Seen SPIRE TOL Je be Steel Gsacat =e Sas eeee ee 2 
ior (sy. 1): Manigault.. 02. 225.-2---2s 1 | Miss Thora Steineger...........--.-- L 
Dime AMARChe 222.5. st obscure ieee 1 | Dr. Leonhard Stejneger............-- 6 
Dr. E. A. Mearns, U. 8. . aac Oe 46 | Dr. Leonhard Stejnegerand Dr. C. W. 
Dr. E. A. Mearns, U.S ,and F. X. Richmond... Er l 
MANOR oie Ge a noes Be eee 19 Mrs. Leonhard ‘(Marie) Siejneeer.. 1 
eave Mitchell 22 522 kite ees ere 2) Frank epucasaee star 2, 
NOREEN MOISGi.2- 3 -fe eons Lh Dr. William Stimpson... -.c-2.<-..2-2 2 
TPAPVITTUI ATS 2026, sack wnccies see 1 | Dr. George puckleys= 2 4 sees sues 6 
Folmevurdoch:..2.--2-<-- s.5.ce20e° Prot bes umiChrasta eee 2.22 ee y, 
ewe Melson.......2...2-2-25.-2. -6 | ALS. Paylor.: ; ee eee ol 
Dr. J.S. es See Seep aes eae 1 | Gen. G. H. phonay, U. ‘Ss. Ve Sat 4 
Dr. E. Palmer. . 1 | Prof. Zadock Thompson............. 2 
William Palner-_ — ley Ares] Lodd uae... = Secs eee 1 
William Palmer ae Aj. IL. ie 27 Guile Pownsendece-c feces. tot eee 12 
Titian R. Peale. (See ese Explor Lieut. W. P. Trowbridge, US 2A 7 
ing Expedition.) Dr. F. W. True and Dr. o W. 
Gs; JAs. ROLOESOU 26 os ree wie eve 5 Prentiss, jr I Pe ay ee a ae ih 
fete ope, Wes. 2-27 -----, = ts) uciten Mi Purmer.-2..-2<2:--t.2-2... 5 
Ue hie ( th ve D4 Nam Dycks.. 255-50. tae esses 1 
Dr. D. W. Prentiss, jr. (See True Drs P Vollumrce: oc: sk lee 8 
and Prentiss.) Coll Bol. Wales. 59: .c-<c0eo 1 
B.S. Rairden, U.S. Consul, Batavia. Rohit Wallace eek... ele oo eee 1 
enero RAYS (U9 s Ber saeco ele Tee White. 60ne 22. ee | 
Dr. C. W. Richmond. (See Stejne- | George D. Wilder...............---- l 
ger and Richmond.) - William Wittheldt sess. = a a 1 
J. H. Riley (see also Palmer and | Erich Witthetpel 42 cob ee 9 
Riley)...------ Paes: «2am, eh AE) Wl bie peak tS ees 1 
Major Wirt Fabincont Wr: PeArs Stee 3 | Dr: S. W. Woodhouse..........----- ES 
Major Wirt Robinson, - a A., and Gustav Wurdemann..............-. | 
viene Wovon® [i sesc. 02 oe nee Solin Santice se oe cee 6 
Edward Samuels...........--..---- Oa Aner bok: WOU. seo 4e cers she uk: 3 
Dr. C. Sartorius...........----.---- Bal Toga Ce Vielod Onis lui deen st lec-e eS 
Capt, C..M. Scammon..<-...:--5..-- 2 Wshant Mellakatota. alu dees. oD 
ir. Arthur Schott..------:..-3-.---. 6) Collector unknown @ .-.....-.<.....- 12 
Ernest Thompson Boon ce ee A . a 
Dr. R. W. Shufeldt, U. Ae Ba ee oe l 696 
AUTHORS WHO HAVE DESCRIBED TYPE-SPECIMENS OF MAMMALS IN THE COLLECTION 
OF THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM, BIOLOGICAL SURVEY COLLECTION. 
rea Alene se ee eee alo | DreOnHarh Memam>: 3255 .22225~4 480 
Dr. Knud Andersen...........----- 2 | Gerrit S. Miller, jr... 19 
WMernon alley. .c2:2-.22-.---2a-=--, 42)| BW. Nelson... 39 
eee 22d, Weed A Gieeod Reet e eae 70 
E. A. Goldman.....-...-------.----- 17 | Edward A. Preble.........------ eas 
Br oWalter di Hahn... 2.2 222... - I | Frank Stephens.........-------.--- 1 
inicio welbe tho rosie Se 8 asses 
Dr b--A. Mearns), US. A..F 2: - l 13 


a Of these 1 was purchased on W ah 8 Mahaiad Science Aaah eae 4fromC. K. 
Worthen, 1 from Ww ilhelm Schliiter, 1 received from John Varden, and 2 from the U.S. 


296 


SUMMARY OF TYPE-SPECIMENS. 


COLLECTORS OF TYPE-SPECIMENS OF MAMMALS IN THE COLLECTION OF THE UNITED 
STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM, BIOLOGICAL SURVEY COLLECTION. 


Mou ADDO at sc, che ete ae 
aA RENE DONE oe na io eer ae eres 
Wi: ABLBODY. 22s, ae eee eos 
1S; AURSIPOUS oo a Bes 
id OPA REE eee as ea ate ere ans 
Rs AOL. Cer ee. eS nh zee 
Vernon Bailey (see also Merriam and 


P bt st > 


Vernon eae and Dr. 
Dutcher elses ke eee 
SAPS SCOTS 5 tet rate ee ea ht Se 


OES as Sees Sc 20s oe antec ce ae 
Herberiarownee cote ee oe 
Re Brune. = fee Ee eee 


Beds Conningham ss pees 52.hcnsics 6 
ea DeWeese nee so oe FS. 
G. F. Dippie. (See Mackay and Dip- 
pie.) 
Dr. B. H. Dutcher, U. S. A. (see 
also Bailey and Dutcher)......... 
Pane OC, Himmneh sea ao eer 
Gayt Enmons. 5.2.5 02.00. 6 one oe 
Dr cB ew. EVermann 2-522. cae 
BAEC ASt Scie Saar ete ar ee 
Dr: CAG RIsh eres Sook. £ ihn. cee 
PROP. “bs Pusners 2"... es oensen oe 
iW ac gh Crees tes Teh et eee 
J: He Gaute - 
Per CRAG: =e ae oro erence 
E. A. Goldman (see also Nelson and 
Goldariam) eee ee ete eee 
De ROLOIaI= =. Seo er eee ne 
Mie TOGD 2 28. a2 Meise eee 
C. Hansen 
pron Je iy. eateher: - 5:08. cck see os 
ees J ances te ey a eS 
E. Heller. (See Osgood and Heller.) 
IN CHIGUIRGOR Sse ae ne Ses ee 
JOS lngersoll eseeree ch ern 
DUNG Redes ea eee wees te 
Bios Kesavan pesos se ee ao ee 
Rev. dw Rieen se fae eee ho oe 
JB Wnditer sass eee nts oe 
Ov A) Lamberts so. s2se-c eee 
G; Leonate se: c.0-. Sch eee 





Wes COV G22 Sil Beers os ae 6 
d.< Alden Gore techs. ee etee 17 
DD. Hy Lockey: eee ee ee 1 
GM. MeGuine te tok ke ee 1 
EE. Ao MeRnenny eto ee ee 1 
J. E. McLellan.. ats <A eel 
W. G. Mackay oad ie Ff. Tipe coe 1 
A. G. Maddren. (See Osgood and 
Maddren.) 
CO. EAM rah sto 2 a ee eee 1 
Cz 3 Maynard: Sst son. ke cote eee 1 
Dr. G@; ssarhVMemames ee ae ee ay 
Dr. C. Hart Merriam and Vernon 
Batley cela? G60 aah oe eee 22 
Dr. C. Hart Merriam and E. W 
Nelson223.c2 5. 5> ea ee eee il 
BOS Miurray25 572s sere ee iL 
E. W. Nelson (see also Palmer and 
Nelson) t% ots. 20 227 Gre Aen 78 
E. W. Nelson and E. A. Goldman... 227 
H. ©. Oberholser. . ee re ee 
Wilfred H. Oaosdte eee nel 
Wilfred H. Osgood anal E. Heber! 5 
Wilfred H. Osgood and A. G. Mad- 
dren... ets Z Be eR ee 
GC. Palathe Sid 2k ae 1 
Dre Se Pal mers ye eee eee 10 
Dr. T. S. Palmer and E. W. Nelson. 1 
Ws sPavloti tee cee. os pe eee ee 1 
Alfred E. Preble (see also Preble and 
Preble) s:52 2525 eee eee 1 
Rdward A> Prebles en ee 14 
Edward A. and Alfred E. Preble. . 2 
7 ME Pricunt(.)s Orie) oan aae Hl 
AC Rea sn oc bets Er ae ae ee 1 
Dr Co We Richmond 3.5 ees of one 
Prof. W. Ee Ritter 2s) eee eee 1 
Delton Saund ersi2-20e ee eee 1 
P..Schmid.4.3 =: = eee 2 
C..Sheldon 2%. nso ee ese eee 2 
CG. SE sSimith2=2 oe one eee eee 1 
Frank ‘Stephens... 5.225245. - eee 
J. Ty Stewarti. oo hee ee eee il 
Ci PAStrestorssees ce ee eee 48 
AL in aiventa ss ites sane eee 1 
Rd. Dhompson. 2 speek ter eee 2 
IR. S. Weldonitc22 ee eee il 
A... G:) Wetherby si22-- oot see 1 
Chief of Yakutat Indians....:......- i 
Robert T= Young: oc 2@e ce 2 eee 
Unknown) 2 ee ae eee 1 
fs 


’ LN DEX. 


{Names and page references of minor importance are printed in italics.) 


A. Page. 

MORMITG a SCIUINTIS oe cas ode nese Pease c= 178 
appreviatus, Microtus..............2.------- 79 
STATUE CIOS TES ao arco a $n nee emis ae 182, 184 
MOIS UCOIM IMIS LOLS <2... 3. Sses gos aco eee 221 
MUIELOLIIN V ULDOS 02 <\5.0 cao niestencass=J=ne 213 
PU MISMISMIGIONUS oo-.c 2-0 -ac sce eacese ects 162 
BeTOUMIS WMACTORUS. Soc == ao. soc fo aw:dlsin'as'< 79 
MULMDSAMeNL TIS LOLA: coo sciw oo ee alte onion 222 
acutus, Lagenorhynchus........-..-.-------+-- 7,8 
BU AHPOLSISVSCLUITUS: <2 2-202 .- = Scenic acrcties 179 
MOGOSUIIS HOMPLINS Sanwa esti s coe eat enc < 162 
IMSCIOUUS oo. 5:20 aeitanys nce nes acme 79 

PUMPER MECH acess Sooo Solis c win ialn cinicis'eajaisisiss 282 
PEIGUS SGRIODS = seas ewios ccc cess cee cede ess 233 
POCUPUDLIPIS WRCLIS= 5 Seo c ona J. scsceoe sce 207 
MINE EESDELODLLYS 2.5 e522 = aise s oisinws =e 123 
PONT VSGUSs 28 aoe aie tee aie i a 123 
Vespertilio.- 2-2. - sens. feseceem sess 270 

PIU V.ESPOLUOn cc cee a eee nes seine eens 290 
BPISSnisy HHOMOMYS= os cce. se Pen mano ols = 62 
PIDSCODSIS MVOLOMIYS: 2: 2-c5se5--e< escent -=- 93 
MVS coe 22622 cm cence soeetes = 270 

IPEMOTIUIS. => Sancta oee eos eee 218 

. SOPEKe oss caccasu cals qneaasenetes s 240 
(OTSUSE =< eas vanes tase 229 

Wilpesis:4 i220 ve scseleces: isos 213 

PADUS= oa. coe bosch szcew sen se-ce se 42 

RIBS KAMEN BOTOX: 75 oso. So cic asian asa otioes 241 
BH UCTODAY icra. co ace atai aaa one ase 266 
(CUAL. eho Df Md ER a ee a a 208 
ONVCMONLYS ora sae oe eine aialarese 122 
Reithrodontomys....-.-.......-..- 111 

AIP IbAxDIS, INGQSOPOX:.. 25-22. sses ccc oes 241 
SOMERS ccs 5. canes cecae Ls ee er 241 

PORNO DEVICOM cee elen enor cescete oo seet 79 
Microtus.c. meee ae noes e n> 79 

PEP TNATIS MUS... 25 nmr ow anon wa es 143 
albilabris, Reithrodontomys...............-. 111 
sipimantis, Delphinus. 2. 2c2<eseccn eee ~ co 9 
albinasus, Pappogeomys...............-....- 71 
Bibipes,, PMenAcOMmys: —-- << - ~~ foc nse e n= = 96 
Albirostatus; Delphinns....2. 222. 0..--.0---- 9, 287 
SIDIVEHLEL, ALODUYTAR, <5. o0sccc~nncccssaes 241 
OGY ZO S 222-2 << wanes ont opener ei 117 

Soret ee seen 241 

PAU e ieee esc ae nnac ene hoe ane e nasi 16 
PADRE plata ta tans ata oe ween e amin cin 16 

Pl GPR OA PAR Sh po See. oo wach owe dle see since 16 
BIORDIEUSIN, SELETODUS xcccs0.c0cs a2 2s02 = cae = = 256 


Page. 
Sllenin Oiellys asec nn sae oe eo ee rake 162 
FTOGOULYS= “se sae sec cnen = Seen see sees 106 
MI GTOUUSS.08 Jeter sn aes tee een eee 80 
Neofibers. scat. ay Se olecoe Mec tee cee 80 
INGOLOMR or adsee sniae or ona tai aee cee 106 
OGLUIEUS Son nie eae Bee wens aces 179 
WISIMOCON seat Seaton aes 108 
PON OPM US: sot ese as earner eltre are 162 
allex, IPOLOMYSCUSE: © decccccas< cscs cies eceme 124 
allophylus, Peromyscus... .2.-.----2-.-2-.- 124 
alnorum, Microsorex............ y Pnicio wees 241 
BOLOXe sce ee esas oc bidatasue ee 241 
AAT OUSUDE o aoers=t co cra ts rh Sea Zee oe 282 
TNO MA CANS hse tee iat coe as cnn wate areca 282 
alpinus) EMWtAaMNaS.. 7 sence ooacivies ode nee 173 
SCADANUSS Es sees cee scsaccececeeo nc 233 
IPAIMNUAS Fe oso We ao 5 ose nce BSS ee 173 
IDBOMOMLYS sss aw t eset a ssh ls Saleh 3 63 
alstont, Neotomodon ts at ats-see as sass ses 108 
aitaming Wepusee.. sence a ase yee ase 27 
aiticola, Blannaosr-esss20e5 Se Sete sae a 237 
SIpMOUOM se... t asck meee eee 108 

MOTORS et cnet acest cee cock ceeton coe 241 
alticolusAnvicolae-.---coccscee- sucee cere 80 
Microtusite- = 2 ot Scktec sa tecsctemyoe'< 80 
Reithrodontomys ................- 111 
altilaneus;, Peromyscus<.-.-2+-----2------5- 124 
SLDIOSULATISWMOCRURUIS sae ae sees oe ene eee 179 
BINDIP EA OPLUOPMIOS lc terete Sec eeree 222 
ambiguus, Dipodomys: 2... ..c--s2ccdsc.5e. 56 
amblodon, Sarmatiass.- so 2-2 ee uss news 7 
ammophilus, Perognathus ................-.. 48 
ATNMOSperMopuUuUs=-. scot cease se eele 171 
cinnamomeus........-.-. 171 
LILAC PLES ccnlnicie a= wires 172 
MSISOMcsnee saee tee ss 172 
Saxicolases: i. o\.*22. 2:02 172 
AMOSNUS, Scitropterus -...2-2----.-2-ceec ce 202 
SOTOK ese serio toe secie cooyssacceee 242 
PE TAOS) eoters who oan ech ace 16 

SIN OUBS IP IMOUON oan s a5 6 ons oe as neni 108 
QMS eerosnathys cess ee se 2 2s ieee nce 48 
IPEVORUYSCUS iain. c8ae a'aisiocixip aro 'njsjeenie 124 
BTIOTVE OS MIMS ie Seco ows Se eens sums ale see ¥ons 144 
Aha sett cc ites cox vin vin tentedis 198 
anambensis, Emballonura.........-......-.- 259 
BOMIUUS cI N Se oc duanens 179 
andamanensis, Crocidura.................--. 235 
angelensis, Peromyscus.................-... 124 


298 INDEX. 
Page Page. 
angularis, Thomomysics ne scene re atta 63: | ‘arizonss, Syl vilagus. .<2..:c54...007.2-sceneenee 3l 
angulatus, Gynopterns.. .22-oo-o.s 904s cones 255: | arizonensis, Microtus. ....:.-..::.<0-s2--<es- 81 
angusticeps; Blarina-<. 2-22. 2-026. <6 237 Beluruswet cece 5 ae eeee nee 180 
MiGrObiSi2. . coe ee wees 80) armatus: Oltelitn sso] oe eee 163 
©. ‘OTyZOMyS.<- oss: =< 2502 2-ee ens 17 Spermophilug:::- 2 J. ~2 eee ee 163 
Rabie eiet UT eee 105 | Arttbats:/ 0): \ie ce ee 267 
angustifrons, Spilogale.:...--.-----<2.--2-. =~ 222 QZIBCUS <a ob ac eect ue Cee 267 
angustirostris, Macrorhinus ........----.-.--- 205 Hirswtuss ssa se hee one cae 267 
MITOUNPRG = -oon dec ecaen Se 205 | Dhwovie ss Cee AA Pe eee 267 
Peropnathiiss<. =e. oa. -e-ne 48 | DIPSCEDS ssc seeeteh ee eee - 267 
PIStyPOONUYS. -/:S-2- uss eee 74 PAV oe ote Ste tenth peat ee ee ee 267 
annectens, Citellus: =. ..-<-- 5s. -ure=ae2- ene 162.) ‘artus}Peropnathusse:.- 525-09 s.-- essen 48 
VetArGMyS aoe - Seems Sesser ee 44::| -arusinus; Ratnlas 2 2--. 2.22 ees ore eae eee 198 
Spermophilus ........ ge ec 162° | -Anvicanthiss: 35-15 Se ee cee ae a eee 158 
Amomalanidee so: 22 0-- asics soe meeaenene 203 | Dplanitrons.s acces Cesare 158 
antarcticus, Halichoerus.....----.-...--..--- 202 |. Arvicolaalblestidic-0 eee are ee 79 
anthony, Peromnathus--.--<-2-25- 93-422 <- 48 Siticolsss- ae ee eee ee 80 
BalanUS ss. s. eee eee 179 apella.c.ctcseees oe Genres 80 
antillularum, Nyctinomus.......-.. Se ies ci 279 BUSLOUUS: 2 «bon la enon po ieee aes 81 
Antilocapra:.0-2.s.228 sees oe onewe qeeeetease 12 DLO Well cn 2 6 sae Jassie eee 82 
MOXiICAMAL3.- =. 2222s see ses 12 californica ls 2:2 o)s2 ioe gana ceenietee 82 
ANMtTOZOUS. © 20 <3 So cose se ee coke Seren cee 278 chimamomes to eae even aa arene $3 
MING see eases on a ee ee 278 Curtatalt: 222 Jocto.s coesoeeee ase 84 
MACHMOUS Hs a0 ok wae 2 oe 278 Oda eases en ok ee eee 84 
PAllidUs 7s sss ce 278 fortilis: i sy. cso os se cece 85 
Aoris, GaleopitheCis= oo seen ea ate 254 hay dentls-. Ss 5 Sa eee 86 
Galeopterusescc= = ese ee 254 longirostriswss2-2 snes. 20 eee 87 
Scitirus:655. 3 Se ese Bane sae 179 IMNACTODUS om aslo cela asin oe alone es 87 
AMACHE, WMeLIS? ~ sees soce eclec ee aati awit a we cie 207 MOdeStae.|. 15. v= sicn'55 sac eenee rs 88 
AGIA; SAT VACO tee seen een een teense 80 MONTANA jos aoe eee eee 88, 289 
aphorodemus, Microtus .......-....-.------- 81 mMontosasae ni. oo4.05 2 oes ees 88 
apicis, Mus ....- Ge eae ees o- Jase moun noees 144 INOV GBR ofa eee een eee 88 
AWIOdOnasa 54. eecneeeee tes ee nee 159 ANUS Sc\-aceen weeks ee ee 89 
Olympia sate ese = ee ose 159 oecidentalis:S5.<- 255-22. eee 89 
PM PRCUICR es oe wnt ota a5 sess 160 operarius 2-05 425.535 sass 90 
TAINO see ae Pes ane eee 160 MAUPEITIMNA? Acfass inde cae cates See re ae 90 
AOC ONS 55 oe oe ee owned enn aleae ena ae 159 Phresh Pee yak eee ens Om es 91 
apoausis; CyNOmoOl eis. econ meee eines 283 quasiater: 2 .s< oe ees 91,289 
Maca ee cats Meese See eva eee 283 scalopsoldes.. J3->-<.\7-5.csceeen ees 91 
ADATSOIMNY Scena nana woe toc eee 157 trowbridgil... v2 s*- 72x acne as 92 
IAMOMIVS” wece saison anaes a eee rae W57’ | sASChizOMyS= Suncare oo5 do ns ee aerators 93 
INnvlocoates==>- <5. se eee eager 157 lemminuS 5 i005 2 35<22ss sees ae 93 
(si Prisee 0. o-oo eee ee 157 |) asellus Wuepusyjacccecce we eeac eae Bee 27 
OGUNSUSceee aces c22 co 6 er Ce ed 157) I casper, MUS". o So toc 6 aes ee ee eee 144 
AOUUNS MUIR aoe eer nn ee ee rare 144.) ‘Atalapha Semota 53. 5226 seorn ase oseieeeeeee 276 
ArChicus, (OULOmuUSe. re ctee as pease e case 218 téliotis = =. Jasco: tee ano eee eee 
SOTO ese ce ete a ieee cae ee ee 242) || “Atherura zypomatica-£59: =< ce accen ae 40 
Aratocephaluss 2.2 cw -- cee earned oe eee 208). || WACDOrUrUS 26 ek oe ce ere ee eaten aetna 40 
LOWHSCN ON <9 oe eee een 205 TeNUtaUS S202. ee ae eae eee 40 
ATCUOPAUGIA § h cen = ohana eas oe ee we eae 209 ZY BUMS HCUS. Stata nee sae moses rate 40 
fUSCa sie cae eee ames 209 | Atophyrax albiventer.................... Sal 
INOW Ao te os ee eee a 209 palimericye so jaro cae see 248 
TROD eee cn ene ee eee 209) || ‘atratus; USy. 52-222. tees eee 144 
THINOL: one. ve aut She eee 209 Sclwrus: -'342e loo eee eae 180 
SIMNDISM ss Pascoe eer 210' |, atridorsum, Mus sn 2. eas eeee cee eo eeeee 144 
ATOLOULYH OLY LODELS aceniin = tse a oi sic ayes 161 |) atronasus, Dipodomys:. .=2.--2--<--5- seenee 56 
AY ONUSS be coss tet cc seat che tiie aS 268 | atrox, Phoniscus 1-0 2-.--~ {ccnon ie sarees tent 278 
NC Ee ta escalate ote che a 268 | attwaterl, Geomys <0. 2.2..0 2a ocepweewene 70 
ATENSTIOS, GSOMYSacs. oqo oe no - ce teo nt an aces 70 OVS: eben c. Siete cite awoeneeteene 10 
WP EXOML GGUS storia tetas ys om eine mae 124 PGYODIYSCUS J5...c sotto sentence 132 
arenicola; Onyehomlys=.-. 2+ --=--s-=5--6---5 122° | -audubonil) lepusy isso acon eee ce eee ae 31,288 
Perosnathiies. 2. eecaare oes ssee ce 48 | aurantius, Reithrodontomys................ 111 
sranicolor: Gerpilltige.s..c-ssedeans cose ees 158 | aureus, Reithrodontomys..................- 112 
arens, Cites: 3 <<. <0 455 nope eee eee 163.|| auricularis, Microtus=2s25-- =) <n s-9 eee 81 
Spermophilng:- espe aoe aa es 163 | aurispinosus, Dysopes.-....-....-.-.2--<...- 279 
STIZONS, LEPUS scr as ave scc etree be 31 Molossusec'.0 22.0 -csi Jeu eaee me 279 








INDEX. 299 

Page. | Page. 
auritus, Peromyscus..........-.- eerie B25 DEMO SRUSIS-. V.OUDES.. = 7. 0-0 n Jan aseewigeee nee 213 
eerenUS: AY VIO ee ee ee eee ae Sin} periandieri.“Blarina |... .-=- cn. s20-6-sec-=~- 237 
Hesperamyss. ac 2-2 eee sar eens 125 BIPIMOC ON. <3 n-nereeweeeatc =~ x 109 
PErOMYyscuse... 32 A. cee 125 | Meir eae 58 ewer ee ee ee 227 
ReIsEralis- JP DOORN Ea). 2 eo een. 5 Iwona 287 | bernardinus, Callospermophilus.........-.... 172 
Pipistrellus =. =. 32... <scessesiee ese 274 Microtus <<. saecee-ce meas mee 82 
meannpe, LHOMOMYS .. = s<.55.552--nacees 63 Spermophilus: 22-4 ose ees 172 
mmeecus, ATUDOUS. i. .- 3.222520 enc cesses OT (DELYTAUSIS, ODAIBK cco cen nee ne ss =n 159 
WOU Seo so say reen ch eee Ata Dut TAUUIS=;SCHINUIS aca) oeecke see coe ol 181 
OSPPAMNS nook nee eS ean eens TS a DULItONUS; pOCIETUS—< socu oe chee smece oes aoe 181 
SE TACT LIS > 25, crete betes clas Beis Sein 17 
B. bimaculatus, Perognathus.............-...-- 49 
PENS oe oe wc ore a oasis s4esesehaeecaaes 224|" blandus! Peromyscus: ¢ =< &2 0/220. o2c.7 se -= 126 
bachmani, Sylvilagus.................-----++- Paonia acini seer oan eee ce See Sle 237 
badius, Peromyscus.........-.-- ese 125 alticolastecncmase s Scherer a 237 
RAPS BULIMUS. o. 22. 82s lasee cs osecietes =~ 145 QNPUStICEPS= o<a-6> 225005 -5-> pai pe 237 
. eet see aes ete 145 Derlahdierisn cs aes saeco eee ass see 237 
Panamensis, Mptesicus. _....-....0.2- 22.5. 275 OVCVICNIAG San oneal ae te See = 237 
Viespertilio..... 2.22. ta-kee=-s<- 275 exilipessosciesecs tee sean oe eee 237 
Pemingi OS. 6 oo. ote ese mes = 3l AGTIG AT 2c- oocee scene See oan 238 
Peropnathns: 2. 22: .s soetacec see ees 49 fOSSOP IS is vc siete oe se eisidees Sone Ae 238 
ROIS See oe os sto - Sowias a See oe e teal 180 POGMANIE 2 so. «a. Woe as Moots aie 238 
DSVIMUAPUS Soe Jol ee ieee cto ee ol MACNELES sae 2 = io Jee eace ae eas Sess 238 
SPHOMOMIYS. 6 0-0. oo eee eeeee eee 63 MACTIAS Seo wee Sock 25 ote entoee 238 
Peri PORUS <5 3< rans. 5-2 sade 27 MAY OUSISS-e see eee hec ene ase es 238 
WMTCTOUUS socio as.7- oo oS See sesie es 81 MOMICANDS seo cece SoA acct oe ween oe 239 
SO: Bee ees daneutentions oe 242 MGISON ks ose cee wo sists ca teeea te wees 239 
pent POETATONNS 5) 0 2...- So3.s<% = 5-ssqn sek Seer 3, 287 ODSCUTA ter see ciaoe comer cae aeons 239 
el HIS so oe sass tno Sanaa ce = 9, 287 DONO e cae see oe wae se ewe Tee 237 
Elasmognathus....... Sete 25 PONINSUS: 25 ener eeee eso ese 239 
SRO eh s.c oe msl s nwa esas tee oa'a = (= 25 PEVOPTING: 2. cece en can cisco esas en 239 
Pps MIS Sars ao eins oan sins mas <isieimsericisinc <= 145 | SOLICINA see ae eee eee ee ee ei) 
RBs ee cnt to. noke samen seseee. x 198 | LelmslesteSs- 22 -c. A wcseyzacee see see 240 
RMIETIAS wetesie On ee ee ae alee ena 180 | bombifrons, Erophylla..............--.....- 268 
EAPEIN en Soo as Soleo sc nw naa oe.win ca anelate aioe 4 iPbyilonyeteris =.=. 2---s2-.c--- 268 
prt) DUI eee onae oe nea re ee mee a 4 bombycinus, Perognathus ..........-..----- 49 
A VIGSONIC. So2oe nce oe eeen ie 4 | borealis, Delphinapterus..............-.-.-- 9, 287 
baliolus, Sciurus............- REC ane. Sch 180 Moarni eres. aha Os eenen -eriss Sher oe 287 
TMC AS HUANG a= 5c noe cewtepic Se amie © 199 WOCY Olas tees coed oe as eke eh seeoe 211 
paneanus, MUNGOACUS. =... .25---.<05-0---25- 16’ | borneanus; Nannosciurus-.; :.=-=5-<.------=. 161 
INSNTOSCIUTUS? W252 s-- eo = =~ -1c 160 INVCtlCeDUSH: =. 720 ere see ness 281 
INIKCUICEDUS 2.2 occ! Sei 2 occas sees - 281 DPA TUS soe noe os ochre mw meee Poms 17 
MAAOUNIS 3g 2 oo ca eek ew ETN SB OWA 90 ea ees a er hla ree rate 10 
pepnCarTIs: SCWITUS. <<. =... 0-5.<2ceacec-seecsc LSU Gl boylit, Hesperomys-oses-nes- 2-522 access. 126 
barbensis, Hipposideros ............-..-..---- 262 RELOMIVSCUS=s>-s cescs eo ion sh ance 126 
perroweusis,; Citellus. . 225. s- seni sses- LGSeeprachelix, MicrOvus. 5 c<cee wisen-c—- ss urs s 82 
Spernmopilus>-<- 2.256. ssssc<<~ MRS yeh oh EVE I ee ee SE sr 39 
RASSANIO VON 22. ooo none ceases saci ose es 229 RO ANOONSISt oan he ce cowak ek ode 39 
(94 6) 0) | ies meen ane okra Ope eS Do all TAC ING DN VL antes se eel ie eae atcla Salen wo Sata 266 
BRHNSULIS CSD) LOLs ots nose Seen es es - 228 Be a ete scree ee tetas) 266 
PUBMRARINOUR i. fic che x <u> tase oeectara> dae cone PEND Re Ty 1) (Ae ee a ee ea 237 
1:59) 00) a re a eee 228 | brevicaudus, Onychomys............----.--- 122 
SHRICOMM S25 hc. camer ee eeeecess 229 Spermophilus=..2o. 2-2-6 <---e 172 
PRAIA CUA <  o\. Sai ieee waveemes se Dble ly PEGVICEDS, ACOMIYS.. oo - oust cece oesae uw secs 70 
MALE ANUS,, MIS a5. o 0! 535-1 w hoped nas <= 145 DOME ee Ae = dtu Talks ve esse 4 
Patnans, Petaurists ....- --..<c22e<- ance -ceee 202 | brevimanus, Chilonatalus.................... 269 
MAGUADUS, ETOSDY US = ~~ 0552 20005 ea5c2-c he 285 DIALING esse ecco e cask es 269 
PROT TIS soc ceo an oak eee Se Le DYE VIDOES Ue DLS eee te Jie en ala alas dare wrote w'a se 17 
Wet VGRNTIS, ELEQODUS «25.5: a5 sen oe conse eecns QhG PLO WEI PATVICO sss S225 cco. s-s-00 ss s2s0e<~ 82 
IR SCINE IS 9e- so sn tee ee ec 181 | MICTOUNIS Snot 2a ene cask ter 82 
RSYNC TARTANIS te MIS 5 aso ws ore Son ak (45 prideeri, UROMOMYS. .-s =<... 22-226 sot o5 63 
SOTOTUS 2 oe 2 oct on sme cas cane MICS DI ACACR tes oes osc sweisins' sn aera 283 

RRR es ef a a ee Me DAO neh GIS» o2-6 dec > o* odes sesh cmnpisw't clan 207 
AMOI s Sse osc ene lot aes 6,287 | brunneipes, Paradoxurus..............-..--- 210 
NSRINPELISIS GILGULIS= o-oo. os tke scans Th4a Dunlarisy DP yvloOntys: - 22 26 tonto cassie ea ate 142 
SPEPMOPGUUS. | = S50. s ices oceace LOSeUeDUNSTA, INGOUWME:. 2. o> o- 0c a= 3 awe eas 98 








300 INDEX. 
Page. 
Hullatus, Mictomys=: ---. sere nee ee 77) Gants; estor-.3. cssosschoce see oe ee 
POLOMYSOUS see esn ks token ee esoee 126 frustror 
SYNaPtOMYS. +. =. cna see ee es 77 goldmani 
bulleri, Panpogeomyas.. 2.2=< sear eae. be asc 72 NeSt@S 5252s cnn neea ee ae ee eee 
Bullimus baronus =s5-- cesses es ee etek 145 MGANTIS] eso oe ae ee ee 217 
hunguranensis Tragnlnsoo.522-s--2 +. 2s - 17 microdon 2G. ee eee 217 
bunoressTupaia esate secre: eee aw sen 251 ne@bIacensis: scan atecaes ove ee eee 217 
RUSTRSCENS MUS cose tn ene ee wee 145 pallidtiss -3..2 ease ee oe eee eee 217 
DiS "MNS 2-202. SA oe ee Se 145 POnINSU] fe: eee eee 17 
PMNS OMUING eo tawe acces eee ee 146 TOXONSIS: 25 4 ce meses = one eee 217 
Duteapensis; MUSisiassseci0- ct sc ce ces - 146 Wigilis: 222238 ts cn oc Seen ee ees 217 
cansus;/Myotalpas-~-2- 55004 5.-<seeeere oe 98 
c. Ochotonass2-2 2c oiucene coe eee 39 
GADSSSOUS a6 50s ace seman aaka tee ae 3: | canus, \Citellus: 2524.2 ce ce oo eee 165 
COntraLIS 525 Soe sae rs oe oe ae 3 Lenothrins: #25 cos505- eee oe ene 157 
cabezonte, Perodipus. <->. «<> -s-es- eos as- 59 IL@pus:.0832 Fe eeee secon eee 27 
EE DOTROMIVS ote naa eee eee 63 IiomnyS Xs seas os as ta oe eee 45 
cacodemus, Eutamias...........-..-...----- 173 Odocoileus 33025. Oe ee 
CACOMIUI> MOlSs= mcs sonnet eee 207 Onychomys: sc. ce eee ee 122 
Capayanun, Macacawos. cose. Jao tee ees 283 PGromysSCus 332285. shh a ate eee 127 
cagayanus, Cynomolpus../..........2...--.. 283 Spermophilus 2353s ae 
PUGIOPUS! oceans as nen eee oe 256.) Capromiys:.2; 232 3232 cee ae ee see anne 41 
californica; Atvicola..3s02 2-50 5a e eee 82 eundlaghi: 2226s. ee eee eee 41 
califommicuss Cenviuss soce ses a= oo see eee 12, 288 thoracatus.2.2-- 5: - eee eee mee 41 
Dinodonmtyss-o- nsec eee ees 50)>| \Gariacus cla vatus:.s-. 402-2s5s0cs <= 12S Scene 12 
VOLOMYS? 52... Steere ee eee. 94 | carimate, Megaderma.....................--- 260 
WGYNK ie pe sak osene Saad ee nee 206 MUS: toes. 32 ose dutanses eee ees 146 
MaACTORISK jc san ee ee 263,290 Miyotis..252 shee: Shae ae Soe 270 
Microdipodaps'=--: --2--s---es=- 55 Presbytis. 322-4 «25. 52susceewe oes 285 
Microtus? os... seve cee eee ee 82, 92 Sclurusts-, as-2 ee aoe eee eee 182 
Myotis 3-5. 29: cee." 271, 272, 273, 291 Traguluss: 3242252025205 secheee 18 
Odocoileus=>=.- + =ss5.-42 0 see 288 UPAR o5. tcc sic cen cance se cee 251 
Otopterusss.,.0 saan nee a2 290) || carimonensis, (Ratuia® 202225225. eo -seee aes 199 
SCAlOPS coo ee eh ee eee 233 SCIULUSE: 522. 2s eases ee eee 182 
BOLDER sees oon 242°} earlottee; WUarClos 225.225. 5s sen eee ne eee 230 
Urecyonss.<:22 03. 00eee eae 211 WTSUS is csesoee oodiSe ce nena se sees 230 
Ursus. 52222220502 eee 2800) ‘Carolia castaneae 2 e262 ce eee eee 265 
callipeplus; Butamias..2.55-2ss.seese nese. 174: |ecaryl, UtaMlas see. seas eee see eee eee eee 174 
Wamiass..2- os.6 ee nee ee 174") cascadensis, Scturus/.-<.+--2--.---o-- oeee eee 182 
callistus; Perognathus.:.:-2220 o2-cb een ee ee 49 Wipes: =: -2c sce ee eee 213 
Calittrichidie soc. haces ocean eee eee 282) |) casensis; MuUsieee 25. 2225.40 ce oe tees cote ee 146 
Callospermophilus:? <.2- nsosee eee eee ae 172 BCLUGUSE. oo-sae cc eceearematacceemere 182 
Pelnarcinvs sees eee 172. || ieastanea, Carolia... : 2% 23 28 oat eee eee 265 
Castanurus»ss,.e-o- sss 173 Tupale 2s) oe stain yeaa eee 252 
MSCLONSIS: eo. eee 173 | castaneum, Hemiderma...................---- 265 
trinitatis..... Shoo eee 173) | castaneus, Munambulus! 2-222 22322-~ 2 eee eee 197 
Camoris, Pipistrellus 3 o2e0 sc 2: sscce eee se 274 | PeQOmlySCus 22 Je ot Sst co mee 127 
campestris, Hesperomys..............--..--- 126) |) CAStanOnOvUS; SCIULUS tus. senece eee 182 
DADS eee ELS emt tee Fe eee 43 | castanops; Cratogeomys...-.4- oe oe eee eee 72 
CATA SEROSDY UScn os isn acs anc cec es Geers cee 285 Pseudostoma:. .u: 1.23. Spee 72 
canescens, Chetodipus............... Pca 49 ‘|\.castanotus: Sciunus:c) 2.2.4.2 see tacts eee eee 182 
OLUGHUS ot eee eee Sete 164 | castanurus, Callospermophilus. ..........-... 173 
IMICKOGUS! S200 eo open eee eee ae 83 TamiasSe~. 22 ieeas ce es osteo oa 173 
WerBGOXULCUA so. ssc cee ac weet ee 210) Castor. c sascis cng cicero eee ent eee aes 160 
PETORDALOUS i. 38s oe ee ene 49 frONGSUOL eva es os eee eee 160 
Npenmopouns <=. <5 22-52. ses cee 164 TOXONSIS. 222: 2 sche ce cee ee eeee weaves 160 
TAS UIS a cee eae ee ott 18 || Castoridss. 2... Hise dacs seek eee moe cements 160 
canicanidns, iutamiag* ss 0... 225. odes san see 174: | .catalinee,; Urocyone: 022 .seeccn-- ao eeeaeon 211 
PONCKOL OSS an ete eee ee tee 83: || catellifer, Mise: .-0 oii. ee Seen cee 146 
caniceps|hntamins 253-2. -. 0. o eee 174 | catemana, Ratufa. on. °<o.5 2-26 -e sees oe 199 
Caniclimis (Lepusst- 25. mccmdeecnen acct csceee 32: | caudata, Crociduma...5-2-.- cusses ee tee 235 
Cani dita satu scans eae cena sews coed 211 | caudatus, Oryzomys......... See cee t see 118 
canipes) EMutamias 7504. ec ccte succes cere 174 SoveR sco bee ae ce eee eee 242 
CADIS 55. Solace sacs anak CHa eo Ie eee 216 | caurinus, Eutamias....-2-2--2---s2-2= == eee 174 





a 





INDEX. 301 

Page. Page. 

Caurinus, Evotomys ........-..--.02-------- OA eCiteliealleni®-2 2-28... 2 eee aes 162 
RE VOUS comes pene eee ee one ie 270 BUNGCUONS Soe team Ocenia oe eee 162 

BUOI OSHIS, ZI DWUS cacao co oa See 8-5 wal 5 | ARGUS ore atest cry oak Sat eee eee 163 
RRO Oa a fone een cite walamtetes sh ata mas 282 | AUMAGUS = s25.Gcn cc asko ccc osteo 163 
cedrophilus, Sylvilagus...............-.----- 32 GATTO WEMSIS etc eons ee access ae 164 
memtralis, CabaSSOUSc..-.2- <= -2 deca ens aemss 3 DELI PONSISc cscs cco 6 poate eee 164 
MCLISk eee eee rae be cee 207 | eanescensi ctcece. set borane eteeee 164 
Myrmecophara,=2.<- 25. -.c~cssarce 3 CADUS Sa. tes e ces ass tan eco te mais ose 165 

SRRUOUA, aw spese Sone are ae cine oem 3 COUCH eee crese oe = capes nes = anes ae 165 

PADUA nee Cee ance ae Seals eae ee 3 CLyPtOSspuobus=.s-4------)es--e52 <= 165 

BPTI ser see eee = ecanece nan eee eta oe 268 OG DES sere te eee as eee ae 165 
MUGMIUDUTU ato es cn = see's = 45 50'= = 268 MISNOU oem < coiaee Ha soil ecte Sse Re See 160 

WENO wane aac ee eee ae ss ease 268 POlMMANN 2 Sec 28 swe 5s c= Saemiciees 3 167 
MEBUALODNUS! £202.22. cde secesesaerse sce 11 macrospilotus: sc. 62. sccedsssee sacs s 167 
SV adie ae ose oo lee cate sae 11 MBI OTS eh sos oe seees Ses ee cee Soar 167 
PRMPOPMGOCIOGGS =< foc So's Sous see sees e ee 282 MArPINALUS= scm oceee ace eases ee 167 
Gumosansis, Odocoileus: .....-.....--------=- 12 INIOMISS Ses sees Sees = wrens ane sles aie 167 
cmmmicaiis. Tiupaia.«. -/..<.2.cce-s- cts =secese 252 Nebulicoldes-s- 2. ae. -omeseee ees ase 168 
@envicapra chanleri..........---...----..--- 11 obsidianus. ..-.- Sosa sycheeecette wes 168 
RB LE Srey rat tn oS oe ae Sete eee 12 ODSOleUUS =. Seah oas wate tae a 168 
ROR E Rev i ante elota ea ois wait oles ae Pon aaee os 15 OTOPOUMUS ne sae eee ieee ie sia facie ers 169 
CHUUIOTBICUIS! = 7 oeis 2 az aisi<cina'ainte wo sonra 12, 288 OSPO00 tee no cacenuwet ns Hose cases 169 
CHB AUG sate oe feos Bios simaio et ats Sierras 12 PALVIGENS Ao. eter cee we ee ew eae 170 
TBWHSILE Ue eee te St ee cteoee ones aaa 14, 288 PETOLENSIS-.ms-c0- eae: ee secon cone 170 
SIIGUITGUN co ok whoa sie isin, = Sipe oie 15 WICSINSS seme cetera - cee nes cee one 170 
MBNNOGOS =~ 2.2 52052 ossecsewsccessces 15 PLALENSISS ss wee. ats Sterne oa te ee ae 170 
TOOSAVGIUAE 2 = = 2 cece sats osesc ees ss 16 SEINSPELL Se occ tose e aoa See 170 

WII rca foo Ses cance Se Stee es 4 SLODNGRSD asco act. eee 171 
Ohmtodipus'canescens'....--.-...---'--5-2..4- 49 LerehiGAUGlS. 2c se22: neo eee ssa 171 
BLCUAIGUS ear oe oan cnionie 50 SVU RAUINIONS Senter avis anon 2 een ee 171 
MPISOM ee tee an enn eianat ee a a= Jot | PCIADALUS MUS" 2 see dee ase Sack aoet epee ts 146 
SLEPHANSIE ss co S22 -koc- makwis oie Boe Clarkia GOONS -.cer eee ee one oe ceases 72 
ehunien= Cervicapras: 2-2-2. <o--cecesaeaces tea | F Cla VaSROALACUSs rete. «=c.c0se scree sce. sees 12 
RedunCa so-so eceon =e ose se 11 CETUUS ita nc aes cease coe on eS 12 
CHAODIMUNE. SYLUUAGUS =. .sc=- once esec sents o=- Soe | clamentee-WLOCyON-.s ess .- oesen cess 2s sao 211 
ChigMensis. WSDUS. <<... <c<escdee se cccascse 32 | clementis, Peromyscus. ....-..........-- sins OT 
BCIULUSs casero ne cce eee arse re 183 | clinedaphus, Monophyllus..................- 264 
SEVLVIIAPUIS sence enamel eee om CLUSIUS > RNOTMONDYS sorac cae neeitea sas Bee ster 63 
MIIOTIALALN Ss oeeon = ate ean tke wien wane 209/41 COCOS) CNITUS =..c-sns. aoe sew ene ns Pee axles 183 
PTEVIIUANUS. 2... 325-0252ccc00052 269 | copnatus, Hesperomiys.-..-.-.-.----s-2----=- 127 
TATTOOS San esas = nee cee 269 SVIVUAPUS sso 5 cic ce nocinn eoccee's2 32 
RINGO VCURNISS 6 co - Sep aetna ee ke teen 262 | colime, Reithrodontomys................... 112 
MMGRICANS © seen toate eee oe 2 262 | Colimensis| SClunMISs-s-see—-ee -- sess eee oe 183 
MOLLOLICeENSIS= | -5 25222 - ee sense 5 262 | collaris, Lagomys ..........---.------------- 39 

RO a NA Ole: 2. 5~-ssecerescccees cesses wees 224 Ochotonaie.--~ so.s-b esos sine oa ee 39 
MOA cea 2 os cnt eee snes asi tcnn eos 225 COLON GINS, OMYZOMYS ee <2 ones ooh ashen 118 

OIBLV ENING. wsoseceos = sce enc nae sieve 226 | columbianus, Odocoileus............---------- 288 
PTO HOU OLN ae ao aaa tem «5 ae Sere 5 aoe 156 IPCQOOLBUS: cos concncscie tats oe 60 
MIRdISs Seca sc se on a eee ae 156 Peropnathusincisastaecs see Sees 50 
URIMOP LOLA = coco cw swh asec acs Sagae sa Des es 0 00 | COMMUSSATIUIS, MUS <2 ac ccc sca onic wencsces- ccs 147 
CHYYVBOPASLET, TUPSIG «025552252 b2cccas wont 252: | compactus, Dipodomys.:..-.-.-...-:-----.-- 57 
Chrysomallia, TUpsia-. c= 2sc2c<ctsseccen es 252'11 (COMPUUS; POrOMYSCUS. . oh 2. feo cee nw cde «s 127 
chrysopsis, Reithrodontomys...............- RUE WECONCQLON. SCIUIDUSE chor encom sito Urine Se.5 5. 183 
Gmevcauda, Wllomys. ::..50cccnss<cecoe- ce. - 159 Simias: =... —- Poe e eee te ee wc 286 
cinereicollis, Eutamias........-......-..-.-.- Lip) ;CONCUTENSIS HAVA. nese s5- cnc. te ses 2c -en- 199 
(Pamias sess spate aos ee oud a 175 OMIM ete seaae esos ee. wns oe 184 

cinereus, Reithrodontomys.................. TZ ROOOD Da Ulsan ie tie oats ernie asim = iene 226 
Cinnamomes, Arvicola..:--..5..-.0-.0-s200s2 83 RLU QUIS See eee tee eae ca ata re 226 
POdOMYS. cs. sa-n oneness 83 DQUIC UNAS ra hen ete tan ee tia 226 
cinnamomeus, Ammospermophilus.........- 171 SOROLIGUMIS sect aise si) Sea tee 
IPT PISUPELIMS sar = — oe steels 274 | LelTIAICR LES = =. 7 nt. e ose ee 226 

SLPIIUASE 28. eee a one a2 2 171 TOMGUSIS= 5c vx'ow acs carne ecto Sasiene 226 

GYce; RMNINOlOPHUS..-..55-.----2.+ 5S -- 22s. 260 MEU DICH Ses Panes cain asec awe Cec 227 
METAS ee eee ee ca adn s ote eane tesa ce 1Oaup COMMIMS., IMAG. sous ctssiccncente tenes s..2 199 
SMESUS! Aes tae Seca esain oie wai Soa os > 162) Conmectanss LSPUSz...25-9%.-cu cnet eee on tec e 32 
BUOCOUNB osm 8s soc sado5 oh oa ese otc Se 5 162 Yl ViSSUB so. ss asses oe ses =o 32 











302 INDEX. 

Page. Page 
consobrinus, PeromyscuS.......-...----.---- 128 | Cynomolgus apoensis=: . 0.5 .2...20 522 - cess 
consplousRatala vo e.conce sss cnuaeten see 199 | CARSYANUS!oiic-2 cst uiweseeeeen 
constrictus, Microvus=..2<. 32. .2.s4. evens os 84 mindanensig.- 7 =. este 
convexum, Urodermans. 2 4202 ene 266 Suluarisis\. 5.223... cee ccnesas te 
COUPGr OULADIAS: = 325... 32 beeen nceseneteet 175: | “Cynomyse2 ee sate eee eee 

NYHApLONIYS. S26... owe cenasrss 77 gunnisonl so os~ cco neo aee 
POIIAS Sea. eee ence one eet 175 MORICANUS Jc'srondas eae ae Selemite ee 
COrynOrninus +5; Smo eeo sei pada ae eee 207 \' ‘Cynoptertlsse ios ooo eee 
pallescens........ oe soe owen ss 27 Sn PulAtUS! Sia). c00= eoaneete eee 
castaricensis, Felis. 1. 20. teak en nae ee 208 |. THAJON jase eee eae ee 
Odacdileus2.22-6=. 5c = 13 | TGS ae Soka oe ae Se 
Macrogeomys............----- 75 | pavensiS: sche. eee eee 
Gonchis Gites sos..e 20 eee ee 165 | PHINCEDS22o2. -e a ake eters 
Spermophilus. 22-55 osc ncien se 165 
Goulesi, Brethizon: 23.0 -223.2-0-sncerescensos 40 D. 
cozumelse, Didelphis +22. svagsn eee poe. 1 
OFYTOMDYS' s.05 (ss o55-e ose eek 118 |), dalli, Lepus oss. josn=st in eee ee ee 
Peromyseus =<. =-.=.3 Betis 128 INV CtOMLYyS See ee n= sen eae ee 
CTOSSICENS EP SEMMOTCOS . < 2 2 oes otseieiee 6 OVS ss Seen OR SBS ec eee tae 
Crassiirn TS yassul i ic cee a eine eae aes 24 POG a eee heer alt cae eee 
CLASSUS; Day assW 25 32.25 2 assemecastaes en 24 Synaptomiys! .yh2.4 2265S ees 
cratodon, Dipodomys..........--- Mrs Ae 57 Wixsusicee tse ies es ee 
Cratopeomysteee osc. cee aces ete ee 72 | .DaSYMYS..A.csk bee seeae ooo a4 ee eee 
GaSTANODS 2ien note ae 72 rufulus +o sc.cseb te shea eee 
OStOLSiseec .c eon eee ee ee 73.4) Dasypodides-cs- 0.5.60 ke eee eee 
HULVESCENS =< 5. eee eee ea eee 73° '| .Dasypterus: oie hee eee eee 
ro) aT a notre ten ie 73 fioridanus<<.22 5-6... see eeeeee 
OTEOCRIES oe bap aeece sere 7: intermedius: 2. oases one 
POMBRMINUS ser se een eens 73 | “davidsoni, Balzenoptera........-..-...-.:-.. 
DOLOLOUSIS Hore aon wnah ea sees 13> || dawsont, Evo mys. 25 <2 <5. on eee ee wo 
erawiordi, Notiosorex.. <2. .2.<.2.5--225-2--- 240 ||’ decolorus, Nyetomys=..-- 22: -.¢-asee see ae 
SOLS Rees ease Se ares 240 Rhipidonlys sb = san cote eee ee 
CTANIONEVGHtOr NUS sce ae oo ae 147 Sitomiys* =.42.-<.. -h0 22 eee 
erepuscularis; NWycticea.-- ..-/. 2. <s2acs.- 2% Zip.) detia, Mus. 5: ue aocsme ene ae aceen ee ee 
Cricetodipus/ Parvus -+ 5-4-2. s5-— ete eee 54,289 | Delphinapterus borealis..................-.. 
cricetulus, Microtus. .. - . A en tree Cae 84: | WDelphinidee =<\... 5:.)< se. 2 eo sae eee eee 
Cini tus; ELesperomys' 0-5. ese ease 128 | \Delphinus: 2202.2 cecsti- cee. see ee ee 
Oxyroniysies- see ee eee 118 albimanus:2 -25.qs2s0ce ee ee 
(PEROMYSCUS) 2 a2 ee oes. a ee ee se 128 albirostratus:.;.2-4-\.\..c-eeepoeeee 
CTISDUSWIOMNYS a2) se eae ceo eee 45 | ard ee aoe ee eee 
cristobalensis, Peromyscus...........-...--- 128 Gel phis 5. ee ten oe 
Grocidnraeper sees te Sor cee. ee ae 235 Jatefalis: 2% <<bos2- 220k anaes 
ANGAMANGNSIG! :2 cee Me... see oe 235 JONPIGENS.< c= sates ene 
COG AEs See wane no cee weno aspen 235 | plaziodon .<.<\on.siek oda teas oe erceee 
lionienplors.22- 2. =e See 235| | delphis, Delphinus.< 2422.5. ~~ =--- ene eee 
UAL By ree ea ee ee 295: | Dendrohyrax a. 5.2. 1 sons st sea eee 
MICOWAL ICA oe Ce coin ae winewia see 236 VWaliduiSes fc tass s eee eee 
shantungensis. ...... Ee 236: |" Dendromys* sacks secre cee 
SIGUA Ys aS cos Soe eee Loe 236 Nigrifvons = oct. ct ceceue eee ete 
crockit sWorcelaphuss 2: .c oo seers he scene 13; || depressa, Kiertvoula=- =-2-- 2. se. shea eae 
Wnocoileus aco. 2, eee eee 13) |\ depressus, INYCUNOMUSS- 35-3. ns eee 
cryptospilotus) Citellus....<-..22s.see-<>---- 165 | Dermanura pHeous--- 2 535~% o2a-- ease 
Spermophilus:- 2. <ve-- sac oe 165 TAVOGH 52. one ee eo daamace ae ae 
POOL Sate rales enc talacP als ole eel en Al’ |) (DErmMOpPLera's see 8 ona erste) ers epee inte ie orale ee 
ORDOUUIS seco cn eae es Coe 41. || deserti; Dipodomys: s-5.- os ae heern cea oee 
OUR e ete eee nate ee Set he 41 Reithrodontomys: 22s)... ~ =. seen es 
SOMIGSUS oe steeped xlock sw cince sass 42 || desertorum, Neotoma.< 2.22 Seee cee 
Cubanus, Monophyllus:..2 <2. 2 oc. ee clelen tens 264°] destructor, Orta Scere tees eee eee 
cuibertsont, Putorius s,s. ss. ccicksas eens 5 218 | Dicotyles sonoriensis........... bis sikoe eee 
Gumnlator; INGOCOM Ary ec See os one eee vee 98: |: Dicroston yx 5.8. tose er eee 76 
curasoz, Leptonycteris..........-........--- 265 LNBISSCcensis2 ase. sone ewe oe 76 
Corsten, ALVicola= 22. -p uel ee eeeee cook 84 | Didelphises. 323 -t42- ceo a ee eee ee cee 1 
durtatus; Microtus:2.,.adece. ser eh eee le S4 cozumelie ...... re: eee cia neraw 1 
eylindrimra, Urogale: ii. -< enw te ae as bs: TIGHTHONGLY Aco coma eae eee I 
cynocephala, Nycticea.: ..-s:2 2....-+<.2--- 279 tabESCHISIS: 2.2 ~ ne ook eee 1 
cynocephalus, Nyctinomus................-- 279 tOxeNSIS: <'oon Ji cbt conan ees 2 


INDEX. 303 

Page Page. 

Didelphis yucatanensis.............--------- 2 | elegans, Spermophilus ............-.---.---- 165 
ninividss: 2-22 i2s--o cesses aes = DP plegamtulus; Midas. eco. oon wetocts nese sdes Ses 282 
difficilis, Reithrodontomys..........-------- (ere ilionivsams eee. cote se eee. meee eres 159 
PRON, OFvZOMlyS $00 - eso nn ce etme acca 118 GincwCanGac. scree: ose cigon- ease 159 
EOUOIN YS. 32 s255 Sogn cc so woe sae ea 56 | WERVUSH 2 2 ncee ted. wo eee Reece Se 159 
AM DIGSUTS se ot ere et iseteetn = 56 | elongata, Glossophaga..........-.--..-.----- 263 
SiTONASHSS << 22. «Sc henee sawsiece 961 ‘elymocetes; Microtus.~- =... 25..u-Sse<c--<-- 85 
californicus..<....-.-- Hors slopes: 56 | Emballonura.............. rs te ee 259 
COMPACHUS <= orcas = een = 57 ANAIMUONSISs2 same eee ee eee 259 
CTATOGON ee ec cop se madeseieniee= 57 PGMS ULanISae see ena an are crea se 259 
GOSBnUl ee een a= eee eo 57 SOMUCaUd Abdie n-ne anna 259 
LEO Eee eee ae ae ert ear 52.) Emballonuride -..-.--.--.-.--------------- 259 
(co cl Ee Se aoe oe ee Die meanpans:- sKerivOUla-tese ses see ariarian- 2/225 e- = 278 
MSnlaNiSe: -— ane een Sse Df | ONeaAnUS MUS 2 eee eee genet eee a= = 147 
ROYTIGHS Swat ase ase sae ge ae 58 PleLopUss: se sae Mae ec toet eases 257 
MAT CAN GS son a= see Nase ae Hom Bh ptesiousse= Lamesa sce on eet eee eee ose 275 
mUitchellis *.-- ave — oa ee 58 (DARAIMENSIS = sa-e-- ener cee ee ees = 275 
MIONUANIUS 2-2 sce ese a eee seen ee 61 MITAMOTENnsiSa cas es canss-pack see 291 
MEISOM a se oe fon Sie ss alae a OSes MOLES) SCLULUS cre sss. 5 toc bose eee eta S 184 
MEV ACGUSIS® 2.025 ote eer sae aa 58  eremicoides, Peromyscus. ....- fie se cease 128 
MIGALOIGES FS. nn scsi msia are 58a] eremicusy Chestodip use ana. - 42 -> ~~ 52-1 50 
MA PPatSes ses oes od Santee oaa!s 59 | Moreelap huss: senaseen ss. sse sear 13 
OUNAGUS eer cs aw ze aces sow Tectaws 59 Les pGrOMySen ee ewisen = = tee te 128 
ECOLETISIS ess Peer ee 59 | eynses eee eee te fovetanos 206 
Diabycephalus. 2--=2~--.=--te 2 = 59 Qdocoileus’ spac. o-csspesessee es 13 
SDPCla DIN Siee ae eee eeeenemenie c= 59 PELORMABMUS sss ee oa goes -E = ate ee 50 
IDIOGOPSONPIPES =. <2 =~ ee ain 60 IPGTOMySCUSS = saseee eee see aes 128 
MING LON URINN AG) eee wena sam Ae cise sce se 252 WlemodoOnGee. «asco. so cocchet ase 109 
PUNP Ar INCOLOMIS = ea .< jojo snsjnsine evan esoeee = 98 TUDSES Paste ence nase alee 231 
SEO PE SGN US on ee eam aise lines = DOU) PLCC RIZOM see acer anyatse otn atra Meet aia 40 
Gi) Nein Ro Se: ee ee ee eae ,242 GOLCSIA ects sein se a see 40 
dolbrogess, Spalax..-........-.-.-2 (eee fae 159 MY OPS cts Saeccee ese ae e eee ee 40 
dolichocephalus, Macrogeomys......--.----- (Onl mMbrethizoutid sete. +. at eases o laces onwcseeeee us 40 
RBLICHS s WMUIS Se tocstc oes each see e cea avin] sblrinwceld cese= sass sec esc tte en See eee 233 
SCUIPES Ss o= sos eneotmten ser aeic(> ESSel Abroply las enka. case ae cables. ene 268 
dominicensis, Myotis................-------- 270 | pombiitanis tise 20s 8 he eh 268 
GT ORL Ue ee ee ee 5 re 147 | LATIONS = ees wee ee eee =e 268 
PIRCOIAI NUS (CLOOKL 3 oo neers no smrctiesaav.ce TSA) SOSTOLACRTSs ee eo. as ates eta eee eS 215 
Qrenniclis.e serene ey Scene 13 | CTatORCOIN VSS, sececcte een ocean e 73 
DEES repel etal iil 14 Mephitist m= 20) ie sient talento = 224 
PIGUSALIS MILLAN Go So. oe wn tee alanis a TOs SIOUATCLOS CanlObiee! son <= eee See ewes ic 230 
Reithrodontomys.............---.- SS Penlophus; /Wrsusa 9. = sane ie ye te ces oeicles 231 
DOLD LS ate ee = te ie a a ete te re ea ees MR MO OLILY Sines Soe eee eee errieiacinec tai 143 
Tamias..... Pe Sy netoe Seen ciee fa 175 MOCOTSOM Eee oh see ats Meets eae 143 
douglasii, Sciurus...... eee ee eee LORS MeNTONO‘US, SOLES, 224s ska ee es ora 243 
dowii, Elasmognathus..... aay ea ce 2 | EYERISIRIOS Sete ete eg ee ee Sees ae 
SU AIE OM Bets aoe ann's/ a oes Seen 26 BITUS teste eee eect 173 
RSRICMET AS MPICKOUUS. - 2c aanin la Ie eoin'c Se 84 CACOUEIMNUSS- 5 eee ser eice os xe 173 
We GCOMON 555 c(fs2 e025 dsc ge ep Sttewee ace te 234 CAS DHS ease a tapes a ae een e 174 
pilirostris....... Seda oa a pagina 234 CATCH LUIS ete ta ene reds 2 174 
PPVEONES AULISPINOSUS. «= 62.25 <.csusmscss ase 27 CANIGA DN seein te ees Se esate wre 174 
CamMlpes? 2252 we <1; Bee rns 174 
E. (ST eee re ete aah oc amin ce 174 
MOGEGDISVNG oo bso clon sec cee encnenedsiemas 266 COCELRUIDUIS c Reeteen relia ted alctotrs i nial nieta' 174 
BUDS eon eto w ons ce cees eee 266 GINEBICOMIS tae etc sks eee ees es 175 
ak AL WIOOLA on ac Soox Jac paee acne e cae nos 84 COODEM coer eh, ow cece tnt ees seas 175 
CUO Gils sf x a2 xterra rata rs 84 LOR SHU Smee erin fais oie une oh 175 
MA PRRIRLEN LEDS oe clo cia te wha an! esas lo o-atate Sain malts wiete’= 3 PRACINIG peekin wo isk viet a= ann et's ac. 176 
PITS CRUILNS - 2's. oats a beara wiesa et ntas © 184 MOMIGUSIS Haare. © coe ae me eee 176 
Elasmognathus bairdii....... Daa « coeee Cee 25 MIVOGHSIS trey ce vm cleb cece cohen tes 176 
CONV ie ie a a Sense 26 | luteiventris............ al ie See 176 
PIADSOCON  POLOKS of. 5 <= 5 oo oo ase aatie ws 2 esc $248 PUSCUL Semen oman ate c eeere eee 177 
elata, Spilogale........ tS ae De re es 223 OUNTOPGH USS... pcacce cutee ckekn bao 177 
IAL, OI DOCGINYS. o--2 <5 > -2dannshdoess---~ 57 CODRBLADHIS 08 x eine nai ore nae tae oo ae 177 
electra, Lagenorhynchus.........- ee 8 DIGOCRIES ios oe cena os daa oe ea 177 
elppans, Clauss sic. ot ss acta oom eRe 165 DALI iSe = eee ee ee ek tee eta 177 





304 INDEX. 
Page. | Page. 
Mutemias palmeri:<2. 22.05. oeeeeeeeee 178 | filipensis, Conepatus............. ass ce eee 226 
panamintinuss:<.. take ee eee 178} fimbripes "Sorex. 2-2-5 e ea eee 243 
PAHS? Pe snieeanpeean eee 176))\ firms Mus: 13 2< See eee ee ee 148 
SONBSCCNSs. eco ees eee eee 178;;)\-Bshert, Citeltue s: -./, 5 je. sc.cecareneeee pees 166 
evides, Peromyscus... .... niga Sa RRL eee 129 Microtus: 8... ok eo eee eee 85 
OVOUS: MVOLS=eacec chia ds eee eens uae 290 DOMGES 2o2 chee ce yn ee ee eee 244 
IN QUIOSOLOKE: = Eee coe Semen eee 240 SpermMophilus: +. sssee eee ee 166 
RONG ceny ye bic en chance) momen re 240 | Thomomiyss 2s eee eae 64 
Vespertilious. moses: sees te 900: | ava, Sicistase=-- ee 22>) a eee 42 
ERVOLOMN Vg eo OO ch hes ent Re eee 93; | “Havicollis; Tragrilis 2.45.0 4. se eee eee 18 
RIBSGHISIS els Ae ee Sans L 93) (, flavidulus,Ms:s p25. >s2 5: cs occu eee 148 
calitornicussic s/o eee eee 94° |: HaviventerMusisr2. 22). ae eee 148 
CaUYIUS one ee Occ te eee 94.) flavus, Perograthusssc-s-7 22. 845-5 ee 50 
DUURONE Paes So ae 93 Sminthuss 22. oie .s25- eae eae saeco 42 
idatioonsis:: feos.) nee hee 94°) Hebilis;Mus--2ee225) 5 ae eee eee ane 148 
Jorinelieretae tara eee eee 94 | floridana,Blarina?,°2: 2.835. .2. eee oes eee 238 
TSO saws os eee .... 94 | floridanus, Dasypterus....................-. 277 
MI VATIUS? coc se dt Noe see eee es 94 | Oryzomys= i522. eee ee 118 
NOLVEPIGUS <<) eee eee eee 95 | Peromyscus 2 oo sae nee 133 
OBSCNTHS 5 -— coset ee eee eee eee 95 DSUs Xo tect tear eee eee 231 
occidentalis +5°4-s<ss.-cesea ee 95 | floweri, Kogia............ ase ners eemeriaea 4 
OTCR? oat ear eee ee 95) wocalinus)Trapulusia.sess-2 se see eee * 18 
SUECICUS. oc hs eee ee 95. | formosus, /Tragulus=2-5.24--2 eae eee 18 
VASCORID Me oe on ee es 95:|-fossata, -Welists:-2-. 625-5.) 2 ea eee 208 
WAN POLAE cs ee erence ees 96 >| ‘fossor;(Blarina. 2222245205 eee eee 238 
Gxiguos, Sylvilacusssc. enc scte nee eae ees 32 SC LEIUIS ee see oe eee eee 185, 290 
Vespertiiotsscas:aee een ae 990: | dremens, Must slat eo ee er ee 149 
exilipes: Barina one tte nee tae 237 | frondator, Castor.................+---+++++-- 160 
exilis; Dipadomys feet s. 22.0502. sees se Bz. | NSO TRS LAU eee clot ae aes ere ee 260 
eximius, Microsorex’.........-..------------- 243 | frontata, Mephitis........... Jats ses eee 224 
Sorex tee case a ie eee aie 943°) frumentor, SCiurius -=-.2--22-- 22 225--ssasee 185 
GxUlaNS MUS steerer ee nee ees £48} '|/*trustror, Canis, 5.2 <2 Sto oa eee ere 216 
F. fuliginosus, Onychomys.=---c-5-- cee eee 122 
Tallax:,'GeOmy sisns <ccasee sso ea hemes 70 ero eH ate aoa eines a 
Peeuntish js nk ka 50 fulvescens, Cratogeomys Jae yoo Tee eee 73 , % 
| | dulviventer, Microtus:: 2c) ssatec. gesce eee 85 ; 
fans Pteropusss. sess een eee eee 257 | E 5 
Baliga Goce oe eee 206 | CO orate a 
: ‘ a |) falvus, 'Geomys:-c-2552--cass sce os. Seen 64 
felinensisPeromyscuS-=~-2.52--.eecee tee ee 129 | z 199 7 
MeLiS: cyan tcise Ack oe ee eet oe See ee eee 207 phen leah crsgne eee Fo eae ; 
ae aa THOMOM YS. sasts8 eee eee ees 64 
mquatorialis... 0. ~~ -Secee seesceee pees 207 
| fumosus; Geomys---:.2S2ns. esp cee stem 74 
CUDESCENS = 70,0 ae cat Seems Sst oxen 208 Platypeontys: ok 2 ee a 
BNAROS oo a Stance Se 5 See ee 207 Vv: 
ee aM pPyTOpSse scars ee eee 
spuisehdoois pamat cle oh ae Bunambulush! 3e2 siss5iee 5 cosas 
browni nteceteeceteeeceee cree es eceecnee # 7 etanenn Le eee 
caccinitli Feed hater ona tian ae ne See ae 207 abuoviis tet hee ani ane 
centralis. voce c eet ee ee ee eee ecee eee ee eres 207 . peniisulie. 2... eee 
COSIATICENSIBs re encase rete eeeer oe 208 a TOE OMe 
fossata. vet eens cree ee rere teens reer ees 208 fusca, Anotomslidias.-./00.: 2... ss. cee 
goldmani Sree ak Oo Dene ie ee a) 208 | Nanton. ca ee eee 
iinpolesies Tho INS a ake hla eee aes 208 fauscipes, Neotomass:.2-5-2 2... eee 
limitis. Sicha un ox awa tecke aia een mee 208 fudotin: Macatee: co erste oe Ce 
RETIN Nore aici ora’ sletw ata ’s'a ain hae CREE RI 208 Thomuanyy? Ih ee 
USCIS waco tt rc ot Se Sen ee 208 
PAPAROINCS 5-2. one sas Siscetse eer 209 G. 
femoralisattiae 2102s... h =. cl eee eee 200" |. gabbi, Lepus. sc6c8. 02 scot cock eee cee 
BGI santas Wiese ae anon seek pone ae 204 Sylvilaguso5 4-2-8 seek eee ae 
TOTIGOCANTIN ML ON: wissen oS oe Neen eee 148 |, gabbil Bassaricyon’: 22. cs scues ete ce aoe 
Terres Scns sacra c ce onsen one 183 |’ gaillardi, Thepus 22 oss ter encnen eee eee met 
foriilla: Arolonla see ak hone, 85 | Ovis....... a Soh ce meta enr eceee em 
IMIGROCURS. Ceasar tae eeatee te aoe 85 | Galeopithecus aoris..............-.....------ 
festinus; Mepis... <2: somcc ewes aes. 28 gracilis... 5... sees) eee 
RYDGES 25 <. sacceaasee ce eee eee eee 97 | nagunite! 2%. ces bese eee 
hudsontas =.:225.0.5 325. Sor aeee ee see 97 pumillus. ©3332 sesso eee 
MACTOGON 223, Us tacaeten a eet eee 97 saturatus../>.i2sess ee eseeeees 
TIPONAIS Sos Wes Niven css peace aes e 97 tORUICUS: 7. sour tre eee ne een 
SPAUUIAUIE.. 0s odenccn ct steers ee ee 07<" }Galeopteridea.. 322.225 sce iseeamem eee 











INDEX. 805 
Page. Page. 

RHRISODLELUS. < oeo scsaua at Sac we bac 254 | goldmani, Sylvilagus........................ 33 

BOVIS) fo ence e eae ed 254 | SPHOMOMIYSi sess ose ee ee ee 64 

practises: 2.422 season tase > Se musa ReOUCEL AM OPIAra cc <u. ~1-2. oosee tess Oo 4 

TSWIT GG ke coe aire Sate oe oom were Pox.| “Ossi; SynapLOMys..-_............--.......- 78 

UN cc Sct So een eee 254 | gossypinus, Hesperomys ........./.......... 130 

Saburatsesgo5.co wets ewes 255 REQONUYSCUS)f <2 oee eece 127,130 

CUSNGUS! = A253 26. cca eee ea 250 | gracilis, Eutamias........................... 176 

Pampelil, Hesperomys. .-.-.:.--4:--t8/2<202% 129 Galeopithegussas. sce eae oes 254 

PELOMYSCUS ss 2 eeSaciee axe te osees 129 Galeoptenus S252 22 os ee os ccc 254 

COST EON Ca) ec Ea 72101) 0) 1 257 Hesperomys.....- meee Wee Ses 131 

PRUs; POLOMYSCUS: «~. «2.20.2 aie see ee 130 ROTOMLYSCUSS, nase a Mh at ee 131 

(ETT Ei cee oe ee ote ee ee 62 FUHOPCeSSa ie Rice ee oe Me eee 276 

RSGOINVS. <5 sc. s Seb afer alata a eae nea at aia 70 | Spilogale Se aS. Ae) een eG 293 

STBNATIUS! oe eee ieee: 70 | PRMNUAS 2 ocr Nectae Jo ee a ee 176 

Biowateri{ st s1-eoee eee ees nOz Crremiaria en hit, ee ae A 7 

DIOVIGAPS alee coast ce eee sees 70 QUIBCUS S92 oe eo OS he Ae. 7 

eID tas ac ce eK tas. ee ae Rome 72 SUOADDSLiNeree ocr tee ee se ea 7 

PUNE foe Ao ce ee des oe eaw eorex es 705| Weratusy Peromyscus. oo) 2522 eae 131 

PLOTS ee cee ok Se noe woes ae e ee 64>) ¢graysoni; epus'..-2 | ..25...05- 200. 33 

MLENOSTISE Ser ae eee eee 74 | Sylva iS sseeeee Te eee Sens 33 

QUITS cee on eae ee ee CBC @erebnitzklin ip hinge ses eee oe ee 5 

MENEYSI Sse ees on Ja tees Sa oe 70 | griseoflavus, Reithrodontomys.............. 113 

WRLOSCONIS HEIR Se ore yee ete eS oe MUS eoristte Grompus- ae os. ee eee 7 

TMG DUONS Sen seer ase ce ieee so hoor 71 ELeLCromys eae ee ee ns ee 44 

ORT ane seek era aes 72 ep USEae ae Sar th ee eee 28 

personatus...... Set ee ae ee 71 MUS Rea f Be et ine  ae 149 

BAC UtAliste ne sos cee ees sks 71 Reithrodontomyss-. =. --- 20s. a0 s.= 113 

SITUS SE See oe 50 2)> oa caer eee ee 158 | guadalupensis, Microtus..................... 86 

BLOUICOION Ss ese Sesame wet on se 158 jagualree seroechimiys= 2-225. 5-50. ee 41 

PemOuIMEnSIS;ENOCAs ==. .-<=2s2ecsc+ 5222-255. 204 | guatemale, Urocyon........................ 211 

BIbbSH; Wenrotrichus -J-<:=2.>.0.2c222-2.25<- 234 | guatemalensis, Microtus..................... 86 

Wrotrichus. © 2222222 o-<scnececesce28 234 Beromyscusss 5 oe oe 131 

ee a ee ieee 16 gubernator, Lagenorhynchus................ 7 

BU eee Se ee oe en ee ee EN ec LOS | gundlachisiCapromyss-s4-- 22204. eee 41 

NOLIOSOPOK sacs eae aaa eee eee 240 | gunnisoni, Cynomys..............-.-.-...... 161 

gilbiventer, Mus. ........ fA ISR esta R a oR 149 Spermophiluss sae sess eee 161 

gillii, Tursiops. eee ieee eee ee 9 EV ASS UTSUS Hes. sane he ee ey ee 231 

gilvus, Perognathus....... sSeveens Se IS 0n cn 51 gymnurus, Gently ses. s LR at 74 

PIM URASOTER crane osha ® ste ose se aoe ose eos 244 Platygeomys............----. us 74 

RARON SEN ect. 2 ous cameos Susans oes 27 | 

(10) 2) (0's) 0) 61: Ta 7 H. 

SCAMMONI: 2 hese sess ces ee f \ebaidartm, sPutorius.=s9----2222--- see ens 219 

OL GLI CTL a 363 | Halichcerus antarcticus...................... 204 

Clonpatal cess Se eet eo eee Sha) | UAUODSIS VU POS co sycce eae aes en 213 

MUO see eee 264.) Narrimanig Vil pesscss. c=. 35+ eee ons eee 214 

REUGeeeeas asnae: eeere 264 | hatcheri, Reithrodon.......................- 143 

LOS et See ere ae Oe ne a ae 26a) | haydent) Sorexdssccc cc 2 ob sen ssencbones seek 244 

POUINAM S SOLOKS.cicm a ssen ate ne stew e shee 244) Doay denis Arvicolas.249.... 2-24 on.aus ost 86 

Paldmant, blaring). 42-22 ose. ot eee 238 ME GrOUUISE 2 toc en el ese occ 86 

Canis. ote ee? we We sen ee eee. IPEGONTYS! eae soe eee oe 86 

Gitta so.) Soe SS Wr hiapben V plpesss@ : <0  k lek rec eee 214 

CTRLOPCODIYS.< 2-55-22 -2-0o02ue sess 73 | helaletes, Synaptomys............... Poe sate 78 

BAUS Set ecBoa ck wok ee ee 208. | Heliosciurus libericus.........2.........-.... 187 

HISLGYOMVS 53226 —-fiaaaes so ane as 44 | helvolus, Reithrodontomys.................. 113 

WB DUS sn ooo tenis apie ee oak ee Do MALCMiIid eras -2 ote ceemers sae fac Piet Bao. ee 265 

IN GUSO MSS 35 oer wets aaa ha he Wain as 107 CASLENOUM aiccas sence Dew Gees cs 265 

MGOLOMI ES i 3- eo eta ain re eee 99 ETEDICHIGHU 25 «on 2 25 on eat oem 266 

WOT VROUE Sasa oe eee ee aac 119 BUDKUMUI ae os creo ee wee ee 265 

PEXORIDOS: ies. avant hee cee es oes 60 ROICOLOR eee nce oes re er 266 

PEROPMADOUS.> => (co cave tee tee ane: Be PLO PRIG eee cacao. s ck oo diatas vate 210 

IPOROTMVSCHS os scot Can eee we! 130 TRON eee eo as ee eae ee 210 

PETRUS epee ne ances et ee aia bernanderi: SCLOLUS..0-. . n=. >a2cent iecke 192 

Reithrodontomys...--............ Aig AELOSPOLONL YS QUIS <5 52 wim a'ain'e =n 9m a onesie. sis 123 

SCMINGHESEUINS = aes ee eos 202 ARISLON TIS = eee ae oem oe oe 125 

DGLETDIB Sree eos eee os 185 bogiity as eee ee tess 126 

SPSLIMGPMUNS.< ce see ae ees 167 CRIMPOSWIS. da eapee ss one ca cere 126 


45336—_08—_—-2:0 





306 INDEX. 
Page 
Hesperomys cognatus .........-------------- 127 | idahoensis, Lepus: -- +. .2.----.s,--- eer esee 
crinitusics 2... 00 bs ee see kee 128 SoreX....d.55 20> asecheeeeseeeeeees 
BRGMIOUS ta rns or reas: 128 ‘THOMOMYA= ===. = 5 aceeees eee 
pambelil.-- 5 se Peaecweesuecsuse 129? |) Reirus: <3 hee aes Ota a ee 
POSS PINUS a eee eee ee eee 130 Macros <2 ssccacaecesteaceres seas 
Gratilig acces ee esas 3-225 520 131:'|-indianola, Spilopale. coh estes: Sera eee 
LEUCODUS > 22-32: =. BE ee 127,181 | inflata, Topalas*< osteo eee eee 
MAGHOPUS. =. ton a Shane een 133° | tngens, .Lutreolas o2--02- 24 so: cbeeeen se ene 
MMGCHIOUS: =~ Cesc. fat ee heen ace ne 134 Perodgipus - sen225 oc-cee assess 
melanophrys:-.- <2 -esscacree == 134°) innultos, Mienotis s.--¢----+ eee eee eee 
MUAY S eo ease lege cee see 137 MUG TOM 9 ais eral caer ee ee 
SONOLICNSIS cos seems 138 SyNaptomiysec- as 2 eee ee ee 
HOXANUG ac 7c = ee seen 139 Witllpessdes tee ces See nee eee 
ROULTIGUS = 2. d22525 2s nee ae eee 123:'| ‘inops; Ribinolophus-) cesses]. eee a sese ee 
WUC Ss on ees see nner ee eee 140°] imornatus, Peroguathus:-.-.->---42-- sees ne 
hesperus, cipistrellus:< 22.2.5; sen - ene 274.| ‘Insectivorase 2: 3222 -2.S5h-c5 soon eee eee 
Seotophilms:c: 2 o-6=2~, -steasaeees 274°) insipnis; Apomysss. co. oka ee eee eee 
‘DHOMOMYS=- == o-oo ee eee 65 Ratula®. 22 oseess- bees eee 
(bbeterofeOMyS=..-- --hs.sc2o= 2 - ee oer eee ae fo.) insonus;; Lepuses.. cesses) ---- ee ae 
LOWTIAUS oes oeeosee ee es = 7 Sylvilsus*se2 os <= eee 
RTCLGTOMLV IC te en a a ea a eee 44: |; insulana, Macach:&- U2 2a 2ine- sees eee 
I Gberomlyss += ees esack ns sees eee 44.|| insularis, Dipodomys::-2--. +s. sss--eeeeeeen 
AUNCCHOUS Jz - 20.) cos soe 44 Marmosa: ic; 2s-cnes sucess 
POLUMANT sass cee a eee 44 Procyon lotor=--2 =-2 2 ee eee 
ErISCUSs=e eee eee ee eee 44 PCO PUsss sas oa Sec. noo eee 
LOD UURUISSe so cee nee s epee ee 45°| integer, Mus! !2< 2252822 a Loe soeeeeeee eee 
nelsoni. s..> s aseeossoae sete eee = 45 | intermedia, Mormoops...-.-.---2--5-s.-s5+- 
heterothrix, Liomys-.. >. <<22s-- 2-2 45 | intermedius, Dasypterus......-...-.-------- 
Ihippolestes; elis.. ~~ ou. <a on a ee 208 Lasiurus .p.ifss55et uso eee 
Hipposideridte S225 --5 css -~ nee oe 262 Thomomys.~.. 2-242 4-0022= eee 
Ep poslderosenes ean 2- <6 pe Paneer eee es 262 | interpres, Ammospermophilus 
barbensis*.--~-s22ssses2 ss eee 262 Tamias'...-sas2<st2 scab 
nicobarUle cs... sous. se eee 262"| inyoensis; Butamiass- 2.0 2-< cee eee 
hipposideros, Rhinolophus .......-.----------- 261: | isthmiea, Neotoma:---<--0 2. ----~.=-—.ene 
Hip purclius, Selucus coke ee alee 185, || isthminus; Liomyse. seees 2 eos Peer 
hippuresns; SCluLus 22> eet ee ee a 185 MicroSGlUYUS=< -- 25-2 =--teee eee 
hirsuitus. Ari beust-=..22 cee som cuss oe 267 Sclurus: 322 2o2e cao heet eee 
Reithrodoutomys-..- ---.ese =e 113 
SRhinglopnus=-- seen eee 260 J. 
hirtiis, SClarus: = ons hoes keeses = aan nes coe 185 | jalape, Reithrodontomys 
hispidus, Perogmathus. 222. oe DL | jobensis, Niyetinomus=- <0 5. co.) 2 escke eee 
IGGOMIY Ss ee eases se ane ce ceccs Dee eee HOG!) (fubatilus; USsses ese ete eee nett rere 
allenite Osos cs ect ace oe eee 106%) {ubats SUS eon. =) oe sees oes ee ere 
Wetuluss 2c -ck kes cs esses 107 | jugularis,, Urarulus. 352 -s scm ne ee ree 
Belzer | UUs se ses eas on ae hw eee ere 34 || jollanus? Muss ce. oe. eee 5 eee 
SylVUSZUS sos 2 ae seen wee eee 34 K 
Opiansis: MOLaMiass: fo ceca a nee ee 176 F 
NorristissLTSuss Jc. occ... ste eee 931 | kKadiacensis, Microtus.....-.-...-------------- 
ROSES SLO RGSUUS oo cc Sh ee see oe ee eee 22 Putorius.....-----------+--++--- 
HOwINSOLGN st occ cyan cna ecole eee eee 244,250 | kaibabensis, Sciurus....----.-----.---------- 
Niisonius wei ber as. 2<2 sss ssess eee eee g7 | kaneii, Putorius..........------------------- 
Humernle sD a yassil jn, ov sj Sess enue wee 24 | keenii, Myotis.......---------+----+-++- +--+ 
humeralis, Nycticelus............-...-..-0:: 275 Vespertilio...-.--------------++++++- 
ieawneNOse: «i esues hace oe 94 | kelleri, Mus...... ..-------------+++-+-++--- 
Piyless; POLONVYSCUS:. 25... 2.2-se--+-<- denies 132 | kenaiensis, Ursus.......----.--------+-----+- 
ERQlobapiiteer aut scoot wists kat oo ote nee 286 Wulpes....-----.++++++++++00+2--- 
hivlocetesy ApOMmyssose- foc% ose asi ae oe 157 | Kerivoula.......------------+-+-+++--2+++++- 
DE GIOUIVR tee oes etter oc cat 119 depressa...-..--------+++---+++++- 
POrOnIyeCUS a8 26 u Manel even 132 Gnipallates sss. 22. sana ee aaa 
Hyperodon semijunctus...................-- 5 minuta.....------++-+++--+2+++++- 
Hyperoddon semijunctus...................- 5 | kernensis, Dipodomys...-..------------------ 
Weystriclda):.. Lone an... sake Seiithiet tain, 40 | kidderi, Ursus.......--..---.------+-+++++--- 
klamathensis, Lepus.- -..-....---------=----- 
I. Reithrodontomys.......------ 
ictariets, Solus: <2 ocs5<-oa8 tee eeekeans 186 Scinropterus -<- -< <s-pe =e 
idahoensis, Brachylagus.-.......-......-..--- 39:1) ‘klossi. Seiurtisie. 272: sa. eee es ee 
VOLO Gs vasists - aon Se oats sare as 94! klossti, Symphalangus..-..--....-..-.-..---- 





186 


INDEX. 307 





Page. | ; Page. 

PERLIEIEY 0S 5 ort ee ere ont oe Bice See aoe sie 42 ILCPUS AUCH DOIN «22. <n Sate cten sume ss manic 31, 288 
breviceps ee Rah veto a RAS he ae 4 baileyi STIS a mis ie ectatis ia ota ac nbs aoe Seiad aR rae 31 
WieGE Ro ot oo ee eee as 4 Ee re ee ae ee 27 
POO Ole rae ere en eee 4 CBTNCLUINIS = 2s ome ws. San c eee eRe aes 32 

CONUS ete cers Eee noes eos Jee 27 

i ChiapensiS ..../2-<.c2-4.6 Sa ty Se Sak oe 32 

connectens. ...-. ee eee ee ae Sea 32 
labradorius, Lepus...-....-----------++----- 2a) Gait eek debe tL 28 
laceianus, Peromyscus.......-------.-------- 132 fostintiere ce ee ne el a eo 28 
laceyi, Peromyscus... ......-..-.+---+++++++- i | Cora ees te ee oad Se tee eA 7 33 
lachuguilla, RUGINGUINS ee oats ete 69 | Gailariie ery eee ts oe ae 28 
PaerIsunis; WCiPeOla.—.--—-. =. n = mannan -* 221 | paldananiess ire 8 act ten oie 33 
feanatay hatula..:...2...- ER ee TS I STR 5 a0 SO VRODE Lee SR has oe ees A 33 
SePOTIOPE VG MS 2 = oo anon ang cuemenacip c= aoe me a a tea eae aR Pe 28 
acutus......--------+------- (,8 | Holenerie: oO ee eee 34 

* Chet. - - «2 <.- ~~ e0nn en n-s 2 IGANGOIISIS ots oe oe net cnt ee 38 
gubernator..........-..---- <i RSOMUS ote eens Gene e a eal aoe eee 34 
obliquidens. ............-.- 8 | Klamsthonsis.co-2: 26 onto. sece tee tee 28 
obscurus ae ep Saaer wi 237 IabradOrius:<e-..-02%.¢- ses cece ae 29 
; perspicillatus......-.....-. o | macfarlani...........- SUNS ie 29 

Wapomiys collatis--------------...----------- 39 | Mmapdalens:.2.-* --<.2. oes aoe 5 29 
lampensis, Paracas eo sence Se ese s oe 19 Talore Pewee Ce eel nr Sg 34 
lancavensis, Mus.......--..----.------------ 150 MNALPATI GH. =. 2 hae ak cae ae 35 
Sciurus.........- eee 186 TOCKTALNT SS oe oh eee ee es 29 
Tragulus....-..---------------- 19 | RUMOR TAT see ee ae ad ee 35 
Janensis, Pteropus.....----...-----------...- 257 GL ab ee Me oe cae oe 35 
Janigera; Pteropus.....--..<..---..------.=-- 257 OLRUS eee ee ee a Sa 30 
Lasiurus... .--...-------------+---+---+-++-- 276 DacCwicus] ee sees wee ook eee 35 
AYIRCEMOOINS 5 == o.oo Sees sei Ses 277, 292 | PORATOMIUS - © 8. see. wee A 30 
Semota.........-------------------- 276 | PICTUS Senet, 2 ce a= Otte pee ae 36 
teliotis.......-.-------------------- 277 TODLISHUS 2 oe ste oo sc were cet knee 36 
Latax..........--------+-------+-----+-+--- 218 | ATT 1 nh ed ee 30 
nefeis.....-------+--+-+-++++-2-+2+++-- 218 SATICHIGIGR I eet nee emcees Semees, pe 36 

Ia UAeISyeDCIDNINUS = = <p o< oe oe ene nee- 9,288 SIeTEIOCte  ee  ee  oe 30 
Prodelphinus...........-.-...--.-- 288 Simplicleanuseees.a- ss eeeen Pe ee 37 

laticeps, Thomomys..-......-.--...-...- a) SUDCINC CUE cee eet aoe eee poe ae 37 
latifrons, Neotoma....--.....-...-.-----.--- 100 trowpmdpiles..6. 2..0 aes eee ss ae. 37 
Orthogeomys.......-.-...-------+. 75 Erich a se ee eae 37 
Spilogale..............-.---.------. 223 GUIBLENSISS 52) =e eo ee oe 30 
latimanus, Scapanus....-.......--.---.------ 233 | WbenicOlay=-+ 27 te4. 4. 4c-5) oe eee 38 
SRMOSOIS , NUOMIOMYS: o-oo ne nae 66 | VAELODIC! ee we Re ET | 30 
PRUOHSISOCLULUS <0 ate o ale min are a0 sin ane == 186 wyallawwallas pooee coe oe a 31 
Lavia...-.-.----------- +++ 22-22-2222 222+ --- 260 nyashingtoniase- eye eee eel can = 31 
JTOMS. ~~~ ~~ ++ 2220-2022 e eee eee eee 260 | VUICH CARIICUS 2c eee acs feeriree 38 

TEX... ---------- 22-222 - 2222 e eee eee eee AO lestes\ Canlisee 1 8-ce <5 5202 ela ne oe 216 
Jemminus, Aschizomys...............-----.- 93 leucodon, Neotoma...........-..--.------++- 100 
RRS ea eee too ee a oon es eS 76 MHomOMyS ees ee 66 
minusculus.........--+------------- 76:1 Jeucoparia, Putorius............-:-.22-..-.-. 220 
nigripes.....-.---..-----+----++---- 76 leucopus, Hesperomys.............-.------- 127, 131 
yukonensis= = --20- 6-252 - 22.2 =n. 20) | leucotis, Sigmodons---.-- =. -.2sesc.0.22--+ 109 
Pemuride...-.-----.- 22-22-22 eee ee eee eee 281") Jevipes) Perodipus:.:=..--..---.-2..-t-....+- 60 
Venothrix........-.-.......--- we teeeeeeeeeee 157 Peromyscus. ............ ne ee 132 
CanuS........---------------+----- 157 eithrodontomys----.-..-22-4-->-- 114 

SREROCO MUS ere oe iis e mio <a am a ie oe a ha Dat slewisit COCVUS oot once ack tec cece scree seule 14,288 
TTC ie oon tee aes eae 282 | libericus, Heliosciurus..............-.-.--.-- 187 

Se PE EEO DUS <0 os cee = hee nate oases 258 IC UILEUIN Meee eee eaten = as one e 187 
MEN ecstasy acne e Sac nn oe a cic ene ae Sie Hemicolor, Crocig tre ..225 5-2... .2ce2 esc cc. nes 235 
WISTNIMUUCLONIS tod 2-.= on onen ances -onrace ene 265 PATAOOKUNUS. 32 toss os mmm cms meme << 210 
PATEASOLO. See soe oes eee 265 Miri nis al Olsens se cence aac cg chccpocasesases 208 

lepunris, FIOterOMyS ==... -. 2-2-2 sees nee 45 | Bint este Nae ee eek ae oo ee 187 
BREMGUEY SOUS ates ois a ee eee Ise DIMANOMYS= 920 cs--2>5-<<- nena ae ee eee 156 

Reser OOM Sere a Soe ane ae ae 219 | NELAIIL Ste. oR ea cee ene Ec dacs 156 
SPENT ne oa IS og aioe ake ale A UINOSUS VE HOMMONLYS: = <2 <-~ 220s -c3ennnansenns 66 
PIP AIOAT He oink oes Sere sine wien ans DVe Gaba, PMOCEM ian an senesced a ee asco sen ene 6 
SRNR SEES eet ere rah on aie sao aes aie DIMOU POUSISS MUR a. soca ce tceeee ete ns basen 1) 


STII ES SOS SEE a eee eee aan Fim WN PUNPSUSIS, SCLUDUS . ©. 2 22 55s-hese se cas-s-2 187 


308 


MuOMyS 33. oo Sass. cee ak ene eee Seer 
CONUS (es ee eS eee eee 
crispus 
heterothrix 
isthmius 
minor 
ODSCHEUB Ste eee tec ow nn owtneewee-oaer 
ONDWAlISS. ea. Ve accu tat sen reeheeets 
DAPVICODS Saree ac oem Cee ee ace ee. 
MHS. oe ke as eae Nsic Weterse eeee 
plantinarensis..... Nai avsaacecehe ceri 
TOSWWAUIS SH Woe 2 wee eee ates 
BOLOSUS Esse e ss cc ceaesawcs seems toes 
BONOraAND. 22. oc. Ses aoa Ae Sa 
VQKGDSIS. <2 oe ge cc cu cee necewasew oes 
LOMTIOUS 2 has othe ices ae ae 
VONRELUCIS :, 2.245 con ase seoee eee 

Brssodelphisss 3252<.5). 5-2 Se cane sess eee 

LiGtoralisy N@OLOWMAE «a2 22 nen eee 

SCIPS 2 secs - ae enc ae a ee eae 


Nanensis,; Geomys. sce. 3-..5 2255552 eee ee 
lonpicanda, Putorius. 32. ce25--seseeee eee 
Meithrodons =. 2-62 eee 


longicaudus, Phenacomys........-...----- ts 
lonpiCrEs, My ObiSace o-oo Sec tee eee seas 
longidens, Delphinus..-.:-2\....-- s2-ce-ssss6 
longimembris, Otognosis..........-.-.------ 
Perognathus).-3.22-422--- eee 

longipes, Dipodopsea sss. ison arcane ee 
Perodinus--cen. 3 Sate sees 
longirostris, Arvicola 
Lophostoma venezuel 
lophurtis! (Peromyscus s—-5 2 -- = oe ee 
loringi, Evotomys..-........-.- EEL See ee 
hieas, Music... s2scc8 sco wae ee eee eee 
DORIS ct) Sere sto acl ae ee ee 
liicasana, Spilogale=-'-.--. 2... 2s. eeee 
lueleePArdops:.c.2--- to. ae. nt cOeeeeecace 
Monophyllus 2: 3. -22--<iecte etter oee 
Stenodermsas=.22 4 w<22tccueee ewes 

VUCT UG US SIMU ONS © once a Se a ne ee 
ludovicianus, Microtus...... ce Seta ae eee 
TOPPUS ABUSES soon Sean a doe ene seuss 
luteicollis, Tragulus..............- tc te erie 
luteiventris, Eutamias............-...-...... 
TaMiassics~ nfo e bac decns ee eeee 

MUGBOLIS, SLUGS =, « 5.22 ost aasme be ease ees 
TOLESCONA GEOINYS .: <0. ose sae ee eee 
BOMINIS! =< one ces aan na ate 

OURO TLCS ei ata Are hina Retort 

VELOUS WE CLOULVSOUS. 22 25 = sn acc nal neeiels 
GROOM ares ie Senior tt win an Soa ening oe Rete oe 
WIS ONIN sacs se ac pe sswieuc cece unseen 

NCUA HIS rN a nts wet arom acl uses 
MAOTGOOTU sear Sek get, WSs 

Lyell) Sores sc ster e pe ence evs oes coos cee 


califormlcGus:- -...s2e- ener ae ne oa 
eremilcus..o.c2..c8 onde eee ea Secesne se 
Pallescens* = 525 ose foe a ew 
WU GAS So sc tac ad epee eee ee 


INDEX. - 
Page. M. Page. 
Ab: )|hnoaeal 2.00.0: slew, Seat ones ae 282 
45 | Adusta:}. 2 ose ccev ness seer ees 282 
45 | ADOGNSIS.: sett e- a cao sae ee 283 
45 | DIOC8 22 seHe eos ore ee eee 283 
45 | cagayana! 224 3.23-5 eee 283 
46 INSWANAS «c's ooo ds eae 252 Alaa ee oe 283 
46 mindanensis.. =) 365.25. - 2 eee 284 
46 | Siluensis 3 so ooee<ch ere eee 284 
46. | Macacus fascus® 2222) a525-0- eee 283 
46 Pageusise fe <6 eae ee oe 284 
46 PHU s 2s Aisne os eee 284 
47 PuUMINS Sse ee ao2he eee 284 
7 DINDIOSUB eo oe ae eee eee 285 
47 VUIOSUS ssc cc. 2o spose aceapeees eee 285 
7.) emaefanlant: Mepis. 2 ose: 52-8) eee eee 29 
47 Microtusc--c-8se 5 oes eee 87 
47 |~machetes, Blaring 2205... 52- soo. eee ee 238 
9 | mackenzii,; Phenacomys:...-.....2:-.<-.--e. 96 
100"'|| “snackloti;: (Pieronus- 2 -2565- 22-4 6-— ae eee 259 
187) | meacrodens;Phoce 234s. 4s a 204 
212): “Tmaerodend, Wiper == acess ses eee eee 97 
212 | utreolas. 25 seen =e ee 221 
70 | Borex? 25 4U5 ok ee eee 245 
218:'| Macropeonlys.25. 2. -e uses ance ee ene 75 
114 | costaricensiS.:.5---a--.2seee eee 75 
114 dolichocephalus..............- 76 
245°] \MACropus, ATVICOR snr a5-.m eee cee eeereee 87 
96 HLesperomys- 262). 6 ee 133 
271 Microtus2: oo 2ns5-5 cease eee ee 87 
8 Myniomes s228.21 5 Seen tee eae 87 
52 Mespertiliozo 22224. S$... 0iceceeeee 271 

51,52. | macropygmeus, Sorex...........-.-...<-..- 245 
60 Macrorhinus angustirostris..................- 205 
60' | macrospilotus; Citellus.-..<.2....5..0.-50.48 167 
87 | Spermophilus................ 167 

963 | macrotiss ldiurussss-b oes ce eee ne ee 203 
133 NYCUNOTIUS << en oe aera 279 
94 Seiuropterus! 2+... seep eee eae 202 
150 MrichyYS: 2- Sos: za.s sid ew sea ee 40 
187° | Macrotusicalifomicus-o: t2ss---- se -see ee 263,290 
993) WMaAcrourUs, Vulpes S42 coo cee aes eeu oes 214 
268) | macrurus; Microtus. 22-70-22 -\-.-s-s-s45seen 87 
265  madrensis, Callospermophilus.............-- 173 
268 INeatomasso sce ane se eee nee 100 
270 BGTOMYSCUS cs ce eee eta 133 
87"| -méerens; SciuropterusS =.=: .-.<.<2.-es- sees 203 
150 | magdalenez, Lepus..:-............... Se ane 29 
19 Perognathus >... 2-2-5255. 52 
176)’ mapister, Neotoma.-. 5-25. 2- -. eee 100 
176: | tiagne! lating. 8.2 --- See a eee 238 
150 | magnirostris, Mus. ..2-_/2-2.22>2.23 7. stneane 151 
71 | magruderensis, Perognathus................- 52 
188: | major “ATCLOgalCia. - omc cc een ee toes 209 
19 | Ohinghisi so hxc ote ok ee 224 
133 | Citellus:: cscs ei eeee bates moet e ae eta 167 
221 | CYNODUGNUS pee e eee baer eee 255 
221 OPUS Aires nate eh aentes i Mea owes - 34 
221 | Mephitis 5 -\-= (25-5. <- easrcreenrenceae® 224 
221 | Natalus osci oc i cee cates eraaees 269 
245 WNeiirotrichus? -22.¢ a. ssa eee 235 
206 | Sigmodones <0. <2. 2c 5s occ cases 109 
206 Spermophilus:. 22.5: 2te oo ee ees eee 167 
206 | Sylvilagas’: 25225: Ss. eee es 34 
206 ZEDUS es Se cece disk a ana es 43 
206 | managuensis, Sciurus........-..-..-..------ 188 





—.. 


PMADSAATIS. SCMILUS + = seszcee ee eee ease ole 
mansueLUs, SVIVIEZUS...--..--<0s0-sea--<--- 


OOPS ae meatal ene ena arn 

SYVLVURSUSue oe ot sass smsee 
marinas, Citellus......-.2i/c2---s<-.<+<- 
Bpermopnilws:---22-+4--~-— es 


GUY DUS ooclcicracs ance eee ae sere sete 
PRHESUI Goes Sos vewin Woaiecioeuslese Smee e 
MinCbiniensis, NeOtoma. ..:.-.-..0ss<2sssse=5- 


PMEMESTISMMUIS§ 9 nooo. eet oee bt nce 
DOUITUSS oo.o. <5 fo aoe es cae 


Tiny AV OLOMLYS.- ... =.= oce.s05—s-o=-- 5 
PEHOMOMUYS se se ceo eco eee ee 
MHEMNUEHTUS GeENbUIIO. 5. <= <6 cie0c=esecnscecs-- 


PECIMSHOLVZOMLYS® «20-2 05255=5es-8saceecss 
IPOTOMLYSCUS. . asco. sna S seen was 
megacephalus, Microdipodops.........-...-. 


RDI LS Sone — eee eta eee te 

MPO EMMIOES = ano | oho anos enews ass 
PAPEHan i ONvZOmys. - &-.. 655.822 ooo sacs = eet 
Megadontomys nelsoni.............-...-..... 
GUOMREST oe <a eetn Soy 

megalops, Peromyscus..........-. ek eae 
megalotis, Hesperomys.............-.--.--.-- 
MASILBTOGONS. <== 22 S27 d5/2= Sas on 
Keithrodontomys.....;.<.....<.-- 
mekisturus, Peromyscus.............-.....- 
melanocarpus, Peromyscus ..............--- 


MIBIBNOPS OCLIFUSS. =. 0. os) vtec aaecea enc 

SMO MMOMVS aoe ae ccc noel eats. 
melanorhinus, Vespertilio................... 
melanotis, Perognathus..................... 


PROVEN ae aoe os eas cca St 
PABITIAIINIG COL VIG oo a x x. cwieccneenaccseucensours 





INDEX. 
Page. | 
188  merriami, Reithrodontomys................. 
34 | mesomelas, Peromyscus...................-- 
SPM OSODIOG ON cece wt es oa ca cae ees tae 
35 SlQNGRELiS soo. 2 aietoe cae eee 
Sos MIBIAChINISMee aa: oct oo kN eS 
167 PAalliduste sc ccc seen eee nce lea- ss 
Hei | pmewa; ThOmomys: << -— =. See te cece -<e 
mr meRicans, AlOUBLIAS 4-2... 02 ace - 5. 
2 | Amtiloeapras nesses 
2 BIsTiNgs Se... Seok ooo wake 
2 Ghilonycterisy. 25-22... ee ee 
161 IM APINOGS = ae ee oe ae ee 
161 INGOtOmM ace ne oo se ee 
1 OLICISCHS ei wee ene oe ee 
101) | mexicanus; Cynomys--..-2-- os ee 
151 | MicronyeterlS;-2 es eee ees ee 
200 | Wataluse-. sec orc, lee cece 
151 | OS VAS 6 ere oe ee ost 
188 | Perognathuss. >see. ssecn-n ee 
JOR MIeNHICLOGIPOUODS 2 ees = eae ee ene 
15 @alulormicus: =) 5-95.52 e eee 
15 megacephalus................ 
94 | palliduss <2. soonkeosasegesees 
66y | smicrodon: | Canis®<. see ooh oe eee 
268 Reithrodontomys..............-. 
217 SIZMOGONE s 552-5552 sence aoe 
208 Spilogales=s5 2-222. cease ae oe 
TSR a MulCrOn Vy Onan} 3c a ee a mee oe 
119 MORICANUS : Goss. 2 re oer eas oe 
133 IHICTOUS Ia sesasa dace ¢ Mine eee = 
HG) | IMICTOpS EeCrOgipUS--s-criee = eee see 
DEON WUICKO PIS, NCOLON Sees o-oo eee te eee 
OGD) |) MUCTOSCIUTUIS ISLETS =s se eae ss see 
260 | Microsorex almorum......................- 
119 CRIMIUS! 3 Se oA ee 
135) |) uCrotis; Micron ycteris= =< ..------0-4--cce. Se 
J40T MCTOtUS sere te ek ane ne eee ee noe 
133 SDDIGVIBLUS so. ee see 
134 SCTODDIUUS hse eee ee 
114 BAOCHUIS Mesa ee ane oes 
114 Bl DICATION a == a= eee See See oe oe 
134 MED eee ee ee ee 
134 altiCOMISE = secs oes ee cee 
200 ANPVSUCEPS sce ee ec ecs sees oe 
134 aphorodemus: 2_-------.12.5.-.... 
134 ATIZONGUSIS. = Jo20 >: cade. osteo cle bee 
134 AUILIGUIATISS 5 csc ho oe ook eee 
188 DATO eee ce eee a ees tcneces 
66 bermardinus::: co 05 5.258) 22d. : 
271 brachielix: 725 - wee ese se oc tes se 
52 DIGWElle co: sp eatee eons eects 
110 ORNTOMNICUS ro ~ eee ee nace 
101 CANESCONS yas to see are See 
176 CANICAIICUSS -) es Se a 
189 COUSUIG ON tee 2 2s ee ee 
224 CHICAUUMIS Gees 2 = Sse cs wae Reece 
224 CUINUHULIS see cece core oa rice Se 
224 WU UGHON se seen eee ew tos ontwee oe om 
224 (Cloth (eee eicctet nae ccichucs se Wate 
225 CUVTUOCOLOS onc co onc wae taleetan « 
225 JOMINS seek Gree pi ate wae ius Suee sic 
225 SISNET ete oth, Me ote Nene ue DoE 
226 SUIVE VENUE Cs 22. cone weet anbieeeue 
15 CWA WMNAENSIS. co cued ate she eek 
29 haydenil...... 2.4.6 Sr euetette wens “i 
134 WTIMMUUTUS Yoree cook os Sten ee oe oe 


"81 


81 
81 
82 
82 





310 INDEX. 
Page. Page. 
Microtus kadiacensis..........---.----..-+--- 86\| minutus, Rhinolophus:..........22u>.se-4.60 261 
ludovictanus; >-- coco tee eee eee 87 Veanertitio 2.) sa. ea eee ee 261 
MAGIANI AI cote eran ote es wees 87 , miradorensis, Eptesieus.................-... 291 
INAGYODIUS. cceee = ee Reece cscs 87 Scotephilus: 25-0 cree 275,291 
INAOUTIVUS Sorat coc ees eee SORE 87 | ‘Mirouniga. 3. . sc.is2-Aa- <a eee ee 205 
MONITUS Ae eek ee eee ee se 88 | - angustirostris'....;..-ccees steep see 205 
WMIQOUGS CUS SLo. - conn r onan aaa 88 | mitchelli; Dipodomys_ 22-2 22s ee eee 58 
MON ANOS se oot eee ee 87,289" | mmiurus, Mileropises2 one 2 care eee 88 
THOMLOSUS = cians ae - ae ees ea one 88 |) mobilensis, Goomys>. 2. }au-— 7-3 eee 71 
TMOLORS 5 foes se eae eae eae me 88 .| modesta, Arvieola 220. o.- 5S seer eee 88 
MISTS ee se ee eS 80 | modestus; Microtus:22 25-5555) Sees 88 
MRTOTALISS che. 2 ee ede. 89. |} molaris; Nastiass:coc5 se ne eee 228 
MGEVECOUSIS < o--- ee ee eee oes 89.'| mollis; Citellts. be eee a eee een 167 
OonOgastene..- hc a- .. ee eee ee aes 81,83 Spermonhilns:.-2 55... sesh eee 167 
ODGPSLIUS <5 225-00 sass e some eee 90'.,|? Molossid <= 2 sao ase e een ee ee ee 279 
OTROS 6s onsets 90) || Molossusix; 32-2282 So nc sae cee eee 281 
IDAMINGHSIS se eee ae 90 aurispinosus. 52>. 2.2)-s 2+. seeeoeee 279 
RUPERT USS ee) eee eee 90 MI STICANS see n-ne aan eee 281 
DHRU Ee cise see eee eee 91 PIOUOSUS..e Oho So ee ee 281 
popoleDsISee sess ss eee 91 DY SULCUS. een esos ane er eaeeeee 281 
(ussiaterss.<. eae seeeeeemecaee 91) 280, | Monophyllts=-s:2 6 a sees ese 264 
TAVIGUIUS.- see oe eee eee eee 91 | Clinedaphus:o:is .- ceeeoeeeee 264 
Sealopsoides=.-.54-----<-5-=--4=---- 80,91 | cubanis.= 522. J-22scee eee ee 264 
Solrpensise cn Jase eee ane 92 THCiE >. Laan acess bee nee see eres 265 
SBEPOUS onus bate e eee ee sr abisante se 92 | pléthodon~...5..<.4-52--2seaee 265 
SItk@NSIS 52106-22450. 2 eee eee 92 | portoricensis 26 2.c.c-cs2246-ee 265 
(otiNSeNdS ooo sn ee nee 89 | montana, Arvicola.......-......--...2-20+ 88, 289 
ishUkIShOruil 62s. 25. caren ee 92) | montanus, Dipodoniys. 22-4 ---- eee 61 
VMbTOSts ee 5. ee a ee 92 | Microtus oi 22: 2..2s24aeeneeee 7,289 
LINSIASCOTISIS! oc ooh = eee eaten 93 | Perodipuse.2 als os seo See 61 
ValliGolaosss. sasce sna s ee Sere 93 Reithrodontomys. .........-..-.- 115 
VAKUtAteUSIS.2=- 3) pee eee ee 93 | Zapus..s2 2. oi ss acre a 43 
microtus, Oxymycterus............-..------ 143 | montereyensis; Soraxs. =: 7.429 es eee eee 245 
Mictomys DulatuS-2 2-55 --<-7252- seme cte 77 ~~ montezum2, Neotoms sc... a02 sesso Dee eee 102 
Galli. 525. 2555 sees cee eee ice 7 | -monticols,. Perognathus- 35... --s ee eee eee 52 
InNUItUS . ncs-2 sect ee ee ee Ae 78 Sorex oo. co oh cewse sce seen cee 246 
sphagnicolas.!: ss-¢s5s45+ acs 1eseee 78 |, wonticolus, Sorexs-:o:..5 22--seees-55-5 eee 246 
{els so. ae ale ate e eee ones 78} montosa; Arvicola;<- 20-25. seen ee 88 
WIANPElM (25 alyssa ae 79) | montosus, .Microtus.- 22. -t5.>-.s2s-eecee-aee 88 
Midas eleganttllus.-::-..-252-2222-2s-ee-- =<. 282" | miordax, Arvicolt.-- 23-522. 56-0 see eeeeeeen 88 
TMNGGANOOrN, KUISUS +. sec sccm esac ence 232 | Microtus. . oJ. aie ee eee 88 
THUS CMON BIUS—<ces25 56 tees een ner 225 Mynomies =... 22032022 See eee 88 
wimBlluUSs SCLUTUS..2- .<-2-ssecceee~c eae eas 189 | MOTmMOODS cc). -aug.< 2a. seen earn cee 262 
MWHIMUCUIUS, SCLULNS: = 25202254 see = aoe eee 189 Injtermedin< a. 28 Sees see eee 262 
MOA CrOciGtia s— sacs 2 soe e eae acc ee se ae 235 | mepslophyils Ge2.c-2- teste 263 
RAL INTIA | CLUNUIDs = oe esa a oo ee ep een 189 | morroensis, Perodipus..................-.--- 61 
Rupe. scutes pee ee ees 23. | mundus, Vespertilio’ 2. co sar. cscene -seecene 291 
mindanensis, Cynomolgus.............------ 284 "| Mintiacus..%. 24 Lc Soec ea uc eeeeee 16 
MOCSCR cons santas so eee eee oe 284 anCanus:.....sUccecocmaees oeeeee 16 
MUS. ooh een hee eens 151 |, muricauda, Myosorexs.2>-->-.-e=ee cece seers 236 
MITTS, SL EMOUONs).2 45 ee sc asar certs PLO | Mitiridse: 2.22 is bee eee eee eee 76 
minnesote, Peromyscus: -....25s02-2---026= 195) | MVS’ 22. sia se stas ene meee ero Seca aes 143 
THNOM PAN UCOZOLA 005 5 5 ses sn ee aoe oe 278 albigularis: < .53.s2.¢-4octce oo co aes 143 
ATOLOPANUNG. (455-5 sschicemceste ers cel 209 ANAMD GG. sass. over eee hoe eee ere 144 
RGU PAG eco e ot eens 210 APICIS Tf Art SSS- nck acess eeeieee ees eee 144 
EB PUS tke os ene ooce tase eee enna 35 Boul. See ck antes aah tale coemre Cee 144 
WAGHIVS = oS kick twee deren tae ete 46 SPOR. Lh ges oi oer See ee eee 144 
NIGUEL UH BOL tte oe 2 ec tixn scan nas sen 236 BtetUSs 6.0. Lice tee cee eee sete see 144 
OUI ADRS au kts xen wes «acs ate as 35 atridorsum:.-.ui.t .620c ten chee oes 144 
AR DUSS: sete Le CURe ee cteian sens amendan 43 DSRODUS S22 a sacee access kau Oe. aoe eee 145 
minusculus, Lemmus.........-...---- gece: 76 Dale 7s). 255s acs spk ee eee eee eee 145 
Pintswrellus: oto. oct os 274 Datamanus..2.0.ccn-boeeee~ eee cues 145 
minuts, Kerivoulas.20 6 noses seat k ona sew cee 278 bentincantisa. <7 o-oo ce nee eee 145 
miintitilis, Rhogecsss .....).-see~-soues esos see 76 BUErescOns. 2 se. ee eee eee 145 
minutillus; Rhinolophus:>:.22-2.0. >- +. ~~~. 261 DURTUNUS A 3 o as iecioe eee a en eee 145 
minutus, Cynopterus.......... os eR a ie 255 DUSPUIS.w5, ech AA es oe eee eke See 146 








INDEX. 311 
Page. Page. 
REPS DUTANPONSIS se oc ace /secaees oe le ones 2 146. | MSCUluUSs! Peromyscus. ./- -2cset esses ae 135 
COTIMAGs- . masiere sn onan way 146 SICOMUYS: =.= <2 aco ee teen = 135 
GuS@nitee seco Se auc nc eaeeeersee ease TSG | MANUISTO ae eer ec a saat Oe ee ho 221 
ital ares) meee ere entre 146 PIGIIGO Abe ne te tee re ee 221 
Gln b ahviss sees ee core eae eee any 146 AG UMONG ae tee ae 3 oe 222 
Gonimikcari vikeer =~ se- nes oe eet ea 147 NeSOphilseanse = << e eee ee ea are 222 
eramoriventer 472.5 san. secure ass 147 OLICCDOS Bee anaes (ae eee 222 
LOR Se ee ep eee ae see Ami en IStelG se yeter = 4e.0. 2 oe etc tee ueece nea 218 
MOM CCHS A ce so. oa UE Re Seto eciee 147. )-mutapilis: Sorex... .- <2. -.c0se-h 05s. Sere 242 
MOTTON 8 eee fone cee 1a pemiutica, Glossophara: 22... sac. ..ces cess - 264 
MOPARS J. ao nie oe ea Sow aone meee (Aveo ticus SV lpesic= -c.ec dct ore a. eee ecc0% 214 
PRAT ETI Soe op Oe ee ee cee aire 148 | Mynomes alticolus.........-- Steet 2a ee i 80 
SREDADCRIUSs ee 5 eto a a cin cae aes oe 148 | MACKOPUS pe aeok che ose eee cae 87 
nM Gate Roe = fe see ene acs 148 | MOPAR seta set cee atcasee 88 
EOC Se eo toe et ne IS ia 148 MANUS see ceee ioe eee ee oe 89 
HAGIVONLOD. 2b och. i ou CaaS ee een ee ISO Mivod es Mipripes sss. aa: = arenes ees aoe 76 
LIE OU LSS % a ee ae eee eer M485) amy ops, Erethizonls. 2. -5--22--5--422-< Sees 40 
ROOTEETIS te ce Pals osyeeces 2 RIE Fe ae 149 POLG Kee ese soe eee ee 246 
gilbiventer......- fais os Ease Ee 149 | ALHOMOMYS225ee ow ase eae eee 67 
CORDS Re ee ee ee 120 Wiley OSORE Xe nes se anti < otaeaeta seo ees eee 236 
AOL ON Sona cars oS oss cio anes SoS Ree een 149 TUNIGAUGAL Joo < cet sade dee sence 236 
SMR ore coe ca eae eee ees 149 iF wiyvobalpacs fete. ceo «saccse ao teehee aia een 98 
Rea Old eee ne Aen oe cn nee Aa Saisie cre 150 GANSUS Son. eee ate te aeeeeee es 98 
PIT RISES Se Sere on cn eye neers oe) sess SOM IMEC OLS 5.8 eb San 5 See Doe Seas eee Se 270 
MTAPENIRIS! Soe is aes 2 wie meare bra eialat Wate ale aia > 150 SIASCENSIS WS sen cc swicckss «.octosc eee ease 270 
aOR er arte Ui oe Sore die aoe £50 CALITOMMICUS Fem tee easel 271, 272, 273, 291 
MHRELSMOEE ES Seles oon ee. > SPU Sahat 150 CAaNIMALB Esa aoe Mh ataeere eee a 270 
WINERIEINS oh b oc Scucten woe esac eu secs 150 CAUITINUS sone a-e ance eso tee ene ee 270 
BP OTMTOR GELS yo2 ck 0 acu eas create ciation < 151 Gominicensis -..2s220. 0s. seers ee 270 
AS ee ene eae) Sos 5 Sete alate 151 GVOUS eee eee ean ae nS eee 290 
LTT CER ee a ee a 151 (ROGUTIE es seen ans ae See Be 271 
AIC MMERNIS 6 eho a eee boale s.cwc's 151 LONPICTUS see tose ese Cee As 2s 271 
SCOT M a so Ba Sn Se cee. oc 151 PUCHUQUS. SAG R . o - Soe 0.43 Beas 270 
PUREMSS. 25 on Ses eon oo aa es atte eo 152 NESOPOLIS? Geictens- es ec eetetee eevee mas 272 
MIMMINIOSUIS 82 Be. Miaa oh waco sais ssse ieee ess 152 palliduise2 ecjseas. 2-35-26 ako one ss 273,291 
MATIALPTINIG oe 2 ae a sacs ae cee ee eecscnes 152 SaLUTStUS Se see. - 2a Sac S oes et se 5 273 
CUA 2s porte eS Ses oe 152 HH YSANOdES Se 55 See tans Sheer ese 273 
MICTRORUMLUE So oon, = a ance gutta a 148 VUMANENSIS Aas se eased eee 271,291 
POUUIVIRNUS soos 2 Sasson omnes sean se 120289" || Moyzmecophagals.—-. -- seen ene ton eae 3 
WOIMVENTOR.« os-2s2--secce. sees eR osess 152 centralis: 3=...22 sbes.seeo=8 == 3 
NN Sere et as Sc nde ce see e'te ste ease pial) Mvurmecopharidiees, - as. -aeunesces ee eee 3 
TORRES srs 0 a shane iawn falstars Mo sIeS wom cise oes 152 | 
RETURNS He othe toss Saas oh s oc 153 | N. 
RIAMIPMIC UN eta. = ae a ise ete Pee 1538) mana, Brachypniyilar once cicccwecc sole tomes = 266 
BIMIUUMEDSISE sae nc coco ee cheno ea 1539) soaAnvodes; |Geryus= 222) saccwescseea a a a oe 15 
ST TE TTC eR a io | Gitemnndsalurnss2..5 -. .Josct eee cee sce 160 
PUI Ree ae San oc BoE EN seen 153 | BANGCRHUS =. 206 oes oc ee 160 
SUM LDATIG oh aaa icc ool w Siac nieles eas ools's 153 bonmleantists 24-2: sees 161 
FERTALL OTIS Re et! ne SR ES ck 154 DUIGHO ree eee ea 161 
BUMS ee ne. 5a ee ae Sos scat 154 STMALMALLIG sone exits ate eee 161 
BONGUR sheen ct eter aoc ease ae ae eee Id) MOMS SATWICOLA te cine cewes cc eee ue can eee 89 
REO ae a ee i ean es ere 154 MIOTOSUS! Cortana te ase etes ox vest 7 xe 89 
RACIUUTHES 3 25, oo soir Jak Meee pS tia 154 DIVMOMIOS. Stok tixacne 5 owe tes eel. 25 89 
RUCUUISYVEURISe cree Soc Sacco 2s awe oe Re 154 MOLER ee Geta eie sae ese cou ety tee Uae 246 
ABI DSIATICNB LS Se oo sco d ese eiecae eth 155 TRAVASSIIGEL omit cur ed.coeee en dees es oes 24 
= BAERS oes 2 ase tole <is's ee ole aso = 155 | Napseozapus roanensis ....................- 44 
SNOT RQICNIS fe ooo esp cet me ele ore heresies LBB OpSiCUS, CCUOMOMIyS so... ocean. vssescttotcskess 67 
LE VE 1 AU RE Rene ee Po eNOS Sees wa va Se Sone ae w 228 
REE CLOLSUTL: 12. 4 eels s etc sat enaeee 155 TOLAIAS roe hgc ios wise ese wia so eloee eh icm 2 228 
WAMGUIS So. 255. BAe cia es 155 TIDINGS aa, wate 3 = ai coe hae oe Mera eecae 228 
PO TEREI I es aco ns cia = ete thioca tiene kaos 155,289 | Natalide....... Said 2 i a acl a i iaraPare te a Se 269 
NORITONGTIS le Se ye Pi UP BO ot aoe mI ELLIS Ste Ac oo: See esas ne eraeee oe 269 
WLIO A eo ee ee eR re eee 156 PTB VAMIGUGS: 2. asc ae woes ek. eke 269 
PEI PORU OER ai eles coc ets weassemee waa 156 TS less ee re aa oe eR ego 269 
ASO ATO MC Peers ae oe an moe ke a eee 159 THEXICAM USS Jee se dys ela eet tare 269 
miusculoides, Peromyscus... 200.0. =.224----- 135 IMI CHIPOS GUNG a a .teee eee en oes ati 269 





312 INDEX. 
Page, Page 

natunz, Galeopithecus...........-.-------- 254: | Neotoma martinensis.::......-.-.--+--=-s0ee 101 
Goeleoptarus ce .. 20-2353 one oe 254 MelANUIA: ; ..i5 sca sesewseene Suse 101 
INyeuicebUSs 2. eens ee eons ee 282 mexicana. 20h) .< ssi2 4. pos swe 101 
ePrAR MIS: . se deo heer an ees 19 micropuss ieee. see cane 101 
TIAGUNADSIS NaTSe hk st eos een oe eee ere 23 MONTeZOM osx Hone eee 102 
TIRVIFACOL, NOOSONOK 2.2 45.0 se eee eae en = 246 NAVUS Ss 22s Sos nex wos Tee Teh OEE 102 
ROTO Kas ease eco une receere omens 246 nelsoni: ces =: 15:52 Se sdeotee eer 102 
NIA VTIS DIGOLORIE aoe ee ee es eee 102 nudicauds... 3-2... e9ese eee 102 
TOMS sono eS Sows = oe ee 67 oecidentalis. 42... 2.0722 eames 102 
Mebracensiss; Canis: -.--p bc eee ee 217 OCHY ACOA. onc col dene. cana 103 
Reithrodontomys.......------- 116 onlzabeee co discs cnsbescs cae 103 
nebulicola, Citellus= <= 2. 52.2.2... 28.2 ses-e= 168 orolestes’: ==). Ou so.2 0s ste somes 103 
MOCSLOL,, VEUPOSs conse s ssannoa- se eee beeen 215 | palatina = <. 320. .6.20. oe ee oe 103 
MePlGetA, LARICG a. <2 soe son ho ae epee 227 Parvidens: .2).-2 ..c0c.- asso eee 104 
neglectus, Platygeomys.........------------ 74 Dicta.-. 282225 --cocd eee 104 
MGEplipens; GOUMUSS. 6 onso2qesn 135 seen 189 pinetorinn. 235.05 cs sae acceso eeeee 104 
nelsoni, Ammospermophilus............---- 172 planiceps.c3.cs sce ecascae ewes 104 
Blarinae. 2 cise s kiln oe. esses eae 239 SAXAMASNS 4.5 3c ce ese we eee 104 
Ghsstodipusss- 225-620 =60 eeaeee -e 53 Siniplés:543-3- 3 -- 5 45--aee eee 104 
Dipodomys:ns-0- 2. oseee eae eee 58 Solasts sie eae Soe ae ee 105 
(Ch {ee ee ee meee. See 72 solitanian.. i565 4-1 eee 105 
HIGteLOMYS = -sae tee se an ee een eae 45 splendens)): 225-25 4s -< = Sener 105 
Meépadontomys...3 2 --<-2e-—=s-%-- = 135 StephenSiit io... 24ss veneer 105 
IN SS Dean ec eee nee ee ee 228 Streatorine. sac see eee oer On 
NeqtomIai. .cch= ds --<5s22seeae wees 102 tenuicatidans seo 22 sacs 106 
Odocollens=—.,---s-. 2 vase se eee 14 tropicalis. 22. = £5... Jee sees 106 
Orthogeomys==.-- 5-22 -s0c5-es=e= 75 VONUSES foci.< scsicic ascnlemes asceetee 106 
Oryroniyae eee =e see 119 WAITED seem ee ee eee 106 
OOvIS: j= See eat re eee eee ll ZOCALO ote ae eee Cee Oe 106 
Parogriathissess etre reno eee 53)\|) INeotomoadons:-2 si ekai2 toe eeee eee 108 
Peromyscus esse enc cone eases ee 135 alstonl: 208) chee es eeceee 108 
Romerclagusss. -e2- -Aachee see eee 39 orizabe:— 2s 22sa5. 0c -be econ 108 
Beluruisat 4 eee an. 5a sores 190 perotensis -<..--5<.5=ss sees eee 108 
Bpermophilasssena- 2. aeeecae- 172 | neotomodon, Nelsonia-..-........--.------- 107 
‘ThomOmyS=5-2—-5- 45-4 eee ee 67',\|) Mereis; Lataxt ce: Safes ae os eee 218 
ENON OILY A secant a6 sce ce eee 107 Rhinolophus-2-.6. 05s acene eee ee eee 261 
MVlOMYS sie 2 see h anos See ees 45 | nerterus, Reithrodontomys..-..........-.---- 116 
INaisoniag= se. sete Fe ee See ee 107: || nesites; Rihinolophus-. 9. -s-2e-...ceoe-e eee 261 
goldmaniw...-csceccee eeu a 107, || nesophila, Mustela =. .\23 2. s-cs0-sepes sees 222 
neotomodon:5.2- 24-55. -ee see eae 107; | nesopolus, Myotis... 4--22...4----aGeeeeeeeeeee 272 
TIOTNOYVALIS, MUCTOUUS .s--c-= oats ey se aaa 80) Netirotrichus a3 2) <2 secsst-e eee et see 234 
Solnnis sss eee ee 190 PIDDSIIE® soo 0b ae. ce eee ee 234 
Noepfiber allenic nc. 25. 2225 te se cuseen wee © 80 IMAI OF 2. (oclnnio tee sc sce eo eee 235 
meomoexicanus, Sciurus....22. 2.92. . tsesesen 190 | nevadensis, Dipodomys..................... 58 
Sylvilegis.c.-2.2 estes 35 Microtus. ccc: 22 26 Pee ee eee 89 
VM POS Sa serie as mole. EOS 215 Nyctinomus 2-23 222.5 <2e6 odie 280 
INGOINYS ooo coco ns mee ene pe aaieeaes cesses 236 Perognathus=2-¢ s23..2e nee eee 53 
MON Sone eee renee eek sees ces 236 SOveN. i. eons wae aieae e eee ee 246 
IN@OsOrex: HI DIDATUIS. 25>. ae eee ee ee 241 TROMORLYS 2, i. 02sS2= oes ee eee ee 67 
TIQVIFHUOL ans so Soenien ears tis cater 246 ZOPuUs se 25 es SS gas os sore eres aie 43 
MOPLOMIA 2! Sete cee leis se oe eae are ae 98)'| niidensis:.Sus 2221-6 ee eee 23 
Allene petit ec hemeemeeee 106;|, niadicus; Pteropusio- 22----- ee Joes 258 
aU bas 2552.5. eee s sai meee 08: | niadis; Chiropodomys's.75-- 2c: -2ss----sccee= 156 
SM MLALONS sooo. oma ees 98.\|\ Niadius. ..2..24.s8a- pe ss aoa aoe eee ee 256 
COXAITONUM a2 =. aan == ces Sees 98 PIINCOPS ss aa..4s Ace 256 
Pusher taco erm eake seer 98 | niasensis, Rhinolophus..............-......- 261 
ROL VU VEER = eee mine aie emit 99 |. nicobarica, Crociduraa. net sec ve ene emcee eee 236 
TOSCR eR aes ere Meee ene 99)'| nicobaricts;-Susciy-lte-. eee etna eee 23 
TUBCIDES Eee rc creree ore ne sence ee 99 | nicobarule, Hipposideros.................-- 262 
POLOMMAN ee ees ys os oe 99: | niger, Thomomys.~ si. ce ee ee eer 67 
ISTH MICA caida seta cosa acs cw a seats 99 | nigrescens, Peromyscus..............------- 135 
latitpons.. oy itrcs ese e asc seecee ce 100 Ratila. ce esas ceca cee 200 
lencodotes. 2532 wk ee neeee ee n 100’ |, nigricans, ‘Molossus. <<. .2>-5~ apn. soo eaten 281 
Uttoralis co ys. voccceeese = see teeee 100 |; niipricollis; Trapultis.opee co. eee ea 19 
MIAATENSISS oo. cwc ee ee a ee 100: || nigrifrons; Dendromiyse. si: --s--22- 3 aoe 158 
MACISTOR win wer aie See Cee 100. -nigripes; Lemmus), ois sae seen eee 76 


a 





INDEX. 
Page, 

PET TGS, ME VOOGS 5 acc eee oe On| POCUOLONA CANSUSs..-225 252229 se ee eee E 
RHETOCINCLUS, (ETASTIUG o>< += <n ac5c- 5s ss = 20 CONBMIGT 22-3 ce te ee epee Pee ee 
mids, Vespertilio. ........c-<.-+s-2ss-2-5-=-- BiAvig OChOtOnida a oe Seco. mist cee ee ones. 
nitratoides, Dipodomys. -..........-.-------- jae MOCHTACER a INCOLONIG = 72. --<5 <<< seems Sac sete ae 

SPALHS, DINGOUOMYS.-.-.-052sseso5sc- 2-6 59) | Ochrogaster, Microtus...........---0s..2-<<- 
PG RNIOS, To VOLONLYS at otc Cains occ cise es maie eae 94 | oehrogenys, Eutamias ....o...225.2.2.2.2.00% 
norvegicus, Evotomys..............--------- 95 | ochrognathus, Sigmodon.................-.. 
MOrADUIS,  RAbUIa 27 See 2c low ols cee oe aa oe 20L7) sochrus. Peroenathus... =... .260-c sch esse = 
AOU INO Tel eT ee See eee ere 220m MOCLUS. DHOMOMIYS 2 sete ens ceeee eet ne cee 
Mephitis. .coo.s.25de- 55 dst eee cece 220) YOCtOdOnTIGe ao. S2 cee bw ea cnten ces aes wee 
MRIRRSIERE oe he 92 85 SoS. bac eee aces AO COCOLHBUS 22 ths Soo ey ae ae ees Seeks 
crawiordic.25, 29. fe SES ac es. ee 240 californicus? 22.23: 25 - Si oetee 
VOLS MoS ross. aeean eset 240 CANUSHpe eco a Poem ee a coos 
Bighseree oth Lo eee eee 240 CEITOSENSIG eee sie se sees oes cca 
noveboracensis, Peromyscus.......-...-------- 126 COLMMDINNUS 2 - =e. 22 oe oe ee 
novemlineatus, Sciurus.................----- 178 COSLATICONSIS © 22/2 eee ee 
Warilops:-< -cu.s ee eee: 178 erogid = MS ee oe 
MMOLE Rates, moet cae en es 241 SLeMiCHS seep see eee eee ae es eee 
Nycticea crepuscularis............--. $e38 27.52 275 | M@Msonts sew soe Sa eee oe 
ypNOCe POA sess eases 279 | SCApRiOulS ase = s= see eee se eee 
OY SeEA ED O]0SE op, 281 SIUKGNSIS sacs ee soe ee oe ee 
IDANCANUS: 32 sen So er 281 | LOxAnUSs= so eee Jan Se eee eee 
IBOCTIGANUS 6 2 to sent seen se en 281 | COMES eh eee te eo ae 
MADUIN SER oo. cues ace sce ae 282 PLUCK sects eek oe 
UPAR et on era aie) = coe te ee = = CARAS) GS] eee eens Se i ea ee 
UILOTALS 29 aes eee ees 2 275 | olympica, Aplodontia....................... 
Nyctinamops yucatanicus..............----- Ze0n} olympus, ATChIMYS! a. -s-s5scesece aoe none 
PU MMOMIS See oo to aase sees me ac © 279 (RGIS yaa we snes solos ae eta ee 
SnGilargimy Sse erect sce 279 Marmotaee. as -e peas ase oes - 
eynocephalus.._.-.-..0s2--2:<:- 279 | ONY CHOMLY She = eee eset ee epee eee 
CEDTESSUS Soa ss = oe esate Pe 280 | DIDESVATIS TAee oa atet eee Roemer 
HGDENBIS iS! o5-1, Soe ee | 280 | ATONICO Ete acca ene eee 
IRMETOUS 2-8 anette 279 | brevicaudus:. <3 2.2 -.4.25eeee ee 
TIOVACGUSIS «¢ sec. fas esiseneeees 280 CANUS! S528 Sos oe es eee ee 
OLENOtIS: 5. soe re ae es 280 | fuliginosus. ...- Le ay Sew Seer a 
PUSUIUS Foot 2 ee se ce 280 perpallidus® J. 54.2252 eee ce 
WHCALANICHS= =... .222c.ee8 226-2 280 | LOLLIGUS 52 es es eee eee 
BI IMIR Yes een. eae aie ie se s\tace = = 142 tularensis::5322<<-0- shee Sane 
CGBCOIOTUS S22 229-252 2. waoen noe 142 VeRIONSIS os neat saree ne ee 
IRIS PUT CLUES 2 ois ono soe ee ae ae oe 190] Voperarius;, Atvicola. 2 o-22cs-ss cae ac eeee 
RIPIICATIOS, NCOLOILA «odes pe once ctscasen te 102 Bea aS ee one rae oca aces 
oO. MiCTObUSS “oan - <stock ane sieve aseloea 
"PHOMIOULYS:: 3.2 ees ode ats fa senee = 
Gaxace, Marmosa......------------+--+2+05- 2: | ‘oraritis,, Seapamus.2< 2... 202-5222 t2 <u. 
oaxacensis, Peromyscus........-...-.------- LSORiGonbitaliss Wioniys: sas tes ee ese: aeons see 
obliquidens, Lagenorhynchus..............- Bliiaroa: destructor... 2:,-0<.+3-- Suse. ---~es- 
Ghpeurs,Blarina. =... ....-+-- +--+ -aa~-2+-=-- at. sorea, BI VOLOMIYS <2 cas + -2:c.024-tex-ueleecs as 
obscurus, Eutamias..............-..-------- LUN Foren 7 MICrOts: <.cec. aoe eos kes ee 
Evotomys..........-.------------- 95 | oregonensis, Putorius................-------- 
(MEGA DONUS: <—acec nae ee 197 Waupertilaes fey 7 tei 
Lagenorhynchus....-.-.-.--------- 287 oregonus, Citellus.............-- es 
MN S)= here ato wis Actos ao eae 46 Microdipodops.............------- 
MUS........-- 0. +--+ 202 0e ee eee sees 151 MPONMONNUOs ss. .a2- cee noes ae 
EDS RNAS fas tee gee eee crear noe 275 APHOMOMYSee ne seen eases 
Reithrodontomys..........----.-- 116 Peppa cle, oa eee tee 
Bored... ..-----2-2nneeneener enone 249 | oreocetes, Cratogeomys............----2-.+-- 
Tamias.....--...----------+++++-+- 177 ILEANA eon oe Saas «iene 
Vespertilio............---+.--.---- 272 | oreopolus, Sorex................--.+--- S55o 3 
obsidianus, ETS ee 8 ee nee eo 168 | origenes, MATIN eee oe os ee ee ee 
SDEMLO POMS se oo min neice arenes LOSE Ponies UCHR ae 2.ctsscecassossicasenaeains 
RSPEI CHRON UAS ehh fo oe sits nin. arw-n instar er oimiats 168 | INGOLOUIAS = <= 5552 cas n0 Joke ue ewoma 
SPermiOpuIUUss. .. =<. 2/onewens snes 168 INGOUINOGONS oo tees se cade ou sne 
occidentalis, Arvicola.. .....2...<0.<ias<<s0ces 89 PAQOMYSCUB sa: onc cs00e Webaer ode cae 
VOLO YS once oc eiap e tadicncis 95 Ratthrodontomtys. = 622. cisco coe 

MARTINI GIS S cts Sa aie aS es 225 POLK en essa ea eee see cece aes 

INGGIOM A fa ca7- 55 ook 5 25 Bless 3s; 102 SVAVIUSSURS cee aegamaCos sake tons 
RECHOIOD ore eren Feats tele aac Cemss ech es 39 TROMOMYS scene tate osioe te wend 


818 


Page. 
39 
39 
39 

103 
81,83 
177 
110 
53 
67 
41 
12 
288 
12 
12 
288 
13 
13 
13 
14 
14 
14 


95 


220 
272 








Te) eo! ee Le 





314 INDEX. 
Page. 
Qrnatus; Dipodonilys; ~< =. <<<. e. can taneenees 58 | pagensis, Cynopterus.. ..<........<1e.. ese 
BOLGE. Boe eS inlun eee ie Oo Praia a 247 Macacus: -...4 o> -lsnsnoe ee ee 
Orolestess Neetomis. socct ta, wes eeu ns cee oun 103 MUS. 2.5 ARs eek Us 
orophilus, Phenacomys.......-- I denen a 96,97. | palatina, Neotoma.- --. <<. 2) Sc seen eee 
Orthoreom vas. >. sesocs. «oh oa ee eee as 75. | palatinus, Oryzomys: /2:2_ 2. -e2--2---caeeeee 
JAICONS an ac ccaeer ee te case 75 | pallescens, Corynorhinus.........-.--2-2-c- 
TIAISONI cs .2 eae ne eee 75 LYNX 2.92 cnnsee eo seae a ae 
Orthotis NVOtInOMUS << =< eee peee tone eee en 280. | palliata, Ratufa:—2-...-.....-c2-s4- sane 201 
Onrgrarniye seca eee ve see chew ae na ee 117’ | pallidus, Antrozous.5_.. 22-22 -0- --seee eee 278 
SUL WON GAls 52.3 obs ean ee eee 117 Canis. scott es eee 217 
HUPUSHCOPS! so os. dees e se fee 7 | e . Mutamilas. -oocs: 0.2 o te eee 177 
BvUOCUs 2G 2 2... yee aan 2 118 Metachirus: (32: sb. aceaosee ee 3 
CaudatUssoc: oc stave woe beer e ees 118 Microdipodops= 2... a nasee see 56 
EGLONRUS R= 0250 <5 Lee Seer Seay 118 MV GUISE: Eo ae rs a ee eee 273,291 
GOLUNGO. sa nese ae ee oe aS 118 | Perapnaphug. iene ene eee eee 54 
Griniius =. oossnsese ee ere eee 2 118 Proeyons oe ae hee eee 228 
Giatier: 635! 2c.6. 4 ee a 118 | Siempdan: <.jceed ee eee 110 
MoridanNUss 52.csc See eeeee eee 118 | Maming vss 20) 2-0 ee gee 177 
Poldmani: 335 2:05 45. Pero ae 119 Trapwlus: -5 25.2.4 a eee 20 
Inyloceties: = sss 2) ae sen eeeeeeke 119 Vespertilio:2 22a ne eee 278 
MBdiUS eee ee ere 119 | palmeri; Aitophyrax=--00-- =e ee eee 248 
MOPRM ONS ose Aere wn eee eae 119 Butamiss’ sis. ..2 eee eee 178 
MeISONIS 2 os oe eee ee tee 119 Sorex.t:)..i2 2 hese 248 
palatinus: sso2cse-5o le --eestecee es 119) | palustris, “Sciurus:os cence ae ce) eee eee 190 
DOLARHUS= 22sec eeeaee crane 120'.| pamirensis; ‘Microtus= :o.2)-teess-2 neon 90 
PSNUVIADOS 6.4 ac eee sae 120,289 | panamintinus, Eutamias.................--- 178 
THANAOPS sees et oe ba tee 120 } Rerodipusss 3 33352-e eeeeee 61 
richmondi..........--- So ere 120 | Peropnathuse: 56) eee 54 
TOSUPALIS sceete a See eee poe 120 Tamias eae eee eee eee 178 
THAIS ts. Bo a eee eee ¥20' || spandora, Mazama-.-52-cc ese eee eee 15 
VOUS Foe kote tes cate weaeeeeae 120°)" pannosus; MGS! 2-28 3s ee eee eee 152 
saturations. .0.0, s3isee-sae ee 121 | pannovianus, Sciurus.............2.....--+-- 190 
talamanew-es....2 2.24 ease a nanen 121", / spantarensis, Musso 5.22) 32-27 eae eee 152 
tespensisay ssc. -nsew he eee oe 121 || Pappopeomys..c< <2. as ace neta eee 71 
VUCHLANENSIS. s2.csrsice seers e 121 albinasus? 2. Scenes soe eee 71 
ZY POMALICUS! scene ees wee 121 Guillen bcu Sa oet oe eee 72 
osroodi! Citellis:= 22issa- Ss. ee ee 169, || Paradoxurus:. 2-5/2 eS ee eee 210 
(Ctenamivs 2.2% 2c eo eee eee 41 brittinelipes:):_ 2 3s5...ceneee eee 210 
Spermophiluss. 2: 2b see cee 169 canescens:< 32/55. J Sttscaeaeee 210 
Otariidte 4-34 Se. Ae Oe eee 205 Henlealor: 22. aso eee eee 210 
olbtus;(LApuSs st uscc<tes caccee cdo n eee ease 30 TODUSHUS). 12... been ee se ee 210 
Otognosis longimembris..............-.-.--- 62" | parod, Blaring es... 35 hanno sceeas eae 237 
Oloptarnse eee Stes tc Sek ee eee eee 263: | parviceps; Julomtys: ~..5 28... osones esas 46 
callformmicus: .<...--0.-- +a nee 260;)|' parvidens; CilelloS. 2-2 eo. t Seneca 170 
Otonvigni gs reece crease ne eee ee peut eee 142 | Neotomia:: 3.4 eae eee 104 
DHSS eo ee. Eee 142 | Spermophiliis: o)< -seseee See 170 
DN VUObSeecoretes oa eee 142 WUTOGYOR SJ ose Speen eet 212 
olus, Beithrodontoniys. 2... 6. see ee 146 | parvula; Rihopeessas .2-+ 2 o2-k ose eee 276, 292 
MNWIR ee one a Ase cls cinch ee oc ee 10. | parvus, Cricetodipus 2. - 2-22..-<.-2--.--- =e 54, 289 
MUCOVON Ss soto oes u's Meanie cede ee 10 | OMY Sse. oe eee ew Soe aeee eee 159 
ORs ob 2 Fenn C ones ek ow ae Cee 10 | Perognathusé -- + 6220, 6< ee reece 52, 289 
PUNO 2 Saco. ac Ganeat aero tee one 10 | Sclurus so o.50)- eae eee meres 191 
TOSI GANS onan cuits be oases 11. | pascalis; Thomomys--<2-----.----- see 68 
MGISONI SS 25. sates rhe cia Sete eee ene 11 | spatagonica; Felis: <p jes seee aeons eemen 209 
OXVINVCVRIUS Soe hes oe de wens cnn balaeeemnes 143 | paupemima, Arvicola. 2 Stee. . eee e sneer 90 
MUGrOUHAS..<-tee= se peas eee ee 143 ||| paupercimms; Microtus 2). =e ase eee 90 
P pealil Poca li 2 hic eter ea eee ee 204 
: pectoralis, Peromyscus.........-..-.-------- 136 
WAGUVUINS HOw ee one aas oe seine oe 247 | Phonan ee eee 8 
paciiica, Anlodontia, ~-s2-,s0c.-65- seer aan ons 160 | pediculus, Conepatus................--.-.-+- 296 
PPOCVOR- “aaah eons seat iae a 2 227 Pedomys cinnamomea............---------- 83 
pacificus, ANtrozous =; 2.0. 4 aaswer cee os ote 278 | haydenil; i. .0oe Seo Sa eee 86 
LODUS oe nn earner ene i 35 | pollax: Mos... 1b ve ee 152 
Perognsthos. sse<ceesesseee a 53 pemangilensis, Sclurus ..............-----+++. 191 
BOTOK. oo ere c erences te arenes 247 | penecillatus, Perognathus ............----.-- 54 
Gylvilages. cru. <. sae iatda ia taets 35 | penicillatus, Mus.....0.-.-.00¥eswosisiwaues 148 
ZODUS. prinacaisned Ccceeieeeeas 44 Perognathus. .s\cinscarsse samen 54 





eee ° 

INDEX. 315 

Page Page. 

penicillatus. Peromyscus. ....-......-------- 186 |) Peropnathus pallidus... - 2s...--2<..-2..4--.-- 54 
PIMSUNEE, BIBI S 2 <n oo oot e oa - oe 239 NENGMUNNUS 1.224.) oae ee 54 
RIS a eo cane eras ns oak 217 PACVUSo..<- So eid hee ie 52,289 
TOUNIRINOS 2 os sa cgeeen ye ae = 198 DENCCUILAGUS 52. =. aware ee 54 
peninsularis, Emballonura .......-.--.------ 259 MOMICUIAINS: oan nee Hee eee a4 
PAEOUINUS == 2 oe-- seen an ons 61 POM PEN ie: ewan ea eee 55 

Belin. s see coe cess 191 TOSUUAUUS 30. s< season aee eee 55 

BSUS aes ce ne oe an ee np eae 23 SIGGUSS 02. iced eden ee S55 -& aa 

armrras, Oryvromiys.-~ 262. <~..< oo sance~ nee 120 Staphensl << s.2295 282 2225s 55 
MemMUNS, “CHOMOMYS. .- 5. <.-.-<ccvedeeess <== 68 WACSUOC = 2 wie od isis 89 ~3:2 > asc ~ es 55 
SeONAUSS UOMO an fe nce eee a aio not UAT ISE VSCUS oo ete ote ee ao ee kan eee ecis 123 
panera, lering.-.-—--. ss. - <<< -s-s2c--22- 239 BINDS 2 ace ce hs scowls om 2 sei 123 
peregrinus, Cratogeomys ........------------ 73 BUORS once s aos hocee tes pgoteae 124 
Thomomys-- <2. ss. sescs8-=--5- 68 Slophyusscses= pene en 124 

fe DSU oe yo a Toe ee 20 BIIANGUSE= ons scme sn elses eae 124 
meriprinatar, Sclurus....---.-....22.-=------ 191 SUIS aoe eee ae tao ek eee 124 
perniger, Perognathus...........-.---------- 55 anpelensise.-:-co-cese see + = ose 124 
REISS atts Soo = oc Se oe ese = 59 APONATINS testes ae eee = 124 
CHDSLONGOS > os. -s- Sess see 5 es 59 StUWaDER coon eee ee 132 

“COUTECAG) EUG eet = Ae ems 60 BUTE US eee eee ena a Saas 125 
poldninnies =. 2 5.2.2 -4--5s-5s-e ces 60 AUSLELUS s+ = 2 cep eae oe ee eee 125 

UT SE ah OR 60 HAUS S pee. see ence 125 

SEMEPES Seo - een ees oie Ses saab eee 60 pian Gus \..cssor we eee 126 

NGNEIDES: oes eos oon pce cee ee telesales 60 Hoylil.3. 2526ic.ctese ean. 126 

EMICTOPS soso sec ee sacra daeneeeees 60 PUlAtUShe ee eee 126 
MIGHUANUS oss cee See acces eec ese 61 CANUS cece scent Sa cise a teaesnee 127 
MOLFOSRSIS <= sae sss sees es ese 61 castanieusus. cs ecaeos ot soeer cece 127 
PanaminUnNUs: -a-004s0sccsems oes 61 elementiss-so-s6>-4+—set—n bones 127 
POHIDSENATIS 5 tenia eee anaes 61 COMPCUS Saas a> eee ee a 127 
POIPlORUS oso oe et sent sees 61 GOUSODTIBUSS so 32 cme === 128 

SATE ee 62 CORNME St oe sxe te ee os ee 128 

BiPGAWON oe aes sae ce eee ose 62 (GLH GUS ee eee as Seeman 128 
BMIBTOUSIS S- © oon ccace se otesae eee 62 eristopalensis. <2... 5. 22-226 128 
REtAHGHSISS) Jee oe on ese ae 62 eremicolges; .... -222..=2 0.5 -2- 128 

WONUSLOS: < 22. 2c. Sesu~ sens se os = = 62 OLOMICUS..- scene coe st enone 128 

PRR TIIRINIS Sete ee) cat. eee en = 48 OVIdES se hese Eee eee ene 129 
smmophilus® 22. =-2ccese- 5-3-5 48 felipensisssS2cs5.0e 2 - cos 129 

SM PlUS Se oo Se oe Sots 48 OVUIONUS 3 ee tee Cotes eee aa 133 
anpustirosiris. . => =22.2</-5-<..--© 48 fUIWUS cos - occ tease ccs eae 129 

ANCHONG io. cee esas Sere =e 48 pambelit 2.5 /eoc sees soaeecedees 3 129 

OPEN COs skits acces ccc s 48 CONUS Sos ene eae oe sees 130 

BIOS! 2 Sones peo eset s Santee 48 poldmani. eo 55s aeeoe eee 130 
WRUGYis. soot ww es sees. sss 49 POSSV PINUS eases seee = = oe oe 127,130 
DIMACUIAUIS. 5-2 sass os =e 49 STACUIS se erie ee cee a eee 131 
bombycinus: --22-J-s-..55-2525- 49 PYAUISe Se. eee ee eee 131 

GHNUISHIS eo ee en tee Sane ee 49 POD UIIRICOSIS sore odes on 131 

CANESCENS 22. Jes. chc nieces n< se 49 VISAS Ste ec ate x ie's Siwn;s:n nae 132 

ceolom bismusese sie. a<s 32 = 50 NVlOGOLESE oot et soe eos «eae 132 

QUSPOP coo. es ee ee 50 IECOIANUISE eeu cease. Ue avo es 132 

QTOMiCUS 225 cuee wee sae soca 50 | MBP VUss cee econ altel ckkic wcee 132 

WANES ose nee ae tesen 50 IBPLORUSE pecenc ene Soe ns Se 132 

WRGUS 2. cee seccn vas pa oes 50 IBVINIOS oo cock ece ese as. shsea ses 132 

falignosus-0.~ 425 saees as. ce 51] TOphuUrUs. cece eee esi on oe 133 

PIUWUSS. 22 sae foe eb eres tt hess 51 ROUGUISS eeere cere ete sates 133 

goldmant.- poset s3s2~s=50~. 22 51 MAG TONING ae one oe een Ss 133 

MOSPIGUS eres eee ase deem 51 TCS Se eee ee eis ah fact 133 

TNOTAALUG Se ected ence. an ne ol ROP RIGS eee ere Sa acacia oe 133 
longimembris.;222-.-..-<.--+-- 61,52 | TIBEASUULIS a Sees ccc o ce eee 134 
magdalen#......... eee Paes 52 MGIAMOCALPUS .- peo =. Soe 134 
magruderensis.......-..-...-.. 52 MIGIAHOVUCYS = - 4-2. eee ee 134 

ETTRAATNON AS rea neat edna nlc we re 52 PETIA Cas oy sean ae eee 134 

PIRATE tatiana claim ae 52 ATIBSOMIOIAS 4 25h hee ne eae se 135 

POI ETGIOG I 3 oats ace cate ws ont 52 TOIDMESOUR 2 = «8 oe. sept se 135 

GING cnt ss wcenaeetm wana 53 MISE HIGIOES ees eee eee 135 

MEVAUCNSIS «oo. <-2 = cnseasuet sas 53 NTUSCULUSE oo eee ee ee 135 

Gelinas: op evesset ic cutee ee 53 MGWSOH oe eee ee ee ee 135 

PMCUICUS ss weno dass ess ax dase saa 53 TA PIONGGNS sa tatewes ewes aaa 135 


316 INDEX. 

Page. | Page. 

Peromyscus noveboracensis .........-----+-+ 126 | Phenacomys mackenzil..-.-- -... 22.2.2 cen 96 
ORXBCEDSISS-60 + oe Ga eee son eee a 136 orophiluiss:..-.-+sse nace eee 96, 97 
Origabiny ssicsn ces oo bie teeeesee 136 preblel. on o.oo eee 96 

MBC COLAUS Sepa oe rey Amen es 136 rush... eee 97 
penicillatis:..025-<censcee === 5 136 | .phenax, Teanopus .<<.%i20 ce -mecee ese eee 107 

DYBUNUS Se women nos ewer eee 136°) hoca <<. 2. Saoenee ee ae ee 204 
MOUUS crete tee ene keene 137 geronimensis .7-.<2---- -nseoos eee ee 204 
WIBVOSLOUSIS os tower eer c eae =e 137 MNSCLOMONS Son cescnttctns nies siete eee eee 204 
POWIEYL o cn sepa see eee sas nae 136 Pealii es. <5.Joa'2 ompeiccp eel See eee 204 
PUDIAUSS settee ct eet oe nse wa 137 pribilofensis: 2. cu. . Ge tene sree 204 

PODMUS See foes eee te ene 137 Wicherdi's.. 2%. oe doc taneses ose es seen saee 204 
SOSA LUA seat t cts eee seas 137 | Stejnegeri i wicas.ce nee = cee eee 205 

« RIMM IALUS = ccc oee ae See eae 137.| Phocsenai - <i 2h scace eo ene me eee ee 5 
RUG eo ceeds ees aee as 138 australis. 24; costs ck ee oven 287 
SIDROUEIS S42. toe seen ee tee 138 dallic nt) 3S st ee eee eee 5 
SONOLIGUSIS = =m -/acamie eee ee tae 138 | linestase Ss .cs0fats oh oot cerkaneeee 6 
SLOD REDS sccm 2-5 oe een ocr 138 pectoralis.~ 4.5%. (coeur e eens 8 
SUuUDStOL sc - > 20s. ses ea eee e cere 139 PROCES Fe cee een eee 6 
TEBDODSIS: .j05 =n sen keane 139 VODIGMUG lee. <ccmet ee see eee 6 
(AHUSNEPeCUS=..+ .-sser en cea 139° | ‘Phocidwe::¢ 22:5. eke cee eee ne 204 
TOXAVUS 4c. Sse thce ee ceecee 127,139 | (Phodotes:-...-c2seo:ts oa eae eee 269 
AHOMASL 5 eee tee tee 140 tumidirostriss)-- het soe eee 269 
LI DUTONOUSISS-c-c eos eee cee 140) “Phoniseus, 7 c2s-bee oes a eae eee 278 
TOTTI G ha: cseee were ee ese 140 SULOR Spe scree cereale ee ees 278 
TOLONTENECUS see ae. eee cee 140 Phyllonycteris bombifrons..............---- 268 
TUGL eters So nc os Se ae 134,140 | ‘planifrons!< ste eee ee 268 
WIGINON naan a tant eeeees ae 141) | Phyllostomid se: see eee eee 262 
KOMOMOS sacs eer eras 141)) phyllotis; Ototylomysees-ns--ssee= sete 142 
PAMOIASS cs gee nar Soe eee ne cos = 141. |; (Physeteridte:< 5.22 23.352. soc es eee 4 
PAM OVER sepia aisions See eam LAL) ICES ISCHIPUS ac omc sow lean ae seers 184 
garlivnenus.<.. 6 .sceet twee ee 141)| “pietas Neotoman: <5 scccecvecee ones semeeee 104 
WOlOLEN ese es meee 14l)| picts, Hiiamias eae cee eeeene se eeoee aa eee 176 
perotensis, Citelluss.-.s-sse2--ce-= == =e 1705) “pilirostris;Dsymlecodonan-1ns essen eae 234 
Cratogeomys........------------- 73 | pinetorum, Neotoma....................---- 104 
DipodOniys cnet = seen ease 59 TAOMONy Ss ees ee 69 
Neotomodon........-.----------- 108 |) \piniensis; Ratufaseessaccecen see sone eee 201 
Reithrodontomys.........------- 116 | Sciinis> See eee 191 
Spermophilus... .//2./-..08 +--+: 170 |: Pipisirellus’s.272-2/6n0e wee eee 274 
perpallidus, Onychomys. .......-...----.--- 122 australis. - 5 3 ees ae 274 
perpes; THOMOMYS ss -ees- = = eee ee sana 68 | CAMOrbe: - ioc oe eee 274 
perplexus, Perodipus..........-....--------- 61 | eilnnamomels!..22 cel eee eee eee 274 
personatus, Geomys........-.--- teeter 71 Hesperus. 35 ass eee 274 
Sorex es os cee ce eee Ae ee OHO minuschlts: ee 2. eee eee 274 
perspicillatum, Hemiderma.......------.---- 266 obseurus. 2.2 ee eee 275 
perspicillatus, Lagenorhynchus........-....-- 8 subulidens 2. ese eo eee 275 
peruvianus, Oryzomys.....-...-.----------- 289 | Pitymys quasiater..............-...22-.--5 91,289 
US eros eee eens ale 120, 289 | plagiodon, Delphinus.....................++- 9 
pervagus, Thomomys..........-.----------- 69 Prodelphinus- see sueee eee eee 9 
POtariste eis oe os Sactdecne dashes yen oocean 202 planiceps; Neofoma...-csiss tes -eere eed 104 
Patuanay.. © 10 vouasa reese cee 202 PlatyPeomys: oo aseease oct en sees 74 
Terutaus.......----------22------- 202 | planifrons, Arvicanthis ................-..-. 158 
petersoni, Huneomys.......-..--------.----- 143 Erophylla-- 53-2 css oa oe 268 
petreus, Apomys.........--200---22se-- nee 157 Phyllonycteris::2--2-+---2--5--- = 268 
petulans, Sciurus............--.---.-2---++-- 191 plantinarensis, Liomys..........-....------- 46 
DUDOM YX HU TSUB ene oo ede oot on ie wie Site nmnie'n 232 | platycephalus, Dipodomys..............---. 59 
phsootis; Artibeus. -- 2.0 - 5... 2cccennsesewes 267. | Platygeomys: 2-620 so2-cccmmas seen se 74 

GRU AM UN a wisest ce eee ene ae oases 267 STI SUSLITOSITIS = ec cra ctol wa weins = 7 
PNGS0YS AGIOS arate on caw he Cena nas 46 TUMOSUS: 34s orsdeee sweet syn 74 
MBCA UB se oan oe bette eee a aor, 284 GYMNUUS so-so arse see 74 
AUIS te sea ee rane wae 253 neplectus seistee so saseten canes 74 
phseurus, Peromyscus.........-..----------- 136 planiceps:)... eee steers ee 74 
pheous, Arvicola..........20..eee-cesen-- ee 91 tylorhinuss s-cesee.sseeee ene 75 
Microtuss)<, 2 <5. on as aes hana = 91 |, platyrhina, Chincha .-<.<. 2. osesese or oenena ae 226 
Ototylomys. 2-27 aces eee ee beeen a 142 Mophitiss..\..0.vestectee aaa nene 226 
PHEONSCOM YR sie << 2 ose ecentne senor ees eee 06:|) plesius, Citellus 25 o< seas. carers soe keene 170 
Blbipes 27. ss saeeapse wean eens 96 Spermophilus: 1-2 2.-s-uetne ences 170 
longicandus...ykessseeerere 96 | plethodon, Monophyllus..............0+--+++ 265 








INDEX. 317 
Page. | Page, 

BuSdrOMIs. DepUs==s.2-..osseecee esse es ar 30 | pumilus, Galeopithecus...........-..-.--.--- 254 

ELOVMINITUIT Rn ee ee Lies sane nares 233 Galeopterus (2). c2s- eat shee 254 

LUGE see oe. ee eee er nee 233 MMACHOTIS He foSe he cou res eee oes 284 

PEELE Oe nh I a, Pe ee 201 IN VEGHHOMUS | oon ce tse die so mote anes 280 

polius, Peromyscus:......-...-.------------: 137 IS CLUDES beh oe agey ator oey nia aia 192 

mopolensis, Microtus.......--.--=-=----<~--~ OPER MLONI US sero to ne ae toe 218 

portoricensis, Chilonycteris...........------- 265 ALCHCUSS Jue eage nes we aehs ane mae 218 

MTONOPOVNUS=2 ese ore = 262 BIBSCOUSIS hoo soca nee vig sors 218 

preeceps, Artibeus..............-- ee eet 267 CUIDECtSONI We. se sei seseneron eee 218 

AMEN SIS CMGMNIStesc tesco tense esse 170 poldmanies 220s. sya: Soeereacecisees 219 

Spermophilus..........-..-------- 170 AIG RM eters e ee Same Mates 219 

preblei, Phenacomys...........--.-.-------- 96 kadlacensisisessncs vue estes soe Sea ae 219 

fpresbytes PAtUaNUS: se 3. c ns kea- ee 285 PCT OL ate eee eae 219 

PROMS 5 eee eee aa eee Je 285 | leptus...-.....2.5--22-++-+22----- 219 

mera big i: 0) Se ase eee sc nS 285 lelicoparias 22 cease sana o se ee 220 

RETR ae Raa ae 285 lonpicaudas--.22- s2s--s--2 eee eee 218 

CAFIMAIRS < (ooh alee cee eee nee 285 oregonensis-..-..=-.---:------0-=.-- 220 

pratieliise Dracus... 2-20 2--22-ecao------- 20 perdus...........2+---------22-+--- 220 

pretiosus, Molossus...............--.-----+-- 281 saturatus......-..-.----.---++++++-- 220 

OTIS eon ee Sette ee 192 | Streatoris s2.2.02 ree aceachonae 220 

Breas hse ee ee Sone os 20 | tropicalis............-. wee eee seen eee 220 

prevostensis, Peromyscus.............------ 137 washingtoni Baw aol ie i nim or tS = mie 221 

OTe ee a ne hee 248 | Putorius, Spilogale.....................---... 224 

pribilofensis, Phoca................-.-.----- Sau | DY emiecus, MOlOSSUSE acm eciee nme amnieneiy ee 281 

Orie ed Ws eee 248 IPYOCYVONS 2 Jo-c os <n) sone ee eee 228 

Rin pes et ie e e ee ea 15 ARHOMOM YS. sosce eases aes ee 69 

RRininieceee ee ee 991 | Pyrsonota, Ratufa...-.......-...-..--------. 201 
princeps, Cynopterus. .... ee ee ee ace 256 Q. 

2 Niadius.....-....-...-------+--+-- 256 | quadratus;; Phomonlyss-sceecsee ae eee 69 
BNA no-no one nen 26 | quasiater, Arvicola......-... Fed. Se 91, 289 
TUDES CLF SSO) U1 Fs pe = a Se 192 Ree ee eee 289 
Procyon ....... cee eeeeeceseeseeceeseec esses 227 | PLR y pS on eR ead 289 

insullaris. -..-..-.---..------------- 227 | quercinus, Sciurus ...........----+--+-++++- 192 
Cebit sh as a ae ae owe ae ier 227 | : 

OAIIOUS Seated 2s cee em es 228 R. 
pygmeus.............--.---------- 228 | Tainieri, Aplodontia. <- =... sscc22--=2e +2 -e2 160 
PENS ANTICO eerie eta ee wie oie aa eee 2277, | era ptOns) BASSArISt: o2==h 35 eee eee noes 228 
Teel ee ge ee oD | IBASSATISCUS. 3oe- ens eos ott 228 
MatsSraSeae ee eee ee eh ss OOO, |)! IRAULMET oc Keron. co suse bse oe dan ote see wee ace 198 
PISSIOGON ese e cette sce se 97 BNAM DO aise oss eee oe sees eeeaaas tec 198 
RAC MID UU Bor face So ene eas see ges ste siete 41 ANGUSUCENS 32 se eee eee cee 198 
PURINE ay. salns2e sass aw eaeiemis a's 41 SPTISITIIS tee ta a ee eee 198 
DIGSSL PINES SCIULUS..<. =... 2.50. c sees Zen 192 Daleeitocoeeas os anaes cose aeentnean 198 
PERIL earths. ont fla em nemae Bas ost 6 PANCANS. coc 2 scot ew ds eek sect ae 199 
CUUSMAONS feos = 3 Gee a sae 6 CATIMONGMSIS:. <0 ccnsc.cscscemecs Lace 199 
Preudostoma castamops......-.::..:...:..-- 72 CRLEMANS voetec Seo So ce de cenlneees 199 
PaRONANEL EIS = ccna hts a sein Sacer om Senn arn ae 255 CONMUPONSIS cic oe «ene serene ye tee 199 
SIG Useless = ie ws onic ae one nie oa 256 GCOnmmniss s- aeccecc- mcs ete nae ste us 199 
MIGOLPEUGIS ce len eee cee a kt 256 COMSDICTIER Heaac aden cuss em oe tee aid 199 
I WSRIIUIGS 6 =o teran ec eee were. 256 TAIMOPALIS* sae socials we sey aaa = os: « . 200 
ORGANS. 5-5 Mer oat ol na eee eaters gs ties 256 UTR SU ese lee eter econ tee 200 
PUPONUS . = octas naan oan ct cos sens 257 MT tite So Aca ede etahs. 2 oe eed 200 
MPATIAULOS| ©, seta aun cn aac pe eat oe 257 MAS Hattie ascites Shan sicice ce ='bS 200 
POTATO s Ae ote te ks 257 MUCIBNOPOPIA. 2c. 05 os <5 en- Es.se 200 
DSU ET EO ister eee Rate ata 2 aes 57 TDCESCONR Meet aioe scar os set. ole 200 
IIBNSISE, ohn se eee Ss 2 a3 257 notabilis...... Se Se CC EST 201 
| ENTE eee tes Se ee eM es 257 ellisinaese so sc5- cusses 4~ etek. oes 201 
IBPNONS Ao 7 oaks oes os ee ae as aoe 258 INCU sscres ec cess stot chloe once 201 
MIRON LOLES Se case i= Sparano ee 259 DOU AoE re seed o.cigce dt aaaa aes aoe 201 
NCE se Set hah ator ta elas Sees 258 DVISONOLD toccat id icon emis tote at 201 
RAGS TISIS a5 -| 22 cise s siiniaean esto ane 258 MOMANBURIS st cco Jonesy cece iste os 201 
ROMS eras goer fa eae sets Bove TUE MO SINMANIOA Ek ccwiday oon e inane ce oe aah 267 
puller Nannosclurus..-2-.2---.-------=s->- [Ale lemavidulos, Microtus::: .; =. --.<00-0-- sce. oL 
EEL ELI DOL RL DIS Sereter ns SNe ois aioe eo clare wiore cata TROP THVULUS wCTACUIISG oJ.) eco ebstaseo sees eee 20 
IELTS RRR teeta ere at ae ee on cin ann cs 151 | ravus, Artibeus -..--- Bee SS eee deen 267 
RIPON MITE ae ants Sere ne ne a ahs are oe 253 TRACUHY Ot Spot esate Jeu ecaees 21 





318 INDEX. 
Page. 

Redunch.” «2 2e<cssnan~ sak eeeneR eee een 12 || Biogstssntumida: +. 52. 7-45 eee eee 
Ghinnlerl (56 fio oe eee V1 i ttehardtl, Phoca’.92:) = o515. ee ~ fe coe 
regalis, Valpess--..<2cssrcmenna nce eebnmsmns = 215..| riehardsont, Sorex. P22 e239 coke ee 
Relthradones. 22-2. .can toon cee eee 143: | richmondi, . Didelphis:. =) s/s. .4.- soe ee 
Netoheru ec ceee ee a2 eee ee 143 Oryrom ys... =. 0 a eee 
Jongi@avidtcs suse nc. ee en- see ee Sk Selurus)223 <c1-- e525 ee 
TMMeralObien nee eee ena pena aes 114] vigidus; Lepus:. 22 c22.2 2 ecue are aeeeeee 
MMIOTIGANUS. 2 ono cae ae tees 115 SY VISE: oc. oo. eke a ete ee 
ReitnrodontoMmys:-c esc. eee eo ete eee 111 -| tingens, Spilopale:2<-<2-o2.8 ----- ea eee 
aI DeSOBNS<. 4+ fo poe eeice lil TAVASS sa eee coe ee 

AlbilaAbris 2+ ..seoteeee ce T11>. | tipensisNiberc-.- ese eee eee 

AL COLIS ot eae ee eens 111 | Troanensis, Napseozapus)....-...2..+--.-s<s-5 

qurAntOs:..S:e-cevercatees 111 Zaps 5-s2cbe sl bee ee ee 

STIVGTIE Ee Ce ee 112: robustus; Cranomivsesscseee- ee ane eee 

Chrysopsiss 22s -sesscee = = 112 GPUS uct e ice an eee eee 

Clnercus: 22.5 ete 112 Paradosuruss2c-ees,- aoe eee 

Coliniw.3.- Ssacseetee ees 112 Sylvilagns2te6 7 ic eee cee 

Cesertlic-<-ce sceRm ene 112’| ‘Romerolagus---5522-p-eee- eee ee ae 

Githcilise (see seco eee ee = 112 nelsoni. 2) Se ee 

@Gorsaliss- coe eee 113" |,Zeosevelti, Cerviise 2) soo eee eee 

poldmanic..- 420s $137] Tostratus, Munambulus-s- esses ee 

priseoflavus:.----2--------- 113 Wiomrys sree nce ee nee 

PTISCUS 2 es oe ema aoe aed 113 Mrs. 38 LY eet 2 ee 

Hel Vols ete ee eee 113 OT Y ZO 8: 2a ee 

hinsutis. 2. .e eee 113 Perognathuss-s coss- ces. eee 

TAA DB ooo eee 14> | nOwWleyt, Pero MmUsCi ss. nae eee ee ee 

klamathensis........------ 114») rabeculus;, Sciurus.c. 22 22-4 see cee eee 

Tepi peste) ss re aes 114 rubeus, Tragulus*. sss 20s eee 

lonsicaidar 2 oe eehe ee 114) rubidiventris, Scluruscccs 2-2. eee 

mePalOtiss 224.6 eee eee 114)|' rubidus,. Peromysctis:-2--.0.-2.--25-- ene 
metre sss eee ewer ee 115 i, Dutinus; Hesperoniys 22-5 esos eee 
microdonh. 2) se. eee 115 ONyZ0mlyS=2 5022 2. eases eee 

TNONUANUS. - 622 eee eee 115 Peromyscus® 3.222022 eee eee. 

nebrascensis..........----- 116 | Tujiventer, Leontocebus...........-.<.-------- 

MELLSLUSaa= 2 aoe eee ence 11g | Tufulus; Dasymiys.. nce ae eee ee ee 

DUSCTIETIS. 1! Wena nee 116 Trapulus).:.).s46s-eh eee 

OF Zab eee eee ene 176 || COLUS, OLVZOnLyS cece cesar eee 

OLS oY Bee ee A eee 116 | wdssens; Dragulus: see ee eee ae 

DOLOLEHSISas- case eee 116\,|' Fussulus, ‘Tragulus® 3325 eee ee ee 

TENUILOSinise se 8 ee eee 117 || rotiliventris,:Seluras=- 2-2 4-2---poe-- eee 

LOMOCUS ons oe cp bee ee eee 117 

LOCH ic tithe oe seck 117 Ss. 

WACRLOCR we wna chee seuss ees 117: ||) Sagittalis,; Geomiys== 5.5). < ieta-eee eee wc seer 
restrictus, Sylvilagus..:......--..-...------- 36.|| SSSMEHBS<. oo. eee cose ee shape eee ee 
TOR UAVIA SE 05 pare Shes ce ee Cee eee 260 amblodon- noi tank Sterne eee 
WHADGODS) ONVZONYSas seca s ce es ec ee 190.) ‘Sallens, Lepus.:.. .20. <= bee aoe eoes 
Rhinolophicie ss. s- sacs eee eens 960)" Salvint, ‘Sorex. 203.0. -2 501 saad s= onan sae ae 
RUBINGIOPHUS Secs ies ce sess e es tata eee xe ware 960 ||| samoensis, Pteropus:..+..c-o=s=->--e aera ose 

GCOS sso eee eee 260 | sanctidiegi, Lepus...... SS St Sy ene 

hipposideros............--..---- 261 | Bylvilaguss:(yncsyeut econ ae 

irettts 2) oo ee ee 960.| Sanpraus, Sciluris-c5c: cose socee ee eaek cones 

PADDR certian inc coe pee nmee eee 90 | Saxntacruze, Urocyon..-2--t.2.~-c25--=e5eee 

TINTS =< sc ae heer oe 961. | saturation, OryZ0mys.os-. 2.273) ee ee 

MNTNTCUNS ace ace bas toe 261 | saturatus, Galeopithecus.................-..-. 

MOLOIN sca eeos sas soe ees 261  " Galeoptenus socom awe sae lenses 

TIESItRS arene As ec eee 261 MOUS S esc m ene «see eee eee 

Missenisiniee = 2 S22 Soon enews oe 261 Puborinss 2 tach eens eer 

SOUPALUIS ee on see ech tee wine 261 SCluNIs 523.0 cose ween 

SPAR cae Senate ae eee snc ee 261 Slemodon'.- 3st near orn eee 

WIPO pe eer see eae cements 261 | .Saussirel Sorex 2 2s. ce a on oeee eee 

Thilonis; Presbytes’ S22. cc eenaeoen ace wees 285 Saxamans, NGOLOMGs..o.2<en es nese cee 

Bis! onc Soe oa ee ee nee ae 24 |\ saxatilis: PeromiyscOs 2.22) 2seoe al. eee ee 
Rhipidomys decolorus:.-.52cectseceun neces 142 saxicola, Ammospermophilus 

Riopeesss... sess hcccenew sen sae eee 276 BasSaristus.. 424 ache hee eee ce 

Prats no sohese ec cee eee 276 saxicolus, Spermophilus....................- 

miinifiliae ac svces eee ee eee 976 || Scalops:wnens.2.26-2b cece eee eee 

DAT Vise caceeaccion ences eerrecean 276, 292 | callfornicus: 3. -j-.e a-cecuee eee eeene 





INDEX. 319 

' 
Page. Page, 
scalopsoides, Arvicola......-...:.:<-.-2----- SUES eres CLANUIS ROSSI on eo ore wo = 0 a lant ok armed arn tiara ee 186 
Micros. 2.05 os es arass  Ke 80, 91 TTC VOD se naan ies a ee ne ee 186 
scammonii, Globicephalus...............---- 7 IETS USIS ye sen oe ene ee 186 
SUMATISTNUIS:. eres fo ee eS So eee ees 233 IWeNiGUS 2. Sons 222 eae eee eae 187 
BIPBUSY see te ee eee eee 2 233 TCS aera = ees eae A eee An aan See 187 
lati MON se See = 233 AIMEE PONISIS Sam re pcid ta on chance ears oe 187 
OParlas ee ese ee eee oe eee tos 234 JIPOVAMS oe oe one ee ee cee eee 187 
LOUD TREN ee tt ee oer ie 233 AS Set geet seas y= See oe ae 187 
EIN res See Series ee ee el 234 NUGESCANS aoe ee. Poe ers oe ro es Soa 188 
scaphiotus, Odocoileus .............-.--.----- 14 MMANAPTIENSIS. 4c -ce8s 2 ae ch base cess 188 
seirpensis, Microtus ......... Sac ocek seuss et 92 MIANSAIATISE See soso oe oat ee eee 188 
Pea aN Ey atm Oe, oS wae See oie ses 160 WISLUN SUS scence ee sak avs teens 188 
ROARS URES ote a. sceateae rcs a cieioie oe sce 202 INCATUSI 5-52 eee os see secs sak Site 188 
AIMOANUS 22 en yee ea ea wr 202 TMIGIANODS =< cece nee te cee aa ee 188 
Roldmani< 8 225.241 9-b-u-2 2 - 202 MOENOANALIIS= oases Ase 189 
ris mathensis!:.=-=-s<.-s6e== 25> 202 PPLINIGL CS ee ee ak EE ee 189 
IMBCTONMS 22 ae. = 2 See ese hse 202 IMUIMIGHUSS ae soe eae ee ee ee 189 
MSAOUS ono ene ce ence asm cn See = 203 TPUTINATIS nectar tee ee ee ete ere 189 
Stephensites- <5. =< ees 203 TURIBGUS S20 cc5:- 0 eee ae ase esc 189 
WIEKONENSIS Ss < st aee eens So 203 Mepglieens:.--- vies ose 5 oe e eee eee ce 189 
SANMCGUS a. Sasso cet os AS hese ss - 203 MEISODI! 2 sae sec gee ee See ee esse eae 190 
REDO oF 2 a chid amie bie's « 178 MA@MOralis 5 eye eee ass ees 190 
REID Tle ere eee es eee 178 MEOMEXICANUS. 5.2.8) eles Genoese 190 
TPR pen ee ne ree a Ee Sa oh 182, 184 novenilineatis....c2. 4-- osteo eae 178 
TEREST VE TTS) I ee a ep 179 MUCHAS 5 ac oa eee oat eee 190 
BION es ee ne co oe roa en 179 PALUSUIS: Ae soso noe San Ascenso 190 
PALIDNISEREATIS 9-52.25. win Sa ohms ae eet gsc 179 ANNO VIAMUS. soa. ese sees sein 190 
anambensis. - . --- rare phate eee se 179 DER VUS se sac saan. ho er ce eat 191 
PBLNOO Va Sa ee ae ow ck aes otc 179 POEMANCIIGHSIS.-.22-5=- ee eee 191 
ois ee ee ae ee ae ee 179 POMINSUIATISS-1- eo eet stones oe 191 
PIMVANCUSIS. 2 2320s Se sake ease. 180 MELIPLINALONS. oo eee wae as ceee eee 191 
BUNMUHS ee ooo sescs sc estceneeseass See 180 PevUlanS 362 -ees ack ee Bc ce Jee 191 
RIDGES a ate Sc crcwu we asa ee ORE SESE 180 DICEUS ES. Sa Jee ae ot cece see eee 184 
POPES aie ote Seb a2 doe wnk tet ReSe ss 180 PINIGMSISS oe sas Oe eae ttc ee soe 191 
IDAMOINIS ess ao oo sci coo. eos as 180 PTELLOSUS Sears es accents acs tae 192 
RCATTIS? ee aca eee aA 181 PPLOCEIUS 95 550 te aeons wee 192 
WC res oe Sone se ne ee ee ee 181 proserpinwes- G52 ~ sss ae aes ee ce 192 
PERL NCANIUS S32cc-. ke se aoe eens 181 MUMRILUSSS: eas! oA ae oe eeon eae 192 
iSO GR US sone sae See ees eee = 181 QUEICINGS? 2s 5. ss se cee nanan s eee 192 
VOLUN Pv a1 BS Re ee ie ee ae cy an 181 MICH OT Gah eee ee ee ae he 193 
BRERA Oo. oo ae cone doves 182 MRT ESES TS LUIS ee ee eae 193 
CATHMOUBIISIS: < oo.n5 cacy s xn onset cee 182 PUIG NVENGNISs= a. 2 eee a eee we 193 
RASPAGENSIS = Joe sao. oe se sot secee ees = 182 MULTI V CLLULIS eee ee ec See 193 
PHSEUSIG es ascostew oh osniev aces awtecres 182 | SANPPAUS 12 cb sais ese eae om wt5 ekom Se 193 
PASUADONOLUS® ose ae oe oases a ewie ns a 182 | Saturatus.........--- Chern tne Secs ae 193 
CBStAMOIUS: 222 52220 sosc+s see ose 182 | SQNGK 2 a5 cen cee Coen ete en aes t 194 
Ghispensiss 200: .2coes-owcocsceeeess 188 Beraloeeea cn ears sons cede eee 194 
BUCO. 2 oe uc osc areeetas 5 183 | BOriliuinee has eee cores eee eee 194 
POUIMENISIS: = 320. chon eee ae 183 suckleyi...-.. DOE AE. che Hove eters Baten 194 
concolor ......-.. BetaNews Ra 183 | SIM VANUR Sees a ascot pe wes eesie nics 194 
COnGIensIS: <\.. 2 ae eco 2 184 BUYS ets Oe case san ceeesmass soe: 195 
MOMGNGHS: «32 - ce eaten cena en 184 CAAT NUS ete eres oes fee -fow = = 195 
MOTSAIIN So osc aoe ot ee ew 3 184 PANUSSANUS) 2. = a oso. a ee 195 
TIULBEE kato eee ee a 194 | tedongus......... Eee AIS ol oi 195 
UO RSace cah re Poe oars marsh atk 184 | PERLNDON WIN ka no bes noe poe nee sta 195 
BIODUBs 2 sac 2b 0 22 = see cobra pce k Bele 184 ROURCRAA Pins LOM Oietete tan eae Sas 196 
UMEDA oad te cious es Staa ate Se RR IE 183 DOL sees eter eh ac ec a eae & wl 196 
NGRSOT sess oy dak Soc kn an mame ees 185,290 | Tie eee eae a as be Soe ee Cera 196 
REPERBEI DOD sido taste ooo a ko os sete a 185 | ubericolor.......- Ena 196 
DOlEMIAMIGY 2.2L che ociden ain ae owutehiee 185 | PRCT LIN eee a ee 196 
MBPAMEOU =. oad aco cat ok oc oe kup eeses 192 VELL G1) 151 CR sips eo goer een tlre =, © 197 
MID DUROMUS 2.0.0.5 —.' an ge taieieat = 185 LMR faite Unk co hei ate sie ee ee a 197 
BD DUEGSUS Sse. % ee alee ees = 185 | VECATADIBNISISS oe 2 oul dean een nap 197 
DARI ee oe ef = ai wz antonio aso e 185 | RPE MORRMe sis cca aoc acken ee tonwenie sqawes 248 
IOMEQICHES ooo sass 2 so wobec ew estes 186 DCOLOPONUS NEINALUS 5 <i... 6k ae see es car 274 
GRUREUIEI See, Son eS ore acre e Sc ates a @ 186 miuiradorensis. <..-.:-=-.:-..... 276,201 
BRI DADEDSIS eS occes - de ack heey - 186 | semicaudata, Emballonura.................. 259 





320) INDEX. 
Page. | Page. 
semicaudatus, Vespertilio.............------- 250| |) sonoriensis, Peromyscus - <2. <2 -~ <n. ssnenes 138 
semijunctus, Hyperodon............--------- 6 | \sordida, TDtipala... -.~2c2.~2nde coce ee eee 253 
FLV PGIOUGON ata eee ere eo DS OLOK oo ere ani vite ea ae ee eee ee eas ee 240 
Hemots, Atalannaes...-0css-pacte eee eee 276 Alascensil'355=5toeeen le aeee eee 240 
TLasturus’:< 5s sc se eee eee 276 alaskaunus:. 25.5 Ge; s-s<chs- ee ee eee 241 
senescens, Teutamias:. 2. - cc /ses sees ee2o== 2 =e 178 albibarbis.\. 2 2.<. 4 St eee ae 241 
BENET, (CONMITIO Sala. Soe cudec coos eee eee 268 albiventer s.2\-3<<.<06~sa->ee eee 241 
BEniculn, MOMMOODS: --4-2..--- a. cke awe ene 263 SIMOMUIMN = Seo ns one a oe ee 241 
SOratO SCIOUTUAl sc 02. c atin eee ee ee 194 alticolas. 2-2 32.2s00saenne eee eens 241 
sericeus, Ctenomys........-----.-----+----=- 42 GMOBWUS Sacks wees ts meatal oie eee 242 
serpens, Microtus........-- Uae ea ae eG 92 arctiGus..s. 2/0 ckess+cass shes see mare 242 
SENTIUTISS EUS Ge cae ies eels ore ema sa 153 pairdl: 22 soo. dsceedcecnsecncaeee ewer ee 242 
Solaris! 2.5 cs. tccsncss eee eee 194 califormicisso50 ss cess sc sees can Sean 242 
SaLOSUS pMOMYS We. 2 vigsv see hae eee 47 COUGHbUS. oo ise scene deine eee 242 
shantungensis, Crocidura.......-.----------- 236 Grawitordl. cs. 5.0 oc Seeee ee eee 240 
BHGESTGDSIS, HOLGK nccccc28 ees aset ms eae soe 248 dobsonis.47.50.cessseecte eee eee es 242 
Shumacinersiss Sore k.>---5 2-6 esas eee 249 @lassodon. 5-2 esc vomees ee sae eee 243 
MiantaniCUS “MUS|-->— 5. boca ncecn eee ae a 153 Guronotus 2 2-2 eee eee 243 
SIDOANUS; UMNNOMYS-- seo ase eee eee 156 Gvotisveed f 25 Ae a ee ee 240 
Siccus, Oropnathus: - oo<.-ces t= 2- 25m 55 eximiuss..) si. Jccc-2 at ators oa seme 243 
Dleistas. ssc o os cose soo ase Ratna Ceci 42 fimbripes S432. bese i nee eee 243 
AV o ee ee ee Seeman niet 42 ASHELE 2. Ss csoste ah ete oe eee 244 
siculey Crocidurais -.-o--se-- ee ee sore 236 #lacialis2? sso ccch one see eee 244 
Glenn, WUEpUS 2 ecaae aa = eae ee Oo eee te 30 OCI ANN Seen tae el clo sie ae eee 244 
PIR TMOGON ere ta ein ete Sears ae ate 108 hay dent. fe ote aes ee ere 244 
Siler = sek oe eee en ee 108 ROYiS Ee Pics soe a ae eee 250 
SlilCOlaR eee eee aera ere = 108 idahoensig). : o: .Jsaecen sd sees eee 245 
AIMOIES Pe sec ntae scene wie ere 108 longiesiidale . .< sete enaeee eee 245 
perlandlertese-- eee sees ae = 109 [Wellies Soo e ose mc open eee ee eeee 245 
Grenucnse. +. ce eases ees see 109 TIA CHOU ON e. an. ee ae 245 
leucots ce fee or eens anes 109 MACTOP Y PMTs oS. ae 245 
MIA ORR poe ee eee eens 109 INONTLELCVEDSIS = aes toes foe nin 245 
TMICIRNOUIS 22a see eee = 110 MMONGCOMD = 2vieiusd wciclae ote eee 246 
MICTOOON ate n- sc eee eee eae 110 tnonticolus)< S25 to.eeJasssec- secede 246 
MS eee eee aie sees eee 110 TULA BUS ao oo tea ne ree eerie 242 
OCHTORNOUDUS 225s pea nas ee 110 TAT VOLS he tee ais cence ata oct ae eee 246 
MB Soe eis reer etn ea 110 MOTIIS een) sctch te erste che eee ee eee 246 
SALUTADUS.-e5ese- ne cee eer 111 Wi Sd Re LOM ae ait chee eer 246 
TONSIENSIS7-0e sacs eee eae ae 111 NOVAUSNSIS 52. casos eee eee 246 
RIMIAINTENSIS TIS oe ee eee ee au 153 DUGSe os tee Se bn eee ee ere 241 
Bimiss itech ee ke ere ee ee meee 286 ODSCHTUS os asi mamas ga eee eee ene 249 
CONCOlOLS 29. sects gana ee eee 286 OT BOD OLS atee ao ete eater eee 247 
SITUS) ORB Rae see as ot cleo ae ieee eee 249 OTIZE DIRE cies oe eee meee eee 247 
BV AVIS RUS Soi a wir iis werner ee ec 36 DIT DUIS So oe oa ees ice aie tate ire 247 
simplex, Arctogalidia: ....---.-.-2---=-2.-=- 210 ID GIVES ora alate tela tele ele eee 247 
INGOLOINE 6 ete ance ae as ie ere ee 104 DAGIIOUS: contact ote e eae eee 247 
simplicicanus, Lepus........---.----------- 37 IDRINIGKILG o-oo eee ae eter 248 
SimiwiAns, Leroi pus=4-- teen e852 - = 62 DOP RO TMG | ere ete me 243,244, 245 
Simnitatus, OLOUl VECUS = 25: weiner 137 PFEVOStANSIS coe cola Soe ree ee ee 248 
BUMUMIS) LOLOMIYSCUS=..2 sais aes aaeeen sees 138 PU DUOGNSIS= cf - se oo eee ee 248 
Singlose, LHOMOMVS. =2 sano pede eases 69 FICHGTUSOWA: 2 5: fo sc eee eee eee 247 
RITHSESPUGNAIS ADIDAS =. oc nonwes er meee ces 253 Bal Wittlon aan a sos eee ere 248 
BICKOTIAIS | MUICTOUUS 26 was an us nat aes weer ee 92 | SHUBSULEGL J ot. eee ee eee eer 248 
CD OCONEIS Soe sean eee 14 splatert: hin oS tec se- ae eee 248 
RGQOTIUVBOUN § cits ona) se eae 138 SHAStONSIS 92. eee see eon ee eee ee 248 
Sitomys COCOONS. se oc ue... n~ 2. eee 142 shimaginensis 7-2. eee. = eee 249 
TNVISCUMIE eek wane eu we ce ae nee ets 135 | similis Jas <2 bile. oe seats 249 
Sminthus flavus.............. Jee nt 42 | sphiagnieol as 235) eee wen ce see eee 249 
ROCCATIS, MUS ue. sete eat cen e Uta siee nis 153 Stizodon vieca 2. coe p eee eee an oe ee eee 249 
Sola, NeoLompecns cfveseataace seas eee eas 105 | sirestorls< 25 ce tee eee eee eee 249 
solitaria. Neotomniay > cad c-s ob ee enae cece 105 | suokleyiie: oe oe. Jeon eee eee 249 
solitarius, Rhinolophus..........-.---.----- 261 | tenelliss ss scd.2 tee 250 
Sonorans, Liomys2-.-..-- 2-<seerses- sss a+ === 47 thompsonl:. 2.5... gb. - er cere 250 
sonorienke;! TAYASSU << << os cee oe ee eee 25 trowbridglts.o8..- 262.5422 e eee 250 
sonoriensis, Conepatus .....--....------.---- 226 | Tundrensiss.2 0.7 2 <-- eo re eee 250 
Dicotyler=. o.<-0<s--e ee ae eee 25 | VARTONS >... cc c'se- 5 oe a eee ees 949, 251 
IGSPGIOMLyS «ssn enn iaea ade oes 138 vancouverensis. ......--.-----+--+s--- 251 





INDEX. 321 

Page. Page. 

SLT TESS ag CA aR a en Zoe || Stephersis Citaluss o-c.- <a. sas oec see ence 171 
ESTER Gr So Sait Pe ae A ee cere 235 Neotoniae (2555 86 .o85, reece 105 
REINA MEANINGS so eso bu oo ue na eee 239 Paropriathis..s- aoe eo ees 328s 55 
PaMCISCUS MEXICANS: =<. << can ca esos seen ents 239 POYQUIVSCUS s 2 - atiuda. sees sas eee che 138 
Spacix, Cephalophus.....-........-<.------ M1 DOLULODULCIUS = euecin cane ore oe Soden y20S 
hINnolophus: <i<.22 ses< ese sc ee 261 I PeMNODOUUS as st cee eee = 171 
UTSLER 159°) Stenoderma lucie. ................... bed ce 268 
DER VtOnSIS” e222 5b oe Saas dante MOS) PSUZOGON,, SOLER =. cae cices ene sce ee. cceha 249 
Golpragess: 2255 oso cc fce uses ons LOM RSDOIGUS «MUSt emer hee oo ae ee ce ees 153 
NPMIIRLUSS RipAbo ese. sock cee ecoccdwaneste Ss aStreatoriy NEOLOmne 20h 2-6 F250! 2 tock 105 
Spectabilis, Dipodomys. ....-.-.--.--=-----.: a9 ReLouIpUSs sj o2- 5-2 -c2 2.2 nc eee 62 
ppermophilus alleni-..-...2..2.-...-.--.---- 162 LOTUS ose ote cee es sh eee e ase aee 220 
annectenS: |. sc.csvesso.c-eeee 162 DOLGK Sa oe eet ais Soe nt eee eo 249 

BROS Hye er ca ein oe eee ent 163?) *strepitans Musee. -. seth. 2es tek 3h S, 153 

SEMAUUS Senseo ois a ne wees 163d: estridens; Mus?s- 4-7 soe See 154 

PALTOWENSISaa- 25. --.4.-4- =o 3 1643) -striduluss Mus:i-e 26 <. see. see Seeeaee 154 

INGEN CENSIS 2255 42-42- ee eis 164°) ‘subater; Peromyscus:= ..-. s2....2.----J-<.5- 139 

permardinus 2. -<.---22-s0055-: 1727 |ssabeinctus;uepus a6. .cu- sass eee eee 37 

DSTO ViCaUdUS. ..-<<.i22-022~.2+- 172 yl vilazus. 222) 22 so22 secs ce eee 37 

NSAMIPSCAUIS ores ec sia eee. sia wi 164 | subrufum, Hemiderma...................... 265 

CANIS fe ose cence sescues 1a subrufus; rapids] ss. ee ee eee eee 21 

ONUGHIC Ce. Qo eccecsonesee sca. 165 | subulidens, Pipistrellus.................-... 275 

, cryptospilotus.......-.-.-.--- G5) |) suckleyi, Sciuruss=25--2 22.5 eens see Lae 194 

PIB PENS HS a cmscesges seas ss 165 DOLlOkE So eee ee eee ere Se eae 249 

PISHORT tthe eee he ere a 166: | ‘suecicus,, Bvotomys: == <<... -.-5:---..2.--.-- 95 

Polanrania: <<. = ssose eee oes UD (SSRI coop ae een ee ae Aen a Pan TS aoe oe 22 

PuNniSON-- Soha c esas 5c Sos Tis esallivanus; scluruSe.se. ee 6422 ~ ee ee 194 
mAGrospuotus-..<-.=-<--<---+- 167 | suluensis, Cynomolgus.................-.... 284 

DLA Cre 2 haa a ates Sa 1670) Suma tree; ARNeCuruss ace soe ease atenioe ce oe 41 

TELAL OAT WS So fora Saas S'aa0 wine 167 | sumatranus, Nannosciurus...-.............-. 161 

MIMS eee tye- eae ee oe ae LGWe Sure, RUpalne seen eeence. ts. Ae ee ee 253 

MIGISOMY aie SS hao evs otaceie cee = MP2 SUTCLUSs MS Ee ee a hac bee eet Se ee So eetie & 154 
obsidianus............. Se. 168 SCWITUS= 5 rare cists 2 ans Seach tte 195 

co 01571) (21 | a 1685 |Surifers Muse. <2 =e een see ee ee 154 

BPPPONUS shoo aca eeee eee eee GO| raulSa ee eee ern once vere Sener 22 

DOB POOU Meee eee e eee ae 169 PDB epee tee Asc a ee oe tas 22 
PSEVIGENS:...-.---- 252-220 s05e 170 JUDSiIS = eee ee eee = s 22 

PELOLEOSIS = abso sacae s-- eke 170 VOD SGRHIS 2 oie aoe ee as tcc em ctor ae 22 

WIOSIUS en eee a eae tes 170 TULL LS Stes etna ra ct eee rae cite 23 

PISIANSIS!s Aaaeeme eon ees 170 TIA GUNIGNSIS Sion. cic atest Leguees 23 

SSR TULL ae re ek 172 MIAUONSIS Aiea se eee ee ee 23 

ALG DMOUSI Se oa ce ee masse as 171 MICODATICUS Fehr eee See = tee 23 

TALEMEAN CUS =e eee oe een oe 171 lic reat coe Aeneas sas pete 23 

WABIMICNSIS: < -:.,--~.-2--<<s502% 171 | POHIUSUL ETS 420) se ee ee 23 

sphagnicola, Mictomys...............-...-.. 78 | MOMS ee Satan aoe ete 24 
LCV ed SS UE Ee ee 2AOM INS VLVIA SUS crete nde ee es mec cw see eee 31 
SYTANLOMLYS o-oo - one pecs ss 78 STU ON SEA oes on 0 eee 31 

Bais Mr aera AS 95 2ts le tos Sis cial 2a eee es 222 CTU haat SAA ee le ee 37 
BUN ONS oo a eee oes Se 222 aE ness wa ete Sea 31 

BESTS ITONS 2. Siicicncus Cece te ose eons 222 cedrophilus......-. ee ee tee ere: 32 

Bist ete ee eet 223 CHAD AS Ae 3 oe een BE, OT, 

PIACIMS 2 oro et oa ct A ee ee eee 223 GHISPEUSIGss22.0. s8scive ess esccee ts 32 
PIGNANOIA 55. cacao e een ence ee a. 223 CI PE US ater ate pea ic noe. vases ee Ju 32 
PRRROH SSS aoptnatas = seme sates nen 2p 223 COMMEGLOUS ee dice lie os. dotecs secs 32 
WORSEN Witt. Sao tts uacoce meta as else 223 MI PMS et teere Sal tite eo ennxsecoes 32 
MUMCKOOON 22.550: von ak sae eee sea ee 223 I eee acre Sis acts ee 33 
IRAED = oa st on Bs Naim ahaa, tone eS eS 224 PORT See ota ig om Coates wie el 33 

TANT 211 (2 Ges ee eae re pee AEE 224 RRO UNS rare lane atene ee sl glo enicrs = 33 

MEMS ere a2! So wy oe oO ee ee 224 GUMS 2 cecil t oD ais 'sn to Sisters 34 

STE (CS DS A ee ee eee ees eee 224 PUSODUIBE 2 62 Seine Coo 8 Sod ocee ea maces 34 
Bplendens, INGOLOMS -. <<... 9.2... 2 css cc eos 105 MAIO cert ee aa own weiaia eine ieiern toe 34 
SANS MAM PUSS 2 oa. ocicu cece cncescncoee % MUARSUGHUISL <. sbse. sare cence tees 34 
RIBIMEPON MOMCNUIS = 202-2. sen as ee oon ie ce 170 THEE COTIUES. Sena e a acer one ee 35 
MRCSOPIOGON coc - comcu cc cccein a ca'e 5 TTUDOE Sc pe dee cases ae eee ee we 35 

pee tee Sa, ocean eel 205 NGOMOEXICANUS 65.02 haan amos sen 35 

Btepuensl, Ghastodipus=-. >. ....2--2-2-.-c2-- 55 OUIPR DG ae cers ca cee sone saceaee= 35 


45336—08——21 





322 INDEX. 
Page. Page. 
Sylvilagus pachfious .. <..0--- sac tenes ree = 85:\|) (Da yassumanus: 2.3 cease toons eee ee 24 
TestriCtus.. <2 .22.. soseneee seus 5 36 INP CDS: cw! hate Soe ee ee 24 
NI CLUG st ano Oe one ia Bien ee ee 36 sonorlense@¥s:).252-. 2. w~ceseenceees 25 
FODUSUUS 3. scan ccc seek lee eee 36 WikCATANENSS (2a en ee a oe eee 25 
SHnotidiept: ** oie oss eee 36 Witesilanensise= {286 Ae ce ee 25 
simills-2 5s sce - ccs bce esecoe eee eee 36° | SMayassuid ee: 5-07 se A 24 
SUDGINOUIS >. 5252. cSteecen eee a0 «| eanopus.—:5b Sas aye ee eee 107 
WPELICOlON: eases see ae Peon 38 | phenax 20 S235 82h eee 107 
WALLICOMBS cmc ons awl doses aaa 38 | teapensis, Oryzomlys-.--4--2 222 s---ae-eeeneee 121 
WRYTOM 5 o.sc\c cine scares oencem eet 38 Peroniyscus.. 2. 2-csc-sceeeneeeee 139 
yucatanicus...... wee eae 38: | tedonrus.\SGuinns 3.5455 -5~o ee eee eee 195 
Symphalanegus <<< ----s< cals ee eee 286 | tehuantepecus, Peromyscus................-- 139 
IOSS)is S25 bcs cceeee eens 286 | teliotis, Atalapha.....................-.....- 277 
SYDADUOMIYS 2. a Set «acne case secs era oe 77 | TGASIMITUS 32 22 ait awe. ot cee ee eee 277 
bullatuisss-nn eee eee 77 | telmalestes; Blaring.. °. $00 22 osc, 2. s0sneas 240 
COOPEN = se 06 vanes aoe eee ee 77 GonepabUs-f. 2052+ opciones ecaeee 226 
allie 5245. eer e wd: | tenellus, Sorex secs reso een ees Sect 250 
POSSI ee Sn oe Sate anere 78 | DADOSS Sore oo oe eee 44 
helslotess --- 2-3 ese e oe 78 | tenuicauda, Neotoma--<--.-.--------------54 106 
SONS 2 aeee eee ee ee 78 | tenuidorsalis Vespertilio..................- 278, 291 
Sphagnicolas-nssasteese sees 78 | tenuirostris, Reithrodontomys............-.- 117 
TRG TiS ea 78 | Selarus: 2.525 ee soacate mace 195 
POET POU eee ene oe cess. 0095) emus; Spilopale:< 260 ge pcree eee 224 
|} tephura, Tupaia.........- Be Se eae ore 253 
T. | -tereticaudusCiteltussss-—- = cee eae eens 171 
tabascensis; Didelphis_.2....-..-.22-5--<e-o=- 1 Spermopbilus:. <=: a2. = a= ace ee 
taciturnus; MUS ti... oo. 5. Sanco pe eee s care 154 | terutaus, Atherurus: 2-9. c oes oecee cess = eee 40 
tagulayensis) Mus — Sete ane <- cne sas saece nae 154 | Poetaurista 23559 acse Oem aae ate 202 
talamencs; OryZz0mys:- 2c etsaecn as ose Soe 121). texanum Satie See eee ee ceo eee 3 
IRI idee: 2 te ee ears Seek, He cat ee 933 3\/-LexAanuUs,D Ofcelapbus..-<) 425" Sone eee eee ee 14 
tamibelanicus; Mus s28 2. ee yo tana, oPangas as 155 | Hesperomyss=.- ~ 2. =< 55 soe enn eeae 139 
WeaMias Alps eae See os eee pte 173 | Odocotleus2-2i 2. ones seen 14 
CAlIpeplus=-sseeee. - hs a ere ees 174 | IPETOULYSCUS= ac: soe eocer ners 127,139 
CASUAMIETIS 2 er eeecniace none eee 1735) teRGnSis,(\Ganisscan ses ee eee eee 217 
Cinersicollis:.< 2-5-5 ars eee 175 | Castors) Obaaat st ea. n eee 160 
CINNANIOMCUS asec. sak ee 171 Gonepatus: +. as oneness ee aces 226 
GOODEEMS. cskic: ossrcsek ns -ce eee anweas 175 | Didelphis.s 2303s sc0cerace eee ee 2 
CLOTSALIS:}, oes. Sacto a pet acto eer 175 ion yS-2 0 sa ee eee 47 
PTACIIS ©: cea pnt euk Od abe nei 176 | ANHOMOMLYS eee cease eee 69 
INtEnpTes= cont s eee ses soe Lie UOC yon. Soe coe ee ees 212 
lutelventris: Sh-. vs-.<! Recs oesemenrs 76"\ Whecurus.:. ooo. 2 Steen omen sn comico ereae ee 41 
MeOMOUTUS:.. 22's eens aso eee 176 | SUMAtIse. <2 ere toe ee ees 41 
GUSGUIUIS =< scene nia < sce Saree eae L77" \sthomastyOdocoileis-s-e ass ee see 15 
MAIO ee tS. Sans os eee aes 177 Megadontomys............-.---.<.<: 140 
ADS OU UNS oe ae ne een eee oe 178 IPOLOMYSCUS= sh het ses ane ee ease el 
PU RIMIO Sowa ease ner a ane cece a eee 178 Sclamis:325Vi2-Ge ss ee ee eee 196 
MOVEMUMNG AIS 235-5 Se aecc re cau eee 178.2) 2DhOMONLYS< 3224 52- 3h ee ieee eet 62 
bans, MUS ss 3, casa ies ee ee aes meee gL ggrestise ss. .c2 sto. ase sec eee 62 
SADAVTUTIS  SCHUNIG: feo. we sets tte an Ss oe 195 ALPINUS. 22 emie a eee eee 63 
ipITela Sc a. Ie we came ee eee aoe ke 25 ANGUIATIS. $2825. oe ee 63 
ALTOID. ee Aces oan Be eee 25 BWADDOG! 6 Cesc cstec sees eee 63 
GOWilss-. oes 0h cs ax ees eee 26 palleyit ete enceess poe eee cane ae 63 
PTOI GO se pc orcs ace os = fa 3c ale eee 25 bridgeri. ssid... 535. coceeeoneae 63 
BUSING OHS Aan ce 6 fo 5 oe ee teers ok 157 pabezones sala oe. epee 63 
ADOOUAIS: ot east a aaa megs eee 157 Glasilis:. 2.020.322 #22 ce oseaseoees 63 
HATTISSEOLIE MSCIULOS: 2-455 S2sck nce esaea a 195 | fishioni. oc yet wore ec ecee eee eee 64 
SDATOUAON ASS 2 oo endo oa cacctanee toaet 34 fill VUS= 26 fae Jose Beer, see eee 64 
(DECOR ane GEE O LER e/a meee SNe Son oka ee 3 | TUSCUIS 2.6 --6 se oe oe ee 64 
LOXBUNN Pe ssc eee nese ialstos ceo 3 | POld Man Serge ea sane 64 
Daxidedey 5.) cn soe teeters cence aoe re 227 | PESHELUS-22 -ssese- = 5.2 ne neese 65 
DENIM CIENIES tscy couse» roe kina 20s 21 227 idahioensis: <<. ¢c2.eonsn<see seen 65 
NEP OCta! owt ee ee Canaan ls 227 INtEXINOGIUS oc seas eae ee 65 
PAVASSULS 5 en. Ses eee ee ee eae ee 24 lachupuilla-c-2 52 fotc ce eee 65 
CTASSUTOS Jeo... 2k cts eee ee eee ee 24 labiceps: <2 5..ees0s onan ese te 65 
CYASSUB Ss? 62 osc Bete eee ee 24 | latinos trisic: S200 cssctae tee toe ae 66 
humeral: <2 ,20 505: aes eee ees 24 | leucodon.. 2:23: eee eee 66 
Inumeralis. 2 202 Wesson sos castee sees 24 | WimioSus. <3 a< se eee cone eee ae 66 


—— 


ee 





y 4 

INDEX. 323 

Page. Page. 
PPNOMOMYS MALAY. ~~ <...-------cacss~e 66 | Tragulus luteicollis........... emus este ocecs 19 
MGIRDUDS = eset sce cece cee er 66 WIGBSCONS E33 owe ne hajen eoece esp eas 19 
NOW ah cen else eet tem ato a< 66 TEC EO ns SAE acne ea agree ot 19 
PUG SE esas Soe cee eee 67 PMiSTICOlISS <n costae — esc nan se e 19 
TASS oats Se ee eee mee 67 MMPTOCINCL ISS samc. ates sSne anne owe 20 
TIAVUS ae Soe ee ne oan coin tare 67 MEMS ee a See eee wie rete 20 
NGSOMea as en ee aes ee oe 67 DOIUAVIIS* co cen cerrackemcone ee ame ne 20 
Meyvadensis....¢ 6s. sens =<. So~ = 67 Mretielluss... Canc n anon as ocak mee 20 
PID OES ee 1+ Sees Aone, mine Sekar 67 PreviOsusyss. 5+ i ss cn ass ence oes Seee 20 
ES ese Cec et cere aan 67 Te ULES ee ee en eel ede = Sie 20 
GUOLAIUS 2 os on eee se tse 68 TRVUS Sosccc5 >< Ps ee he eee ie 21 
OVGPONUS 05 e255 < eae ose ss 68 TUDCUS Saco assesses ss acke cee seees 21 
(Vu LA:40): ee eae a eee 68 MUU Se ne sees pease eee coors 21 
AESCALISKs =. a<% xe ee nee so 68 TUSSOUS 5 a iociars halen eo Soca ece ce aee 21 
PSLCUbISse ace eee cess 68 MUSSULUS a2 oon oe ee oo es we eee 21 
MENCATINOS=-.42 oso poco e n= 68 | SUDrifuS ssa an ana te ana eas 21 
MENDES: 22 22 sca nke eee 68 yYmMbrinUs..- 62 = f-— 35 = So eae 22 
WEGCVAPUS. <5 8 ose ene een sso 69 | WITPICOMISe ene ee eee 22 
DINGLOROKE Sen. ease ease 69 | trichopus, Zygogeomys...-..........-.-..--- 76 
WV RUNeeUS.- 52-5 oe eee neo GOs Rrichys= = 22. tS sccc ae enee nck we ecaeeee 40 
eqpadratus. <<. 22..2c-esse~ season 69 IMACLOUS es oe ere ten omoe 40 
Biislows xo oe cine Sar cess = 69" |e tricolor Plemidermal 22. se 2ee see =o enee= 266 
PEROMISIGE Sono cose se see cee 69  trinitatis, Callospermophilus................. 173 
Rn theme Soon ne oe eee sc 69°). tropicalis: Conepatus...2- 23. ----o-csecs~sse 227 
MERRIONISISE <a omscs sie eoous nce ae 70) INeotOMIa. cc 5-< a oe cae eecsasees 106 
Mii esOI SOLCK --... sees enc cna toe 250 | IE THEOLLUS Se ee eee 220 
mboracatus,'CAapromys: .....=:...<.2-------- 41 DS DLOP A Gare woe een ee oes 224 
V0 ES" 0) 0 i Jian) trow brideilwArvicolac. 22. ...2- 6 <eense ces 92 
tiburonensis, Peromyscus. ....--.:.........- 140 HEBD Se ceases seen ae nee 37 
(CELE eG TESTIS 2471 (10 ic le 201 ORER wisn aac oe au-a es isistenenn acc 250 
MEMMARNICUS A MMISS oS. Sac clceSccoe cesses eee 155) 3) truely Glossophagassse-. cos. ate oe oe eeee 264 
SGAEMEMSS MULUS SS Ons. Se ccsae sess cones S552 155 HHCSPCLONIY Sse oh g op ces oe sen cle eee 140 
toltecus, Reithrodontomys............-.---- 117 WED US Rist atoc ose e eset et eo cee = 37 
toluce, Reithrodontomys.................-- 117 MMUGLOMLYS oe ce soso Seton eo eee eee 78 
BSLPID Steere ce eye cee oko een ae 196 Odocollous. <2 4. -ceccceencccceveaee ee 12 
MIUAEUSIS, SiZMOdON .......--.----s--6--,----< 111 PELOULYSGUS). ceca ce se-e as os cess 134,140 
SRI ad UES ore Sco cee Se eae eee ete 263 IPhenacomyss.2--c 4c ee eae eee oe 97 
PTO ITOM So ier kee eae aol 263 Pod Ory mMnurse ose eee eee ae ae 233 
Ras eTOMLYSCUS ...: =... -2--2-s2secs- = 140 DCADAUUS 2s ~ 3- asus eaisa seeders se ones 234 
torridus, Hesperomys .-...-.--.------------- 123 Scinnusst tx) pasate ae eae ener 196 
Heterogeomys..........-.-----2--+ 75 Symaptomlysses dees ee eee eee 78 
WAGMINSS © orcas rete c oe stnn emesis 470), tshuktshortm, MMCrOUuS.. 922-3 eee == 92 
IM VCUOMYS <8 e ooe tosh ces 123 | tuancus, Galeopithecus...............-..---- 255 
totontepecus, Peromyscus...........--.-...- 140 | GaleoptenuSe oss se s=-c0cenn cee see oho 
townsendi, Arctocephalus................-.. Dise LUArensis MuepUS= 34-2. eno sees ote eee = 30 
TACK OLLOs Se ess. te le 89 | OnyChomys-<2~- aces =- ses eae een 123 
WOM TOWMUS <oc11 22 oBe osc scmest es 233 | PerogipUS 26s oss. cena oS = 62 
OC V ON. sr nee ot eee 213))| UUMIDalensisy, IylOmiyS... essence tence 142 
“05, Dp) LT CB ee a TH) WttmMides, DOP COSSS wens aja c ncaa ye wala 276 
RIDERS western ed waa ad oie ale cis Haticiite osc inw es ana 16) | tumidifrons, |Chilonatalusy..... 50)... 00000--- 269 
PICS ate See eon te, Sotete 16 | TMIGITOStrIS, NALAIUS. 22: cn cs cena carcic ween 269 
DAVICANUS! 323 <a taeoao et eo tceecsees 17 | HOW OGOSE san cite ne a ein tan oe 269 
POPEUIATIUISS (ecto Sts cine minicom V7 | ttmdrensis; Sorex. --.----- 2/2. ------ 20. -- 5a: 250 
PYM Se ch ese os ae cei weit TMs ie ESO orate here ne ene Saisie sss ction se 251 
HOMTiean See eee Ae. ee eS 17 | Pep AMBEee ee weet Ae sc ees 251 

RXOVIPCS at oe tosh reba we tae cese 17 DUnOrs at eetces cc cutee s cede teen 251 
imenranensis'.. 252525.5- ose ecen 17 CAIN AUER aoe ance a ease ace ch tascose 251 
ESICSCONS soos «onc Soe Se deoie ale wicim om 18 AS eM nets ae roo SAS care. wic a siastew owe 252 
MUTI sata a ota sd os Satie see oe 18 Pe WIGH IG tees Ann asa aeie.s Soo ae 252 
A VACOLIS Se a2 Ba sinc ot oe os See ae e'sis =m 18 (ena gc0) 3:0) ee ae 252 
TEVSOAUN IS by wero Sc) = Se a oar 18 CULVSOMMMNG 2 sexe son ese oe cee oe 252 

LOTINIONNIS Se ays hts Yo tea Sa 18 (SCO OMe once te ean eee ee 252 
NOS OL Sere ee ot So = 22 DPS Deven ck = Serete, co tes ieee eaten 252 
IPSS Sere ete Se care es oe a 18 PITTED Ee, cto Se Bee ree eee 253 
RIGS cn chee es ts ai 19 MUNOMIS See orca nea oe a eee 253 

TESTOR CUISIS Serotec cea es a2 2 19 SITNSSSEHONSISH as ack. Foose ee aces en 253 








324 INDEX. 
Page. | Page. 
Wripala SOrdiae +2. o6 Saas sheet 253 | Vampyrops........ aie Basia ne aleoe eee ome 266 
SUNGGs octn execs cane one eaters 253 | FUMMOSUS Hoo. cakes eee 26 
WO ate ral os cae ere 253) | ‘vancouverensis, Sorex:- 2. 20-3 scenes cess 251 
"TP PSUGH 5 4 co au tess ses acttnetees 20L; | “varronis: Tapus-iek fo. eee coe 30 
Moraio: borealis. oct 2 = cnn want cee enwient a 287 || -vasconize, -Evotomiysse secre ase sene- eee - 95 
RUTSIODS 8 ee oo le ee ee et 9 | venezuele, Lophostoma................-.--. 263 
BLD: scraatec clears oe et ee eet ee 9 WOnati.c ae aan oan ae 263 
WOIOMY Si <a as asa dances -wececamtetepacesa> 142° | ~ventorum)/Sctarusy-. 23-0 422-0 eee 197 
Hiniapisete se te een eer ae 142; |\ ventralis, Soraxs- eee eos ee ee 251 
tumtbslansis 22.2.2 so essac et enna 142; | “venustas Neotomas--22 82. eee eee 106 
tylorhinus, Platygeomys:.....-...2..5..---=- 75°|| venustus: Perodipus. 225.2 csc cae ese eee 62 
|: ‘Versacrucis, Lidmiys.2¢ S33 ae sete. eee 47 
U. Vesperimius /afiinis: 362. a. sci eee conn eeee 123 
ODEIICGIOL sUeDUS: com. seat See eee ea 38 melanoOphTrys =: sc<meeceeaesaces 134 
SOHINUSSS. « sas et oack ane ae emer 196 | Vespertilio-afiiniS 2.1% 225: en cet ecaeree 270 
YL SUS oo so cians ee ane se <2 38 BPIISe5S Mylo seeks se en ee 290 
MUS YK eis es on a aoe neers 206 ibahbamensisyook cose ae eee 275 
MHOMOMLYSS 228. eens aoe n eee ere eee OVOLIS Se CLE Sse oe ce ee 290 
TU OLSEN SS see eee eee ee 155 | OXIGUWUS: Sy oecceeen soe sec daen eee 290 
UMDIIN US eL LAC LS see eee eee ee eee eens 22 keenii:-oosl= Sto ee ee 271 
MI DLOSUS, MACACHS.2 5. cas ore ceeeece sas act 285 | MACTOPUSH es Tosca becuse acco estee 271 
MUIGLOLUS!s Soce s eee Case See ees 92 amelanorhinus--=-—-.20ssse eee 271 
unalascensis, Dicrostonyx............---..-- 76 MUATVUUS poe es ee 261 
: MICrOLS 5... 22 eos cecnn cance eee 93 MUNGUS = we eee bee eee 291 
UNG aAwHs (SCMINUS: . oan aon oe one ee 196 Nittduse <a. - FS eee 272 
WN EAVA; MUlPOSe. 5 pas sean Steciesasteecesee 215 ODSCHTUS! Bh Sse ce nn eee 272 
Oar eilbte crc Se mite at oe oeiee ceeaticiee mae 10 | oreponensis< ><. - os sscne eee 272 
RITOCVONS So es Sete eo eee eens esoee 211 | pallidus: .. 2-42. leaner see 278 
poresliseae assesses ee see ee 211 Semicaudatus...-.----osseeeneee 259 
egliformigus- 3s wcceea scan eter ees 211 TCNUIGOTSAUIS 2s eon eee 278,291 
catalinge. sas, Ssen. one Stone 211 WOLATIS Mo tee Sone hg ae eee ee 273 
IClONIP SEs cen ws cae See tee ces 211 ‘VUMANENSIS! spn s aot ee 273,291 
puatemalio secs 2k. socstenotae- sae 211). Vespentilionida3 uc. 22a. o-cee a teers eee 270 
TUUCOTALIS ee ta = Soe eee eee 212) | -vettlus; ELOCOMYS! sense eee ee eee eee 107 
PALGIOENS peas Roce eee eee 212" ||\yvicinior, Peromyscuss... s2c22=5--eeeaaaaee 141 
SANUACLUZEO oe oo owe smaeee ens 212; ;|\ vigilis;' Gans S- oe aers cts ate ne ee 217 
texensis. .... Beta ase ee eee 212''|| villosa; Glossophava +. e~ <2 ceeesece eee 264 
LOWMSeNG!. So. < kon coop acceae 213: |)svillosus;| MaCaCUS.> 2 4--meseeon eee 285 
Wroderitias oo nic. suas sca aatauce scant 266 | “virgicollis;, Tragulusaose.ss-5. ceareeeseseee 22 
CONVEXUIMNE =e eesne eee Sear ae 266\"| ‘virgo, Rubimolophus\<-cscees- s---2 eee eee 261 
Wo pale ss 63sec ee te ot sae onats mene 2638:,| -vitiensis; MUS 2. 2nsccncccese cee ce eee 155,289 
Cylindrurac.. +=. > ssc bee eee eee 253% || vivax, SClurdseels = cans tee aes  ceaseeeee ners 197 
Wrotrichusieibbsil --58-. .. sn ceecsasceeene seas 2340 | VAIVORTIGaG aie eco ia ac ee ne eee eee 209 
MVS? ee se fe eA eee eee 229).| wociferans, Muso 422-28) - on eco ee 156 
NUSHIS Sree ek Gritente (2 Wet can aha ein ah ree 229) ||) vociferus; Pteropuss--. eo. oan. cee eee 259 
IESCONSIA teem 2% ot eee 200).| ‘wolans, Vespartilion:..\-0+.ic.-c-nsnchen ae 273 
CAUITOrEIGUS time ter aon eerie ee mcnee ene 230" | “vomerina, PHockral (2.20 s-ctee oe eee 6 
GATIO DiC hetero el re ee 230)'| “wullcanis Musus- bios oe ee anne 156 
Oa iem see are net oes ee aie orice 280);|) SVilllpeS =e cade ct-neer berate seme ees 213 
PIBDUCUS) 2 Secs: sss ulcee an sen ccs toaee 231 abletoriimsevent scusise. cova sce cee 213 
SUNOS 2 coca 5 0 a coe eae Brea 231 a@lascansisucs £22522 IS eae temceee 213 
MORIA S. fa see aa eae eee 231 PerinPans!S.<e esc eeee eee 213 
RMOS tamer apo ne «aces ena swaninn 231 | CASCHOGNSIS! See cece cea ee ere 213 
MOMENI Rc tds oc ntcc seen ee eneme ne esis 231 allensis see sacie ot occ = a eee eee 213 
BU BESIG ots stamio'n oda aw.c ta arsed mate 232 DATIMANI- Sas oe seen ne eee eerie 214 
PAL ON Oe eterno ss varaniwcce mee vutirs 232 hebes! 2 set Se ose sees cee seem 214 
Minden one eeae en Coss hee 232 INNIS 22-2 oe a eee nee eee 214 
DOPOD ee. eoick Ue eee oye ce 232 kenalensish soos sce ens {nea oem 214 
NItADIENAIS He eKOGI puss. wees eect ene ot esau 62 littoveligh es esescess saree seen cee 212 
TNACTOUNUS) Cas cee ete =~ sae 214 
Vv. MUtiCusRe.e ete eee S ea eeeee 214 
MARTENS OLE K Es cc acct ne ann meena ean As 249,251 TIECALOM IU Bah bis hela eetes sle ae ee tee 215 
validiis; Dendrobiyrax:. ccc. nancsaswenese 26 NeOMOxXICANUS S22. oe oe. aoe ae 215 
MUS ees se rar iat nee ate tare 155 pribilofensise< 3-220. ve~cs= 56 2 ceseeeeee 215 
vallicola;/Microtus:>2)-- >. .s.csesn- eee 93 repalisy. is. soonest ae ace ere 215 


Sylvilaguss co ks seca asta 38 UNPAV A fdisk 5 cee comcast ee 215 





INDEX. 325 
Ww. Page. Page. 
WUMANENSIS MYOUSL =. <scenceecessamestes 271,291 
wallawalla, Lepus...-..-..---------.-++----- 31 Wespertilionte. 24-245 sceee ae 273,291 

SPRITES GOL S32. «cos aa 2 ana nem aco 106 | 

Myigllarisass. cc ates ce eel cen 88 | Bs 

eeminetint Pants =. cee teae zc 31 | PACRLGCHs NCOLOIUAL. aioe ss sese o-stse. ces 106 
Priore ee ee te tee 221 RearOpnatiUSssoc coveaccr sede see ees 55 
wrangeli, Evotomys................2-------- 96 | Reithrodontomys................- 117 
Mirkoutyse ots et Are es ig Poalezaln DOsN Ee, MiSs 2 ee sect meso ee eee 156 
Synaptomys..........-.-2.-s--.-+- 7g | zamelas, Peromyscus........-..........----- 141 
| zamoree, Peromyscus............--.---- Lite aad 
| zapheeus, Sciuropterus...............-..--.-- 203 
x. PE POOIM Se ae ee Lees aae 22 Se ne as ieee 42 
Le ty le Wey} VEL Se heb cose Ress ener ceonep ee econaoce cece 42 
meni ee ee 107 SN EAS CESS US eee ee 42 
Xenurus, Peromyscus..........-.-+--------- 141 | CAT DGS UNS eter eee ate eee 43, 
ofiemiys nelsoni.........2-.......s.-se----« 45 MIAO ee das ser sec eect ered 43 
MUNORCE eh ae eee eee eee oe 43 
¥y MORLARUS Peres eect cece eee 43 
: MevAtensiSer sees seeee eee eee eee 43 
wukiontcis, Oryehomys..-.-..-..-.---------- 123 OFCPONUS { o/s. Sa.5- cc coe es ce cct ease cee 43 
MRETEMSIS OMLOLLUS <n on eee oe oe 171 | DPACIICUS Es enue oes eee eee 44 
Spermophilus..................- 171 TOANENSISK 2. ss eae nee en oes cheese qh 
yakutatensis, Microtus...............-..-..- 93 TeNeUUS Se ae sete eaters oon cee nee ces 44 
WHIMBNSIS. "CHOROID YS. << 2020--- 0222.2 cee es 70° | ‘zarbynehus; Peromyscus. ...0-2.<-.-------6- 141 
AMCHAHITONISG, LEV ASSU «<<. ni. mee a Zan || ZElOLES;, POrOMYSCUS) «i... 55 oases eee 141 
yucatanensis, Didelphis.............--.....- Dae ee ZiB DLN cs revere taye ersten east rate ots iver terete 5 
OPVZONIYS£.~. 525 = sess Sass ns P21 SZ DD a COnuralises.cnsiesem saat ayaa caae ete a 3 
Beiarussc2) estos sas knees O72) SAiphiiss ses seer seo na es oes eae 5 
PAVASS Uo waa citaaz cic necaes-ss- 25 COPINOSER ES acer eset ane aie ee airel 5 
WIMCHeHEMCUS, UGPUS.—- - <2 2c sc enscecs=ss= 38 PTOD TCL ayes ata cicea ats Pare areas otetayer 5 
PUYCLIHOMODPS < << x. 2 20000<n025 DSO Se ZV SOLCOMY See ce sain aa eee ae anne = 76 
IN VCRIUOMNIS 22 '5 50 2S dem aisacin 280 ENICHO DUS heer see a eee 76 
DYLWNASUSS = Sooo 25s oc secs te 38 | PY POMAWUCA A CNONUTA a2 fons ca nan a nintal an aie 40 
MAMRDRBSRISIS A AIMS a -os -oo ese came oec cscs i ) zygomaticus, Atherurus- 2-222. 5..2..-- 4-5 40 
Sciuropterus....22-..5..2 6. s.dsee - 203 | ORYZOMYS* =~ sooner oan een 121 

O 

- 


Palate % aT 
a i as aL i> 
i — d = Pall Serie tn ln mts 
a tah = iP ac =) Pen Pris tiene 
ARs 


re | 


eae . tm 


z aye 


- 








or 























III 


3 9088 01421 1080 


"WOM