874 monographs of north American rodentia. 



with the light stripes whiter, and wider, nearly equalling the interspaces; 

 also mud) paler on Ihe sides and whiter below. * 



Specimens from different localities vary somewhat in color, the varia- 

 tions being similar to those in var. tridecemlineatus, but less marked, The 

 light stripes are generally grayish-white, sometimes suffused a little with 

 vcllowish, and the dark interspaces are generally pale chestnut, varying to 

 more dusky. The light stripes are generally more than half the width of the 

 dark interspaces, and sometimes equal them. Among the palest and smallest 

 examples are the specimens from Fort Union and the Yellowstone and Platte 

 Rivers, an especially pale and small phase characterizing the Mauvaises 

 Torres of the Upper Missouri region. 



GENERAL REMARKS UPON SPERMOPHILUS TRIDECEMLINEATUS AND ITS VARIETIES. 



Differential characters and affinities. — In pattern of coloration, 

 Spermophilus tridecemlineatus quite strongly resembles S. mexicanus, but 

 differs from it in having the ground-color of the dorsal surface much darker, 

 and in the possession of continuous light stripes, alternating with interrupted 

 lines of detached light spots, S. mexicanus having merely longitudinal rows 

 of disconnected white spots, which cease at the occiput, instead of continuing 

 over the top of the head to the forehead. S. mexicanus is also smaller, and 

 has a longer tail, and differs in the characters of the skull, as already shown. 



In general form, and especially in the form of the skull, S. tridecemline- 

 alus resembles S. franklini, but it is much smaller, with a much narrower 

 tail and entirely different pattern of coloration. It hence has no very near 

 American ally, and is still more distinct from any of the Old World Spermo- 

 philes. 



The two varieties of S. tridecemlineatus, in their extreme phases, quite 

 widely differ in respect to size and color, but agree in every detail of form, 

 proportion, and pattern of coloration; var. pallidas being mereby a bleached, 

 depanperate, desert form of tridecemlineatus. In var. pallidus, the tints are 

 not only paler, but the light spots and stripes increase in breadtli at the 

 expense of the darker ground-color. Var. pallidus reaches its extreme phase 

 of differentiation in the driest portions of the plains and the desert regions 

 more to the westward ; var. tridecemlineatus is most specialized over the fer- 

 tile prairies of the Mississippi Valley and thence northward along the Red 

 River and the region to the westward of Lake Winnipeg. Specimens from 



