NATURAL AREAS AND REGIONS 



595 



Mexico) and Salina Cruz, and short 

 railroads radiate from the port of 

 Progreso, Yucatan. The principal ports 

 of the east coast, Tampico, Vera Cruz 

 and Progreso, are reached by regular 

 steamers from New York, New Orleans 

 and other cities, and from Tampico 

 and Vera Cruz there is rail connection 

 with the interior. On the west coast 

 there are numerous ports visited by 

 coastwise steamers, some of which have 

 railroad connections. Among the prin- 

 cipal ports that may be mentioned are 

 Guaymas, La Paz, Mazatlan, San Bias, 

 Manzanillo, Acapulco, Salina Cruz, 

 and Tapachula. 



Visitors to Mexico should be provided 

 with passports. Collectors of birds or 

 mammals, especially, should inform 

 themselves concerning Federal and local 

 laws and regulations affecting shooting 

 and the taking of such material. Let- 

 ters of introduction to officials and 

 others should be secured whenever 

 possible as they are of great value in 

 preventing misunderstanding. Dis- 

 turbed political conditions may make 

 certain regions unsafe. Mexican 

 officials are usually very courteous and 

 inclined to be helpful when approached 

 by properly accredited individuals, 

 as are the people in general except the 

 Indians of some remote sections who 

 look with suspicion upon all visitors 

 whose motives they can not readily 

 understand. 



IV. Bibliography 



The following bibliography includes 

 the titles of some of the more general 

 works concerning in part the biota of 

 Mexico, together with those of a few 

 of the more important papers dealing 

 exclusively with the region. 



Baker, H. B. 



1922. The Mollusca collected by the 

 University of Michigan- 

 Walker Expedition in South- 

 ern Vera Cruz, Mexico. Oc- 

 casional Papers, Museum of 

 Zool., Univ. Mich., No. 106. 

 Hernandez, Francisco. 



1651. Rerum medicarum Novae His- 

 paniae thesaurus, seu plant- 



arum animalium, mineralium 

 mexicanorum historia ex 

 Francisco Ilerndndez, novi 

 orbis medici primarii, rela- 

 tionibus in ipsa mexicana 

 urbe conscriptis a Nardo 

 Antonio Reecho collecta ac 

 in ordinem digesta: a Joanne 

 Terrentio, Joanne Fabro et 

 Fabio Columna Lynceis notis 

 et additionibus illustrata. 

 Cui accessere aliquot ex Prin- 

 cipis Federici Caesii frontis- 

 piciis theatri naturalis phyto- 

 sophicae tabulae una cum 

 quam plurimis iconibus. Pp. 

 1-950+1-90. 111. Rome, 1651. 

 (An important early work 

 including much information 

 concerning animals and 

 plants.) 

 Biologia Centrali-Americana. 



1879-1915. An elaborate treatment in 

 52 volumes by various authors 

 of the mammals, birds, in- 

 sects, moUusks, and plants of 

 Mexico and Central America. 

 Le6n, Nicolas. 

 1895. Biblioteca Botdnico-Mexicana, 

 Catdloge bibliographico y crl- 

 tico de autores y escritos 

 referentes a vegetales de Mex- 

 ico y sus aplicaciones, desde 

 la Conquista hasta el pre- 

 sente. Mexico, 1895. (Con- 

 tains an extensive bibliog- 

 raphy of Mexican botany.) 

 Ramirez, Jose. 



1899. La Vegetacion de Mexico, pp. 

 1-271, with 2 maps. Mexico, 

 1S99. (Describes the general 

 character of the flora.) 

 Ridgway, Robert. 



1901-1919. Birds of North and Middle 

 America: A descriptive cata- 

 logue of the higher groups, 

 genera, species, and subspe- 

 cies of birds known to occur 

 in North America, from the 

 Arctic Lands to the Isthmus 

 of Panama, the West Indies, 

 and other islands of the 

 Caribbean Sea, and the Gala- 

 pagos Archipelago. Bull. 50, 

 U. S. Nat. Mus., pts. 1-8, 

 each separately paged have 

 been issued (others to follow), 

 covering families in reversed 

 order Fringillidae to Alcidae. 

 Washington: Govt. Printing 

 Office. (The current authori- 

 tative systematic account of 

 the birds of the region.) 

 Ramirez, Jose, and Gabriel V. Alcocer. 

 1902. Sinonomia Vulgar y Cientifica 

 de las Plantas Me.xicanas, 



