INDEX. 



187 



Page. 



Tupaia, sirhassenensis 142 



sordida 48 



splendidula 83 



sumatrana 168 



surda 104 



tana 139 



tephrura 50 



typica 85 



wjlkinsoni 52 



Tupaiadse 25 



Tupaiidse 5, 25 



Tupaiince 3 



Tupaina 25 



Tupaioidea 5 



Tupaja 29 



Page. 



Tupaja , miilleri 83 



murina 129 



Tupajidae 25 



Tupaya 29 



press 41 



Tupayae 25 



Tupayidse 25 



typica, Tupaia 85 



Urogale 29, 154 



cylindrura 157 



everetti 157 



utara, Tana 141 



vittatus, Cludobates 177 



wiLkinsoni, Tupaia 52 



wroughtoni, Anathana 128 



ADDENDA. 



The following description appeared too late to be placed in the 

 body of this paper. It should be read after the account of Tupaia 

 javanica on page 107. (See also page 15.) 



TUPAIA JAVANICA BALINA Thomas. 



1913. Tupaia javanica balina Thomas, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., eer. 8, vol. 11, 

 p. 505, May, 1913. 



Type-locality. — Island of Bali, east of Java. 



Type-specimen. — In British Museum, skin without skull, Reg. No. 

 13.3.6.12, collected at Gunong Bratan, Bali, 4,000 feet altitude, 

 January 27, 1911, by Mr. E. Stresemann. Origmal number, 10. 



Geographic distribution. — Island of Bali. (See map on page 111.) 



Diagnostic characters. — Essentially like Tupaia javanica javanica, 

 but smaller; hind foot shorter; color, browner. 



Color. — Upper parts grizzled brown, nearest mummy brown; belly 

 clay color, the hairs slaty basally, buffy on throat and axillae; shoulder 

 streak well marked ; hands and feet bro^vn, not so gray as in javanica 

 javanica; inner side of hind limbs washed with buffy whitish ; tail like 

 body, middle of under surface suffused with cinnamon. 



Measurements. — Type. Head and body, 117 mm.; tail, 153; hind 

 foot (without claws), 34. Skull lost. 



Specimens examined. — None. The above account is based on the 

 original description. The type-specimen is unique. 



The United States National Museum has received from the Kutei 

 or Mahakkam River, eastern Borneo (see map on page 75), 30 speci- 

 mens of treeshrews, too late to be mcorporated with the preceding 

 account. They are identified as follows: 



TUPAIA MitLLERI KoWbrugge. (See page 83.) 



1896. Tupaja miilleri Kohlbrugge, Natuur. Tijdschr. Nederl. Indie, vol. 55 

 (ser. 9, vol. 4), 1896, p. 196. 



Type-locality. — Environs of Banjarmassin, southeastern Borneo. 

 Type-specimen. — I have not seen the type-specunen and do not 

 know where it is. It may be in the Leyden Museum. 

 Geographic distribution. — Southeastern Borneo. 



