INSECTIVORA: SORICIDAE 31 



Sorex palustris albibarbis (Cope)f* 



1862. Neosorex albibarbis Cope, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 14, 

 p. 188. 



1894. Sorex albibarbis Miller, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 26, p. 181, 

 Mar. 24, 1894. 



1903. Sorex palustris albibarbis Rhoads, The Mammals of Pennsylvania and 



New Jersey, . . . , p. 191. 

 1930. Sorex palustris fimbripes Green, A contribution to the mammalogy of 

 the North Mountain region of Pennsylvania, p. 11, Mar. 31, 1930. (Accord- 

 ing to Green, Sorex fimbripes Bachman, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 

 vol. 7, pt. 2, p. 391, pi. 24, fig. 8, 1837, antedates albibarbis Cope. Type 

 locality, high tableland on a branch of Drury's Run, a tributary of the west 

 branch of the Susquehanna River, Lycoming County, Pa. Regarded by 

 Jackson, North Amer. Fauna No. 51, p. 40, July 24, 1928, as a synonym of 

 Sorex cinereus cinereus Kerr.) 

 Type Locality. — Profile Lake, Franconia Mountains, Grafton County, N. H. 

 Range. — Southern Quebec, western New Brunswick, eastern and central On- 

 tario, Vermont, northeastern Connecticut (Jackson, Journ. Mamm., vol. 12, No. 

 3, p. 312, Aug. 24, 1931), eastern and western New York (Eaton, Journ. Mamm., 

 vol. 26, p. 194, July 19, 1945), south to northeastern Pennsylvania. 



Sorex palustris punctulatus Hooper* 



1942. Sorex palustris punctulatus Hooper, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michi- 

 gan No. 463, p. 1, Sept. 15, 1942. 



Type Locality. — Six miles northwest of Durbin, Shavers Fork of the Cheat 

 River, Randolph County, W. Va. Altitude, 3,600 feet. Range.— Allegheny 

 Mountains of eastern West Virginia, and probably also of southwestern Penn- 

 sylvania, western Maryland, and northwestern Virginia. Recorded also from 

 West Prong, Little Pigeon River, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Sevier 

 County, Tenn. (Conaway and Pfitzer, Journ. Mamm., vol. 33, No. 1, p. 106, 

 Feb. 18, 1952) . 



Sorex palustris navigator (Baird)f* 



1858. Neosorex navigator Baird, Mammals, in Rep. Expl. Surv. Railr. to Pa- 

 cific, vol. 8, pt. 1 (Washington, 1857) , p. 11, July 14, 1858. 

 1884. Neosorex navigator True, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 7 ( App., Circ. 29) , 

 p. 606, 29 Nov. 1884. 



1895. Sorex (Neosorex) palustris navigator Merriam, North Amer. Fauna, 

 No. 10, p. 92, Dec. 31, 1895. 



Type Locality. — Near head of Yakima River, Cascade Mountains, Kittitas 

 County, Wash. Range. — From extreme northwestern British Columbia, southern 

 Yukon (Nisutlin River), and adjacent part of Alaska (Haines), approaching 

 coast in Bella Coola region, Stillwater and Chilliwack Valley, south through 

 central and southern British Columbia; the Rocky Mountain region of south- 

 western Alberta (Anderson, Nat. Mus. Canada Bull. 102 (1946), p. 21, Jan. 24, 

 1947) ; south through mountainous areas of Washington (Dalquest, Univ. Kan- 

 sas Publ. Zool., vol. 2, p. 141, Apr. 9, 1948), Idaho, and eastern Oregon to 

 central Nevada (Hall, Mammals of Nevada, p. 123, July 1, 1946) and 



