LAGOMORPHA: LEPORIDAE 151 



Lepus americanus pineus Dalquest* 



1942. Lepus americanus pineus Dalquest, Journ. Maram., vol. 23, No. 2, p. 

 178, May 14, 1942. 



Type Locality.— Cedar Mountain (Moscow Mountain), Latah County, Idaho. 

 Range. — Panhandle of northern Idaho, and through extreme Washington from 

 Blue Mountains in southeastern Washington north to near Washington-British 

 Columbia international boundary in Pend-d'Oreille, Stevens, and Ferry Coun- 

 ties and west to Kettle River Mountains; intergradation between pineus and 

 columbiensis in Kettle River Mountains of Washington and Kootenay Valley 

 of British Columbia; intergradation between pineus and bairdii to the east of 

 Panhandle of Idaho (Dalquest, loc. cit.) . 



Lepus americanus bairdii Haydenf* 



1869. Lepus bairdii Hayden, Amer. Nat., vol. 3, p. 115, May 1869. 



1875. [Lepus americanus] var. bairdii J. A. Allen, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. 

 Hist., vol. 18, p. 434. 



1884. Lepus americanus bairdii True, Proc. V. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 7 (App., 

 Circ. 29) , p. 601, Nov. 29, 1884. 



Type Locality. — Near Fremont Peak, Wind River Mountains, Fremont County, 

 Wyo. Range. — Higher parts of Rocky Mountains from San Juan and Jemez 

 Ranges of New Mexico (V. Bailey, North Amer. Fauna No. 53 (December 1931), 

 p. 45, Mar. 1, 1932) northward through Colorado, western Wyoming, central 

 Utah, mountainous portions of Idaho north and east of Snake River plains (Davis, 

 The Recent mammals of Idaho, p. 355, Apr. 5, 1939) and western Montana to 

 extreme southwestern Alberta (Waterton Lakes National Park) and to Elko 

 and Newgate near international boundary east of Kootenay River in extreme 

 southeastern British Columbia (Anderson, Nat. Mus. Canada Bull. 102 (1946), 

 p. 100, Jan. 24, 1947) ; vertical range, from about 8,000 to 11,000 feet (timber 

 line) in northern New Mexico and Colorado; zonal range, Canadian and 

 Hudsonian. 



Lepus americanus seclusus Baker and Hankins* 



1950. Lepus americanus seclusus Baker and Hankins, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- 

 ington, vol. 63, p. 63, May 25, 1950. 



Type Locality. — Twelve miles east and two miles north of Shell, Bighorn 

 Mountains, Bighorn County, Wyo. Altitude, 7,900 feet. Range. — Bighorn 

 Mountains of north-central Wyoming. 



Lepus europaeus europaeus Pallas* (European hare) 



1778. Lepus europaeus Pallas, Novae species quadrupedum e glirum ordine, 

 . . . , p. 30. 



Type Locality. — -Burgundy, France. Range. — Introduced in Ontario, Can- 

 ada (Anderson, Canadian Field-Nat., vol. 37, No. 4, pp. 75-76, Apr. 21, 1923) ; 

 well established and slowly spreading in southern Ontario north of Lake Erie 

 (St. Thomas and Woodstock), west and north of Lake Ontario (Toronto) to 

 Goderich on east side of Lake Huron (Anderson, Nat. Mus. Canada Bull. 102 

 (1946), p. 100, Jan. 24, 1947) ; and Upper and Lower Peninsulas of Michigan 

 (Burt, Mammals of Michigan, p. 247, 1946). 



