678 U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM BULLETIN 205 



Can is lupus lycaon Schreber* 



1775. Canis lycaon Schreber, Die Saugthiere . . . , Theil 2, Heft 13, pi. 89. 



1843. Canis lupus canadensis Blainville, Osteographie ou description icono- 



graphique . . . , Paris, Atlas, vol. 2, fasc. 13 ( Carnassiers, Genre Canis), 



p. 45, pi. 7 (Canada) . 



1912. Canis lycaon Miller, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 25, p. 95, May 



4, 1912. 

 1937. Canis lupus canadensis G. M. Allen and Barbour, Journ. Mamm., vol. 



18, No. 2, p. 230, May 12, 1937. 

 1937. Canis lupus lycaon Goldman, Journ. Mamm., vol. 18, No. 1, p. 45, Feb. 

 11, 1937; Goldman, in Young and Goldman, The wolves of North America, 

 p. 437, May 29, 1944. 

 1940. Canis tundrarum ungavensis Comeau, Ann. l'Acfas, Montreal, vol. 6, 



p. 121 (35 miles north of village of Godbout, on north coast, Quebec). 

 Type Locality. — Vicinity of Quebec, Quebec, Canada (Goldman, Journ. 

 Mamm., vol. 18, No. 1, p. 38, Feb. 11, 1937). Range. — Eastern Quebec to 

 western and northern Ontario, eastern Minnesota, Michigan, Ohio, Northeastern 

 and Middle Atlantic States; southern limit of range indefinitely determined, but 

 believed to have extended to Florida. Still present in southern Quebec, Ontario, 

 and parts of northern Minnesota, Wisconsin, and northern Michigan. 



Canis lupus nubilus Say* 



1823. Canis nubilus Say, in Long, Account of an expedition from Pittsburgh 



to the Rocky Mountains, . . . , vol. 1, p. 169. 

 1829. Canis lupus var. nubilus Richardson, Fauna Boreali-Americana; . . . , 



p. 69. 

 1884. Canis lupus griseo-albus True, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 7 (App., Circ. 



29), p. 610, Nov. 29, 1884. (Part.) 

 1894. Canis mexicanus nubilus Rhoads, Amer. Nat., vol. 28, p. 524, June 1894. 

 1935. Canis lupus nubilus Pocock, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1935, pt. 3, p. 677, 

 Sept. 12, 1935. — Goldman, in Young and Goldman, The wolves of North 

 America, p. 441, May 29, 1944. 

 Type Locality. — Engineer Cantonment, near present town of Blair, Washing- 

 ton County, Nebr. Range. — Formerly Great Plains region from southern Al- 

 berta and Saskatchewan, and probably southwestern Manitoba, south to north- 

 eastern New Mexico and southern Oklahoma, and from near eastern base of Rocky 

 Mountains east to western Minnesota, western Iowa, and Missouri; now probably 

 extinct. 



Canis lupus irremotus Goldmanf* 



1937. Canis lupus irremotus Goldman, Journ. Mamm., vol. 18, No. 1, p. 41, 

 Feb. 11, 1937. 



Type Locality. — Red Lodge, Carbon County, Mont. Range. — Formerly 

 northern Rocky Mountain region and high adjoining plains, from southern 

 Alberta (Calgary and Lethbridge), south through Idaho and western Wyoming, 

 east to Black Hills (Belle Fourche) of South Dakota. 



Canis lupus crassodon Hall* 



1932. Canis occidentalis crassodon Hall, Univ. California Publ. Zool., vol. 38, 

 No. 12, p. 420, Nov. 8, 1932. 



