NORTH AMERICAN RECENT MAMMALS. 175 



*Marmota monax ochracea — Continued. 



1915. Marmota monax ochracea Howell, North Amer. Fauna, 



No. 37, p. 34. April 7, 1915. 

 Type Locality. — Forty-mile Creek, Alaska. 

 Range. — Interior mountain ranges of Yukon and northern 



British Columbia, from Forty-mile Creek south to the Babine 



Mountains (and Stuart Lake ?) . 



.//arirenfm-group. 



*Marmota flaviventris flaviventris (Audubon and Bachman). 



1841. Arctomys jiaviventer Audubon and Bachman, Proc. Acad. 



Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, p. 99. 

 1885. Arctomys jiaviventer True, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 7, 



(1884), p. 593. 1885. 

 1904. [Marmota] fiaviventer Trouessart, Catal. Mamhi. viv. 



foss., suppl., p. 344. 

 Type Locality. — "Mountains between Texas and California." 



Fixed by Howell (North Amer. Fauna, No. 37, pp. 39, 40, 



April 7, 1915) as Mount Hood, Oregon. 

 Range. — The Cascade Range in Oregon and the northern 



Sierra in California, south to Lake Tahoe. 



♦Marmota flaviventris avara (Bangs). 



1899. Arctomys jiaviventer avarus Bangs, Proc. New England 



Zool. Club, vol. 1, p. 68. July 31, 1899. 

 1904. [Marmota jiaviventer] avarus Trouessart, Catal, Mamm. 



viv. foss., suppl., p. 344. 

 Type Locality. — Okanagan, British Columbia, Canada. 

 Range.— Interior valleys and foothills of southern British 



Columbia and eastern Washington and Oregon. 



t* Marmota flaviventris sierrae Howell. 



1915. Marmota jiaviventris sierrse Howell, North American 



Fauna, No. 37, p. 43. April 7, 1915. 

 Type Locality. — Head of Kern River, Mount Whitney, Tulare 



County, California. Altitude, 9,300 feet. 

 Range. — Higher parts of the southern Sierra Nevada from 



upper Kern River north to vicinity of Mono Lake. 



* Marmota flaviventris fortirostris GrinneU. 



1921. Marmota jiaviventris jortirostris Grinnell, Univ. Calif. 



Publ. Zool., vol. 21, p. 242. November 7, 1921. 

 Type Locality. — McAfee Meadow, White Mountains, Mono 



County, California. Altitude, 11,800 feet. 



