NORTH AMERICAN RECENT MAMMALS. 453 



*Lepus americanus virginianus — Continued. 



Type Locality. — Blue Mountains, northeast of Harrisburg, 



Pennsylvania. 

 Range. — Mountains of West Virginia and Virginia north through 

 Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, Delaware, 

 Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, New 

 Hampshire, most of Maine east to Penobscot River and Mount 

 Katahdin, and extreme southern Ontario. Vertical range, 

 from near sea level in Rhode Island up to over 4,000 feet in 

 the Adirondacks of New York; zonal range, Canadian. 



*Lepus americanus phaeonotus Allen. 



1899. Lepus americanus phxonotus Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. 

 Nat. Hist., vol. 12, p. 11. March 4, 1899. 



Type Locality. — Hallock, Kittson County, Minnesota. 



Range. — Western half of northern peninsula of Michigan, 

 northern Wisconsin, northern Minnesota, and north into 

 extreme western Ontario, and southern Manitoba. Vertical 

 range, from about 900 to 2,000 feet in northern peninsula of 

 Michigan; zonal range, Canadian. 



*Lepus americanus bishopi (Allen). 



1899. Lepus hishopi .Illen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 12, 

 p. 11. March 4, 1899. 



1909. Lepus americanus hishopi Nelson, North Amer. Fauna, 



No. 29, p. 97. August 31, 1909. 

 Type Locality. — Mill Lake, Turtle Mountains, near northern 



border of North Dakota. 

 Range. — Known only from type locality. Turtle Mountains, 



North Dakota. 



t*Lepus americanus macfarlani Meiriam. 



1900. Lepus americanus macfarlani Merriam, Proc. Washington 

 Acad. Sci., vol. 2, p. 30. March 14, 1900. 



tl900. Lepus saliens Osgood, North Amer. Fauna, No. 19, p. 39. 

 October 6, 1900. (Caribou Crossing, between Lake Bennett 

 and Lake Tagish, Yukon, Canada.) 



1907. ? Lepus niediecTci ^L\tschie, Niedieck's Kj-euzfahrten im 

 Beringmeer, p. 240. Kasilof Lake, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. 

 (Not mentioned by Nelson.) 



Type Locality. — Fort Anderson, near mouth of ,\nderson 

 River, Mackenzie, Canada. 



Range. — Wooded parts of Alaska, in upper Yukon region, and 

 southwest to Cook Inlet; base of Alaska Peninsula and all of 

 Yukon Territory, western Mackenzie, northern British Colum- 

 bia, and northwestern Alberta, Canada. Its northern limit 

 coincides with that of the trees. Vertical range, in the 

 Mackenzie River region, from near sea level up to over 2,000 

 feet altitude; zonal range, mainly Hudsonian. 



