234 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



B.— Alces alees bedfordise. 



Alces bedfordife, Ljjdel-ker, Proc. Zoo}. Soc. 1902, vol. i, p. 109; 



Rothschild, ihicl. voL ii, p. 317 ; Lonnhcrg, ibid. p. 353 ; Elwca, 



ibid. 1903, vol. i, p. 147 ; Millais, Field, vol. cxviii, p. 113, 1911. 

 Alces macblis bedfordife, iT/fZeA-Arr, A Trip to Pilawin,\). 85, 1908; 



Ward, Records of Big Game, ed. 6, p. 100, 1910, ed. 7, p. 100, 1914 ; 



Millais, Field, vol. cx\dii, p. 113, 1911. 

 (?) Alces machlis yakutskensis, Millais, Field, vol. cxviii. p. 113, 1911. 



Typical locality Eastern (?) Siberia. 



Typified by a specimen in which the antlers are of the 

 forked, non-palmate type. In other specimens they are 

 fully palniated, but apparently differ semewliat in form from 

 those of European elk. The Yakutsk elk has the head and 

 neck rich dark brown, and, in some instances at any rate, 

 dark brown shanks. 



2.3.11.1. Frontlet and antlers. East(?) Siberia. 

 Type. Presented l»j J. Roivland Ward, Ese[., 1902. 



* * * *. Frontlet and antlers. East Siberia. No history. 



C— Alces alces americanus. 



Cervus auiericamis, Clinton, Letters on Nat. Hist. etc. p. 193, 1822; 



nee Errleben, 1777, vide supra, p. 155. 

 Alces americanus. .Tardive, Natiiralisfs Libr., Mannn. vol. iii, p. 125, 



pi. V, 1835; Merricl; Mamm. Minnesota, p. 270, 1892; Elliot, 



Sijnop. Mamm. N. Amer. (Field Mus. Zool. Pub. vol. ii) p. 38, 1901 ; 



Osgood, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. xv, p. 87, 1902; 



Grant, 7th Rep. Forest, Fish, and Game Commission, p. 226, 



1903; Stone and Cram, American Mammals, p. 43, 1903; 



Brool-s,Rep. New York Zool. Soc. vol. x, p. 201, 1906; Miller, 



List N. Amer. Mamm. p. 391, 1912. 

 Cervus lobatus, Agassiz, Proc. Boston Soc. vol. ii, p. 188, 1846. 

 Alces muswa, Richardson, Zool. Herald, Mamm. p. 66, 1852. 

 Alces lobata, Fitzinger, Sitzber. Ti. AI-. Wiss. Wien, vol. Ixviii, pt. 1, 



p. 348, 1873, vol. Ixix, pt. 1, p. 528, 1874. 

 Alee americanus, Merriam, Mammals of Adirondachs, p. 138, 1884, 



N. Amer. Fauna, no. 5, p. 79. 189i ; Miller, Proc. Boston Soc. 



vol. xxviii, p. 40, 1897. 

 Alces machlis americanus, LydeJiker, Great and Small Game of 



Europe, etc. p. 46, 1901 ; Ward, Records of Big Game, ed. 6, 



p. 97, 1910, ed. 7, p. 97, 1914. 

 Paralces americanus, Allen, Bull. Amer. Mas. Nat. Hist. vol. xvi, 



p. 160, 1902. 



Moose. 



Typical locality eastern North America. 



Stated to be larger and darker than the typical European 



