Schwanda at Miritiba, State of Maranhão, Brazil, 18-11-1908. 
This seems to be quite a new locality fcr this species, though 
Dr. Snethlage records it from Pará, Ilha das Ongas, St. An- 
tonio do Prata, and Rio Acará». (p. 500 — see also 1. e. 
pp. 410-419 ). 
MAMMIFEROS 
Proceed. of the U. St. Nat. Mus., vol. 48.1915: Hol- 
lister, N: Two new south American Jaguars. ( pp. 169-170 
Plate 5). 
Fig 1. Felis onça, Cat. . . Amazon River, near San- 
tarem, Brazil. ..>». 
Bull. of the Am. Mus. of Nat. Hist. N. York. volume 
XXXII. 1914: 
Allen, J. A: New South American Sciuride (pp. 
5585-598 ). 
«.. . Seiurus langsdorffii urucumus subsp. nov. Type, 
n. 37068. 4 ad., Urucum (altitude 400 feet) Rio Paraguay 
(at mouth of Rio Tacuari), Brazil, Dec. 1-1913: Leo F. 
Miller ( Roosevelt Expedition ) etc.. ». 
l. s. c. pp. 647-655. Allen, J. A.: New South Ame- 
rican Monkeys. 
«... Cacajão roosevelti sp. nov. Type n. 36906, & 
Baron Megaço, Matto Grosso, head of the Rio Gy-Paraná, 
March, 4-1914. . . Ateles longimembris sp. nov. Typ, N. 
36.909 q ad., (as before). . .» 
1.s. c. Allen, J. A.: Review of the South American 
Sciuridæ. ‘Vol. XXXIV pp. 147-309. Plates I-XIV and 
25 Tex-figures ). 
« The present « Review » is an attempt to summarize 
and correlate our present knowledge of the Tree Squirrels 
of South America. The material on which it is based, while 
far exceeding in amount that available to any previous in- 
vestigator of the subject, is painfully insufficient for a sa- 
tisfactory revision of the group, but the author hopes that 
the results here brought together will be aid to future work- 
ers in this field ». (p. 148). 
Elliot, Daniel Girand: A « Review of the Primates », 
vols. I- III, New York; 1913: «Brasil with its immense 
extent of territory and vast forests contains the greatest 
proportion of the American Primates. It has two Senioce- 
bus, S. bicolor and S. Martinsi; one Cercopithecus ursulus 
etc., etc... Cacajão is entirely Brazilian and all its three 
species are found within that territory,etc., ( vol. I,p . 1-X XIV 
«... From the above recapitulation it will be seen that 
the Brasilian Subregion is the home of the Primates in the 
New World. Every genus save one, Oedipomidas, is repre- 
ented within its boundaries, and two, Cacajäo and Brachy- 
teleus are not found elsewhere » (pp. IXXV ). 

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