MAMMALS—LUTRINAE—LUTRA CANADENSIS. 185 
muzzle is gently semi-circular, and x teriorly sends down a narrow point, dividing the hair 
of the lip over about one-sixth of its length. The nostrils are large and open, their posterior 
line extending not beyond the centre of the naked mufile. 
The whiskers are arranged in numerous rows, the precise number not being determinable in 
the dry skins examined by me. There is a clump of three or four stiff bristles over the eye, a 
rather larger number behind the eye, several behind the angle of the mouth, and some scattered 
under the chin. The eyes are very small, the orbits not exceeding half an inch in length. 
The ear is small, tapering, but rounded at the tip, rather higher than wide, (a little more than 
half an inch.) The eye is considerably in advance of the median point between the ear and tip 
of muzzle. 
The feet are broad and webbed to a point opposite the root of the claws, the greater portion of 
the terminal naked pads being free. In the fore feet the palms or under surfaces are entirely 
hairy, excepting the central basal portion, which is naked and papillose; there is, however, a 
small peninsula of hair extending forward in this naked space from below the carpal joint. 
The pads at the ends of the toes are naked, but they are entirely cut off from the naked central 
portion by the hairy area. The fingers, when spread out, have their tips nearly in the circum- 
ference of a semi-circle described from the centre of the palm as a centre, the central one rather 
longer. When laid side by side, the third finger is longest, the fourth and second successively 
a little shorter ; the first shorter than the fifth. 
The characteristics of the hind feet are much like those of the fore feet, the inside surfaces or 
soles are hairy over the membranes, the central basal portion being naked. The naked pads 
are entirely isolated from the central bare spots by the hair on the membrane. The extreme 
posterior portion of the heel is hairy. In the naked surface posteriorly are three small tuber- 
cles. The tips of the claws, when the foot is outspread, are nearly in the circumference of a 
circle. When the toes are close together the fourth claw projects furthest, the third is but little 
shorter; the second reaches to the base of the third; that of the fifth falls short of the base of the 
fourth ; that of the first reaches the penultimate articulation of the second toe. 
The general color of the outer fur in a Washington specimen examined is a highly lustrous 
dark liver brown, but little lighter on the belly. The under fur here is, however, decidedly 
lighter, which imparts this general character to the pelage. On the sides of the head below 
the eyes, (including the lips,) and on the chin, extending along the throat to between the legs, 
the color is a dirty whitish, tinged with brown. The under fur generally is of a yellowish 
white, like raw silk, at the base, and light liver brown at the tip, the latter color predominating 
on the back, the former on the belly and sides. The legs and upper surfaces of the tail are 
rather darker than elsewhere. 
A skin of an otter from Fort Wayne agrees essentially with that described above, except in 
having rather less hair on the under surfaces of the membrane of the fore feet. 
A small otter (1877) from Fort Kearney is quite similar in the character of the feet. There 
appears, however, to be a greater space between the naked mufile and the edge of the lip ; the 
width being rather greater than the length. The lower outline of the mufile is straight; the 
upper quite acute, as described. 
There has been considerable uncertainty in reference to the number of species of otters in the 
interior of the United States, and some naturalists have even insisted that there was but one, 
and that identical with the European Lutra vulgaris. Of the incorrectness of this latter view, 
a comparison of specimens will at once convince the observer. Whether we have two species 
24 L 
