RODENTIA—SCIURINAE—SCIURUS. 245 
to be nominal ones, as is not at all unlikely, the number will be reduced to ten from the 
twenty-four given by Audubon and Bachman. 
There are two strongly marked groups of North American squirrels, each, perhaps, capable 
of subdivision ; the one, embracing species largest in size, with a long, bushy and full tail as 
long, with the hairs, at least, as the head and body. The squirrels of the other group are much 
smaller, the head broader, the muzzle shorter ; the tail, including the hairs, shorter than the 
head and body, narrow, and flattened ; these form the transition to the ground squirrels and 
spermophiles. 
The larger squirrels, again, are divisible into those with four permanent upper molars and 
those with five. As far as my observations have extended, the former embrace the fox squirrels, 
or those some varieties of which have the under parts uniform rusty red. The gray squirrels, 
with their black varieties, belong to the division with five upper molars, All the large western 
gray squirrels, with white bellies, as Sciwrus fossor, aberti, and castanonotus, have five. I am 
not prepared to say that no fox-colored squirrel has five upper molars, nor that no permanently 
gray squirrel has four only ; but such is the result of the examinations I have been able to make 
thus far. 
The following synopsis is intended to exhibit the principal characters of the different groups 
and species of squirrels: 
Group A. Squirrels of large size; tail very broad, and, with the hairs, longer than the body ; 
soles mostly naked from the heel in summer. 
Section 1. Upper molars permanently four. Running into ferruginous varieties, in which the 
bones are red. 
Species 1. Hars and nose always white..........s csescsesconssoscseseescessecscnces S. vulpinus. 
Species 2. Hars never white ; head broad; ears short, scarcely longer than 
theyadjacenty Mats as.cecwecseneneascese vo sase se entecrecateteceee toss seas- S. cinereus. 
Species 3. Ears never white; head narrower ; ears high............sssesesseeees S. ludovicianus. 
Species 4. Similar to the last, but much smaller; prevailing colors cinna- 
TOS Ge encocce aGeeBadacar Go deo Sond y Sapo Soa gives Gee soba caenuEor ane sogodsasene S. limitis. 
Section 2. Upper molars permanently five. Ferruginous varieties rare. Colors generally 
gray above and white beneath. Dusky or black varieties in one species. 
Species 5. Without a black lateral line ; tail, even with the hairs, but little 
longer than the body. Above grizzled light yellow, with oc- 
casional washes of yellowish rusty gray. (Some black varie- 
HOSS). sadmesinuvinn athens as duane a ceidhial RG tele aa siniinsin seein Caeleemart S. carolinensis. 
Species 6. Without a black line ; vertebre of tail alone, nearly, or quite as 
long as the body. Above uniform grizzled dark, plumbeous 
PAUL vaca tock cadscustus sense csasvosatendereesucettacetoncaecltds: «aimee eats S. fossor. 
Species 7. With a black Be line ; a chestnut dorsal stripe; ears tufted...8. aberti. 
Species 8. Similar to the last; ears nae dtulted  siisaslaaseuerehn soceasapeemeane dace S. castanonotus. 
Grove B. Squirrels of small size; tail narrow, even including the hairs, shorter than the 
body ; muzzle short ; hind feet, in summer, naked beneath for one-half or one-third their length 
from the heel ; anterior small upper molar either wanting or, when persistent, very small and 
thread-like ; a black stripe on the flanks ; back of the ears more or less tufted in winter. 
