RODENTIA—GEOMYINAE—GEOMYS BURSARIUS. 375 
Dr. Leconte has recently described some specimens of Geomys in the collection of the 
Academy of Natural Sciences, and labelled as coming from the Columbia river, under the name 
of G. oregonensis, separating them from his . canadensis, the typical species, on account of 
the hairiness of the tail. I have carefully examined these specimens, and can find no char- 
acters to distinguish them from the species found in Missouri. The characters given of hairy 
tails and white chin, dark red color, and darker back, are all found equally in both ; indeed, I 
have yet to see a reddish brown adult Geomys, having bisulcate incisors, with an entirely naked 
tail, as an original character. I have satisfied myself that the hairs on the tail are liable to 
fall out in patches, and especially is this the case when the vertebrz are removed. 
Nor am I satisfied that these specimens were collected in or west of the Rocky Mountains at 
all. Mr. Townsend made numerous collections from St. Louis west, and among these must 
have been the pouched rats of Missouri, so striking to an eastern naturalist who had never before 
seen them. Yet nomention is madeof any specimens in his collections, except those of Oregon. 
Furthermore, in the list of mammals published in his Narrative, as having been seen in 
Oregon, this ‘‘ Geomys bursarius,’’ (as his specimens are labelled,) does not appear at all. 
Richardson never heard of it in Oregon ; nor have either Dr. Cooper or Dr. Suckley, who have 
already spent more than two years in Oregon and Washington Territories, ever collected or 
mentioned it. These gentlemen express great surprise at failing to find so many species of 
birds and mammals mentioned by Townsend as occurring in Oregon, although their time has 
so long been devoted almost exclusively to the natural history of that region. I fear, there- 
fore, that, in the long interval which elapsed between the collecting of his specimens and 
their determination, owing to the loss or misplacing of labels, some at least have been referred 
to incorrect localities. 
The accumulation of a much greater amount of material than that at my command when 
the preceding article was written, enables me to speak more fully in regard to several matters 
formerly in uncertainty. There appears to be little doubt that the plumbeous varieties and the 
chestnut brown ones are the same species, as they are associated in so many localities. 
Specimens vary in the amount of hair on the tail as well in the size of the claws. Asa 
general rule, the tail is pretty closely but thinly covered with short lustrous hairs that lie flat 
to the skin. In some specimens the extreme tip of the tail is naked, in others it is bare for the 
terminal third. In none before me is it entirely naked. 
The size of the incisor teeth appears to vary somewhat, independently of the size of the skin, 
and the same may be said of the claws. These become not only longer but higher and stronger 
every way with age. The colors of the chestnut-colored specimens are generally of pretty 
much the same tint; the plumbago-colored ones are sometimes uniform both on back and belly ; 
sometimes with a wash of chestnut on the belly. In all I have seen, the whole fore legs were 
white. 
The first description of this animal was by Shaw, and was based on a drawing communicated 
to him by General Davies of an animal said to have been brought from some portion of interior 
Canada. It is characterized simply as ‘‘ ash-colored, with short, round, nearly naked tail, 
pouched cheeks, and the claws of the fore feet very large, formed for burrowing in the 
ground.’’ The figure represents a species with stuffed sacks on each side of the head, (the 
