PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. 221 



1. HOMO SAPIENS, Linmeus, 1758. Man. 



BothriocepUalus cordatns. 



* Bothrloceplialus latns. 



Davainea madagascariensis 



Dipylidium caninum. 



Hymcnolepis diminuta. 



Hymenolepis murina. 



Krabbea grandis* 



*Tcenia confasa. 



*Tcenia saginata. 



*Tamia solium. 



12. INUUS CYNOMOLGUS vide MACACUS CYNOMOLGUS. 

 LEPUS AMERICANUS, Erxleben, 1777. Northern Hare. 



(Wooded districts, New England to Minnesota, and south to Virginia, along 



the Alleghanies. ) 



? " Toenia pectinata," reported by Curtice, ' 1892, p. 232. 

 LEPUS ARIZONA, Allen, 1877. Arizona Cottontail. 



(Arizona, southern Nevada, and desert region of southern California.) 



* Davainea retractilis. 



137. LEPUS CUNICULUS. Common European Wild Rabbit. 



Andrya cuniculi. See p. 155. 

 * Anoplocephala wimerosa. 

 *Cittotamia ctenoides. 

 *Cittota'nia denticulata. 



137a. LEPUS CUNICULUS DOMESTICUS. Common Domesticated Rabbit. 

 *Cittot(vnia ctenoides. 



? " Tcema pectinata," * reported by Curtice, 1892, p. 232. 

 LEPUS MELANOTIS, Mearns, 1890. Eastern Jackass Hare. 



(Plains from Texas to Nebraska, west to Rocky Mountains.) 



* Davainea salmoni. 



LEPUS PALUSTRIS, Bachrnan, 1837. Marsh Hare. 



(Marshy lowlands of South Atlantic States, from North Carolina southward.) 

 *Cittot(vnia variabilis imbricata. 



138. LEPUS SYLVATICUS, Bachman, 1837. Cottontail. 



(Eastern United States.) 

 *CUtot(Knia perplexa. 

 *CitlotcKnia variabilis. 

 *Cittotce / nia variabilis angusta. 

 ^Davainea salmoni. 

 LEPUS TEXIANUS, Waterhouse, 1848. Black-Tailed Jack-Rabbit. 



(Great Basin. ) 



"An undescribed Tamia," 2 reported by Curtice, 1892, p. 233. 

 140. LEPUS TIMIDUS, Linnajus, 1758. Common European Hare. 



(All parts of Europe except the north of Russia, the Scandinavian 



peninsula, and Ireland.) 

 ? Andrya cuniculi. See p. 155. 



* Andrya rhopalocephala. 



* Cittotamia pectinata. 



139. LEPUS VARiAiiiLis, Pallas, 1778. Mountain Hare. 



(Northern Eurasia.) 

 * AnoplocepJiala ivimerosa. 

 *Cittotcenia pectinata. 



l l am unable to trace this specimen, but most of Curtice's T. pectinata is C. variabilis. 

 -Impossible to tell definitely what species Curtice referred to, but possibly the 

 parasite is Davainea salmoni and the host L. melanotis. 



