VIII.] LIST OF THE FAUNA. 285 



II. Insectivora. 



GALEOPITHECID&. 



Galeopithecus. Malayan. 



TUPAIIDsE. 



Tupaia. Indian and Malayan. 



Ptilocercus. Borneo and some adjacent islands. 



ERINACEID^E. 



Gymnura. Burmese and Malayan. 

 Hylomys. Burmese and Malayan. 



SORICID/E. 



Soriculus. Himalayan and Indo-Chinese. 



Anurosorex. Known by one species from Assam and 

 a second from Tibet and Pekin. 



Chimarrogale. Represented by one species from the 

 eastern Himalaya, hills north of Burma, and Mt 

 Kina Balu, Borneo, and a second from Japan. 



III. Carnivora. 



FELID^:. Very numerous in the region. 



Cynaelurus. Indian and Ethiopian ; the one species 

 being common to the two areas ; fossil in Indian 

 Pliocene. 



VlVERRID/E. 



Viverra. All the species, except a single Ethiopian 

 one, are Oriental, one of these being frequently 

 regarded as the representative of a distinct genus 

 ( Viverricula) ; fossil in European Oligocene and 

 European and Indian Pliocene. 



Hemigale. Malayan. 



Linsanga. Malayan and E. Himalayan. 



Paradoxurus. An outlying species in Celebes. 



Arctogale. Burmese and Malayan. 



Arctictis. Burmese and Malayan. 



Cynogale. Malayan. 



URSID^E. 



Melursus. India and Ceylon. 



