iyo RODEXTS. 



The regions which these animals inhabit are lonely and barren, with but very 

 small amount of vegetation. In such places there are numerous perpendicular 

 faces of rock, up and down which these tiny creatures dart with such lightning- 

 like rapidity as to render it almost impossible for the eye to follow them. Although 

 by no means shy, the report of a gun is sufficient to send them at once to their 

 holes : and a spot which at one moment may be seen covered with hundreds of 

 these creatures, will be left deserted in an instant. The natives hunt them with 

 the aid of a species of weasel, which enters their burrows. From its peculiar 

 softness and delicacy, the fur has long been highly appreciated in Europe, where 

 large quantities are annually import 



THE CHINCHILLA (; nat. size). 



Short-Tailed The short-tailed chinchilla (C. brevicavdata), from Peru, is an 



Chinchilla, animal very little known to naturalists, some of whom have even 

 doubted its right to rank as a distinct species. It is, however, decidedly larger 

 than the common chinchilla, with relatively shorter ears and tail. The general 

 colour of the fur of the upper-parts is a very pale bluish grey, mottled with slaty 

 black: the under-surface of the body, as well as the feet, being white. The tail 

 gradually Incomes bushy towards the tip : its fur being a mixture of greyish white 

 and greyish black, becoming darker towards the tip on the upper-surface. 



cuvier's This (Lagidium cuvieri) is considerably larger than either of 



Chinchilla. t } le preceding, the length of the head and body varying from 



about 1G to 20 inches, and that of the tail, exclusive of the hair at the tip, 





