176 Bulletin American Museum of Natural History. [Vol. Ill, 



1. Ateles vellerosus Gray. Female, skin and skull, and 

 male, skull, Chimalapa, Tehuantepec, March 17 and 26, 1890. 



2. Fells onca Linn. Skull of a female from the coast range, 

 below Colima, Jan. 15, 1890. 



3. Felis tlgrina Erxl. An imperfect hunter's skin, without 

 data. 



4. Fells pardalls Linn. An imperfect hunter's skin, male, 

 Colima, Jan. 15, 1890. 



5. Fells yaguarundl Desm. Two imperfect flat skins, without 

 data. 



6. Putorius bras! 1! anus frenatus (Stew.). One specimen, 

 Tepic. (See this Bulletin, II, p. 165.) 



7. Urocyon virglnianus (Schreber). One specimen (without 

 skull), male, Santo Domingo, Tehuantepec, April 25, 1890. It is 

 much smaller than United States specimens, and more strongly 

 colored throughout. It doubtless represents a form well worthy 

 of subspecific recognition. 



8. Procyon lotor hernandezl (Wagler). One specimen, a 

 female but little more than half grown, Tehuantepec City, Feb. 

 28, 1890. It agrees well with Arizona specimens in color, which 

 differ much in this respect, as well as in size, from speci- 

 mens from Eastern North America, and especially from Florida 

 specimens. 



9. YesperugO filSCUS (jBeauv.). Two specimens, males, Sierra 

 de Colima, Jalisco, Dec. 7, 1890. (See also this Bulletin, II, p. 

 165.) *f 



10. AntTOZOUS pallldus (Le Conte). Eleven specimens, one 

 male and ten females, Sta. Cruz del Valle, Guadalajara, Jalisco, 

 Sept. 7 and 8, 1889. Not appreciably different from specimens 

 from Fort Verde, Arizona, collected by Dr. Mearns. 



Not previously reported from south of the northern boundary 

 of Mexico. 



11. Plecotus (Corinorhinus) townsendi (Cooper). One 

 specimen, male, San Pedro, Guadalajara, September 27, 1889. 



Not previously recorded from Mexico. 



