Mammals from Peru and Bolivia, 187 
Previously a few specimens had been obtained by Mr. J. 
Kalinowski at Marcapata, lower down the Inambari, and by 
including these, the species recorded by Dr. Allen in 
Mr. Keays’s collection (omitting the Lagidium), and those 
now received from Mr. Simons, the number of Inambart 
mammals is raised from eighteen to twenty-seven. 
Lagothria sp. (probably L. Humboldt’). 
A number of skulls. Marcapata. J. Kalinowski. 
Cebus fatuellus peruanus, Thos. 
Marcapata. Kalinowski (as above). 
Alouatta nigra, Geoff. 
Myotis sp. 
Nyctinomus sp. 
Saccopteryx sp. 
Rio Inambari. Simons. 
Nasua montana, Tschudi, 
3 ?, Limbane. Simons. 
These are the first specimens assignable to this rare species 
that the Museum has received. ‘Though from the same 
locality, they differ remarkably from each other in their 
general colour, one being comparatively rufous and the other 
more or less straw-coloured., 
The species appears to replace in the Peruvian Andes the 
peculiar small-toothed V. olivacea, Gray, of the highlands of 
Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela. It is probably Dr. Allen’s 
“ Nasua nasua, L.” 
; : Prat 
Sciurus cestuans cusctnus, Thos. 
@ ?, Rio Inambari, 16th and 19th July. 
‘These specimens quite agree with the type, except that 
their feet are rather less yellow. In a nice series sent by 
Mr. Simons from Mapiri, however, there is considerable 
variation both in the colour of the feet and of the belly, the 
latter part being almost white in some specimens. 
Rhipidomys pheotis, Thos. 
Segrario. Simons (as above). 
