80 BULLETIN 19, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



t*Canis nebracensis texensis Bailey. 



1897. Canis frustror Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 

 11, p. 26. March 15, 1897. (Not of Woodhouse, 1851.) 



1905. Canis nebracensis texensis Bailey, North Amer. Fauna, 

 No. 25, p. 175. October 24, 1905. 



Type Locality. — Forty-five miles southwest of Corpus Christi, 

 Texas. 



Eange. — Gulf region of Texas from Nueces Bay northward; 

 probably throughout the lower Sonoran area of Texas, Okla- 

 homa, and Indian Territory. 



t*Cams lestes Merriam. 



1897. Canis lestes Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol, 

 11, p. 25. March 15, 1897. 



Type Locality. — Toyabe Mountains, near Cloverdale, Nye 

 County, Nevada. 



Range. — Transition zone from the dry interior of southern Brit- 

 ish Columbia, Washington, and Oregon southward over the 

 higher lands of the Great Basin, the Sierra Nevada, and the 

 Rocky Mountains to the plateau of northern Arizona, and 

 thence along the continental divide to the Mexican boundary.' 



*Canis cagottis (Hamilton Smith). 



1839. Lyciscus cagottis Hamilton Smith, Jardine's Naturalists 



Library, Mamm., vol. 9, p. 164. 

 1897. Canis cagottis Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 



11, p. 27. March 15, 1897. 

 Type Locality. — Rio Frio, between City of Mexico and Puebla, 



Mexico. 

 Range. — Southern part of the table-land of Mexico. 



t*Canis peninsulae Merriam. 



1897. Canis peninsulse Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 



vol. 11, p. 28. March 15, 1897. 

 Type Locality. — Santa Anita, Cape St. Lucas, Lower Califor- 

 nia, Mexico. 

 Range. — Peninsula of Lower California. 



t*Canis microdon Merriam. 



1897. Canis microdon Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 



vol. 11, p. 29. March 15, 1897. 

 Type Locality. — Mier, on the Rio Grande, State of Tamaulipas, 



Mexico. 

 Range. — Arid tropical or Tamaulipan region of northeastern 



Mexico and the lower Rio Grande region of Texas. 



