198 BULLETIN 19, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



t*Neotoma ferruginea ochracea Goldman. 



1905. Neotoma ferruginea ochracea Goldman, Proc. Biol. Soc. 



Washington, vol. 18, p. 30. February 2, 1905. 

 Type Locality. — Atemajac, near Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico. 



Altitude, 4,000 feet. 

 Range. — ^Vicinity of the type locality. Lower Sonoran zone. 



Neotoma chrysomelas Allen. 



1908. Neotoma cTirysomelas Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 



vol. 24, p. 653. October 13, 1908. 

 Type Locality. — Matagalpa, Nicaragua. 

 Range. — Known only from the type locality, at about 3,000 feet 



altitude, in central Nicaragua. 



t*Neotoma desertorum Merriam. 



1894. Neotoma desertorum Merriam, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washing- 

 ton, vol. 9, p. 125. July 2, 1894. 



1899. Neotoma hella Bangs, Proc. New Eng. Zool. Club, vol. 1, 

 p. 66. July 31, 1899. (Palm Springs, Riverside County, 

 California.) 



1910. Neotoma nevadensis Taylor, Univ. Calif. Publ. Zool., 

 vol. 5, p. 289, pis. 27. February 12, 1910. (Virgin Valley, 

 Humboldt County, Nevada.) 



Type Locality. — Furnace Creek, Death Valley, Inyo County, 

 California. 



Range. — Desert regions in southeastern and northeastern Cali- 

 fornia, Nevada, eastern Oregon, northern and western Utah, 

 east to northwestern Colorado, and south along the west side 

 of the Colorado River to northeastern Lower California. 

 Upper and lower Sonoran zones. 



*Neotoma lepida lepida Thomas. 



1893. Neotoma lepida Thomas, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 6, 

 vol. 12, p. 235. September, 1893. 



Type Locality. — Unloiown. (See Goldman, North Amer. 

 Fauna, No. 31, pp. 79-80, October 19, 1910.) 



Range. — ^Upper Sonoran zone in the plateau region of north- 

 eastern Arizona, north of the Little Colorado River, and 

 northwestern New Mexico south to Gallup, grading to the 

 southward into stephensi. 



