CATOPUMA——CAYLUXOTHERIUM. 165 
Catopuma (subgenus of Felis) SEvERTZOw, 1858. Fere, Felide. 
Revue et Mag. de Zool., Paris, 2° sér., X, 387, 390, Sept., 1858; TrovEssart, 
Cat. Mamm., new ed., fasc. 11, 364-366, 1897 
Type: [lis (Canieana moormensis Hodgson, from the Himalayas of India. 
Catopuma: Catus 4- Puma. 
Catta Linx, 1806. UD Lemuridze. 
Beschreib. Naturalien-Sammlung Universitüt Rostock, I, 7-8, Dec. 25, 1806. 
Type: Cattu mococo Link (= Lemur catta Linnzeus), from Madagascar. 
Name antedated by Lemur Linn:us, 1758. 
Catta: From the original name of the type species, the ‘cat-like lemur.’ 
Cattus ScHMERLING, 1834. Fere, Felidee. 
* Recherches Ossém. Foss. Liége, 1834, pp. 92, 94, Atlas pl. xvirr, figs. 25-24" 
(fide WorpRrcH, Sitzungsber. Math.-Naturw. Cl. K. Akad. Wiss., Wien, 
LXXXIV, 1 Abth., 240, 244, 1881). 
Species: Cattus minuta Schmerling, and C. magna Schmerling, from the deposits 
near Liége, Belgium. 
Cattus: Lat., cat. 
Catus Friscn, 1775. Fersz, Felidz. 
Das Natur-System vierfüss. Thiere, in enr 12, Tab. Gen., 1775; FrTZINGER, 
Wiss.-populüre Naturgesch. Siiugeth., I, 265-279, 1855; Bilder-Atlas zur Wiss.- 
populüre Naturgesch. Sáugeth., figs. 52-53, 1860. 
New name for '* Felis, der Kater, die Katze." Fitzinger’s genus includes 3 species 
and 4 subspecies: Catus ferus, C. maniculatus, C. domesticus, C. d. hispanicus, C. d. 
striatus, C. d. coeruleus, and C. d. angorensis. 
Caudivolvulus DuwÉnir, 1806. Feree, Procyonide. 
Zool. Analytique, 14, 15, 1806. 
Type: ‘Le Kinkajou,’ from tropical America. 
Caudivolvulus: Lat., cauda, tail; volvo, to roll; + dim. suffix—in allusion to the 
somewhat prehensile tail. 
Cavia Parras, 1766. Glires, Caviidze. 
Miscellanea Zoologica, 30-33, 1766; Spicilegia Zoologica, fasc. 1, 16, 1767;* 
ScHREBER, Saugthiere, pl. cLxx1u, 1777; pl. cLxxiv, 1778; vol. IV, 608-621, 177 
Scavia BLUMENBACH, ‘‘Voigt’s Mag. neuesten Zustand Naturkunde, III, 683, 1802.”’ 
Scavia BuumMENBACH, Handb. Naturgesch., 7te Auflage, 83, 1803. 
Savia (‘ERXLEBEN’) TREVIRANUS, Biologie oder Philos. lebend. Natur., Naturf. u. 
Aerzte, I, 211, 1802; II, 176, 1803; Linx, Beschreib. Nat. Samml. Univ. Rostock, 
I, 11-12, Dec. 25, 1806. 
Type: Cavia cobaya Pallas (— C. cobaya  Marcgrave, 1648 — C. cobaya Schreber, 
1777), from Brazil. 
Cavia: Indian name. 
Caviodon Awranuiwo, 1885. Glires, Caviidze. 
Bol. Acad. Nac. Cien. Córdoba, VIII, entr. 1, pp. 65-66, 1885; Cont. Conocimiento 
Mamíft. Fósil. Repüb. Argentina, in Act. Acad. Nac. Cien. Córdoba, VI, 256- 
258, pl. xir figs. 27-20, xxii figs. 24-26, 1889. 
Type: Caviodon multiplicatus Ameghino, from the barrancas of Paraná, Argentina. 
Extinct. Based on an incomplete molar. 
Caviodon: Cavia; 0d@v = 080vc, tooth—from the resemblance of the molar to 
that of Cavia. 
Cayluxotherium Firuor, 1880. Insectivora, Erinaceide. 
Comptes Rendus, Paris XC, No. 26, p. 1579, Jan.-June, 1880; Bull. Soc. Philoma- 
tique, Paris, sér. 7, IV, 120, 1880. 
Caluxotherium C. O. uU Index Zool., 58, 1902 (misprint). 


*The references to Pallas consist c chie fly ofa dese ae of eau ia capensis (= Procavia 
capensis), with an incidental mention of €. cobaya. 
