302 INDEX GENERUM MAMMALIUM. 
Guepardus— Continued. 
Guepar Borrarp, Le Jardin des Plantes, Mamm., 174, 1842 (raised to generic 
rank). 
Gueparda Gray, List Spec. Mamm. Brit. Mus., pp. xx, 46, 1843; Proc. Zool. 
Soc. London, 1867, 277. 
Species: Guepardus flavus Duvernoy (?), and Felis guttata Hermann, from Asia 
and Africa. 
Name antedated by Cynailurus Wagler, 1830. 
Guepardus: French, guepard, hunting leopard (possibly a compound of French, 
guet, a watcher, and Latin pardus, panther, leopard). ‘‘According to Hatzfeld 
& Darmstetter, a corruption of the English leopard." (Murray’s New English 
Dict., 1901.) 
Guereza Gray, 1870. Primates, Cercopithecidz. 
Cat. Monkeys, Lemurs & Fruit-eating Bats Brit. Mus., 5, 19, 1870. 
Type: Guereza rüppellii Gray ( — Colobus guereza Rüppell), from Abyssinia. 
Guereza: Native Abyssinian name of this monkey. 
Guerlinguetus Gray, 1821. Glires, Sciuridee. 
London Med. Repos., XV, No. 88, p. 304, Apr. 1, 1821; NELsoN, Proc. Wash. 
Acad. Sci., I, 30-31, 98-101, pl. 1 fig. 7, May 9, 1899. 
Type: 'Le guerlinguet, ! Seiurus guerlinguetus Gray ( — S. estuans Linnzeus), from 
Surinam. 
Guerlinguetus: Guerlinguet, a name used by the French settlers in Guiana and 
adopted by Buffon in 1789 (Hist. Nat., Suppl., VII, 261). 
Guevei (subgenus of Cephalophus) Gray, 1852. Ungulata, Artiodactyla, Bovidee. 
Cat. Mamm. Brit. Mus., pt. rrr, Ungulata, 86-89, 1852; Sctarer & THomas, Book 
of Antelopes, I, pt. 11, 121, May, 1895 (in synonymy, type fixed). 
Species, 5: Cephalophus maxwellii (H. Smith, type), from Gambia; C. pygm:a 
( Linnzeus), from South Africa; C. melanorheus Gray, from Fernando Po; C. 
punctulatus Gray, from Sierra Leone; and C. whitfieldii Gray, from Gambia. 
Possibly only a common name. 
Guevei: Native name in Senegal. (Burrow, Hist. Nat., XII, 310, 1764). 
Guilielmofloweria AwEGniNo, 1901. Ungulata, Amblypoda, Pantolambdide. 
Bol. Acad. Nac. Cien. Cordoba, X VI, 397-398, July, 1901 (sep. pp. 51-52). 
Type: Guilielmofloweria plicata Ameghino, from the ‘Cretaceous’ of Patagonia. 
Extinct. 
Guilielmofloweria: In honor of Sir William Henry Flower, 1831-99, pie direc- 
tor of the Natural History Museum, London. 
Guilielmoscottia AmEGHINo, 1901. Primates, nodus 
3ol. Acad. Nac. Cien. Córdoba, X VI, 360, July, 1901 (sep. p. 14). 
Type: Guilielmoscottia plicifera Ameghino, from the ‘Cretaceous’ of Patagonia. 
Extinct. 
Guilielmoscottia: In honor of Wiliam Berryman Scott, 1858- , professor of 
geology and paleontology, Princeton University; author of ‘An Introduction 
to Geology,’ 1897, and numerous papers on paleontology. 
Guillinomys Lesson, 1842. Glires, Octodontid:e. 
Nouv. Tableau Régne Animal, Mamm., 126, 1842. 
Type: Guillinomys chilensis Lesson, from ‘the fresh waters of Chile.’ 
Guillinomys:* guillino, native name in Chile; “0s, mouse. 
Gulo Friscu, 1775. Ferz, Mustelid:e. 
Das Natur-System vierfüss. Thiere in Tabellen, 17, Tab. Gen., 1775; Parras, 
Spicilegia Zoologica, II, fase. xiv, 25-41, tab. 1r, 1780; ‘Stone, Prodromus 

* AGASSIZ gives the derivation as ‘‘ Guillino, nom, SES yds, mus" (Nomen- 
clator Zool., Mamm., Addenda, 5, 1846). 
