FAMILY URSIDA. 27 
in commerce, being used principally in the fabrication of hats. Its flesh, when young and 
tender, is savory, tasting not unlike pig; but in adults, is rank and disagreeable. Occa- 
sionally the raccoon commits great ravages among indian corn, while it is in a milky state ; 
and this, together with his occasional descents upon the barn-yard, scarcely compensates the 
farmer for his zeal in digging up and devouring grubs or larve of injurious insects. 
The Raccoon is found all over North America. It has been seen as high as 60° north on 
the Pacific Ocean. Its southern limits are not so well defined, although it is said to exist as 
far as Paraguay; it may possibly be confounded with another species, which, however, has 
not yet been clearly identified. 
(EXTRA-LIMITAL.) 
Genus Me Es, Brisson. Body robust, low on the legs; ears short and wide; anterior nails very large. 
Tail short, with a glandular pouch beneath. Incisors, #; canines, 2; molars, 12 = 38. Bur- 
rowing ; nocturnal. 
M. labradoria. American badger. (Gopman, 1, 176, fig. Ruicu. pl. 2.) Hoary; a white stripe 
down the forehead; a greyish brown or blackish patch includes the eye, and extends to the tip of 
the nose. Tail 3. Northern regions. Plains of Missouri. 
Obs. In some parts of this State, the woodchuck (Arctomys monaz) is called Badger ; but I am not 
aware that the true Badger exists here. 
GENUS GULO. Storr, Cuvier. 
Body long, and low on the legs. Soles of the hind feet capable of being applied wholly or in 
part upon the ground. Tail bushy. A simple fold beneath the tail, instead of a glandular 
pouch. Feet five-toed, with strong hooked claws. 36 — 38 teeth. Carniverous. Noc- 
turnal. 
Oss. This genus is arranged by some naturalists among the Mustelide, to which indeed it 
bears by its dental system a close relation. The ensemble of its characters would seem, 
however, to place it in its present family, making an easy transition to the next. In the 
latest systematic writers, four species are noted, most of them peculiar to America. The two 
from North America appear to differ only in color, and are considered by many as mere 
varieties, 
THE WOLVERENE. 
GULO LUscUs, 
PLATE XII. FIG. 2.—(CABINET OF THE LYCEUM.) 
Carcajou. La Hontan, Voyage, Vol. 1, p. 81. 
Ursus luscus. Lin, 12 ed. p. 71. 
Wolverene. PrNN. Arct. Zool. Vol. 1, p. 66. Lawson, Carolina, figure. 
Gulo arcticus. HARLAN, Fauna, p. 60. 
G. luscus. Gopman, Am. Nat. Hist. Vol. 1, p. 185, plate. 
Wolverene. Ricuarpson, F, B, A. Vol. 1, p. 41. 
