THE AMERICAN TAPIR. GOT 
black mane. The Tapir can easily be brought under the subjection of man, and is readily 
tamed, becoming unpleasantly familiar with those persons whom it knows, and taking all 
kinds of liberties with them, which would be well enough in a little dog or a kitten, but are 
quite out of place with an animal as large as a donkey. 
The Tapir family, Zapirid@, has two groups or genera, and six species are enumerated. 
For a long time only two were known, the East Indian and the American. Lately, several 
species have been discovered in South America; these were all found in the Andes of New 
Grenada, and Ecuador. A species has also been found in Central America. 
AMERICAN TAPIR.—Tapirus terrestris. 
The common American Tapir (7apirus terrestris) is found in all parts of South America. 
It is regarded as the largest of South American mammals, measuring sometimes six feet from 
the snout to the end of the tail. It is nocturnal in habit. Selecting a mate, it lives in pairs 
during most of the time. 
Baird’s Tapir (Zlasmognathus bairdi) is a late discovery in Central America. The specific 
characters are, a very short fur, close, and dark-brown in color, or nearly black. The lower 
parts of the cheeks and sides of the neck are a bay-brown; the chin, throat, chest, and front 
edge of shoulders, a grayish-white. 
Like the young of other species of Tapir, the young of this are striped curiously with 
white, giving an aspect not unlike that of the zebra. This is the only species of the 
genus known. It is native of the Isthmus of Panama, and extends northward to Mexico. 
It is regarded as larger than other American species. A variety has been described 
as a species, and called Z. dow, in honor of Captain Dow, a clever collector of Cali- 
fornia. 
Tapirs were common in this country in Eocene time, as well as in other countries. The 
extinct forms of family Lophiodontide are allied to them. 
