THAYER AND BANGS: PEARL ISLANDS MAMxMALS. 139 



II. Literature. By Outram Bangs, 



As the papers on Mr. Brown's first trip to the Pearl Islands were 

 scattered, it is well to give a list of them here. They are as follows : 



Bangs, Outram. Birds of San Miguel Island, Panama. Auk, vol. 18, pp. 

 24-32, January, 1901. 



Bangs, Outram. A New Honey Creeper from San Miguel Island, Panama. 

 Proc. New Eng. Zi>'6\. Club, vol. 2, pp. 51-52, Feb. 8, 1901. 



Bangs, Outram. A New Ortalis from the Archipelago de las Perlas, Bay of 

 Panama. Proc. New Eng. Zool. Club, vol. 2, pp. 61-62, July 31, 1901. 



Bangs, Outram. The Mammals Collected in San Miguel Island, Panama, by 

 W. W. Brown, Jr. Amer. Nat., vol. 35, pp. 631-644, August, 1901. (Actual 

 date of distribution, Aug. 22, 1901.) 



Bangs, Outram. Two New Birds from San Miguel Island, Bay of Panama. 

 Proc. New Eng. Zool. Club, vol. 3, pp. 71-73, March 31, 1902. 



Bangs, Outram. A New Wren from San Miguel Island, Bay of Panama. 

 Proc. New Eng. Zool. Club, vol. 4, pp. 3-4, March 16, 1903. 



Besides these papers very little has been published, except a descrip- 

 tion of a supposed new dove, Zenaida hypoleuca G, R. Gray MS. Mus. 

 Brit. 1854 ; Bp. Consp. Av. II. p. 83, 1854. The specimen was collected 

 by Captain Kellett and Lieutenant Wood, and was said to have come 

 from the Pearl Islands (see under Aves of the present paper, species No, 

 31). One or two other birds are listed in the Catalogues of Birds in 

 the British Museum from the same source. 



Mention of birds and mammals described from the islands is of course 

 made in lists and reviews since published, such a-s, — 



Systematic Results of the Study of North American Land Mammals during 

 the years 1901 and 1902, Miller and Rehn ; Land and Sea Mammals of Middle 

 America, Elliot ; Hand-List of Birds, Sharpe ; Birds of North and Middle 

 America, Ridgway. 



III. List of the Mammalia. By Outram Bangs. 



The present trip added but little to our knowledge of the mammalian 

 life of the Pearl Islands. No species was taken that Mr. Brown had 

 not collected on his first visit to the islands in 1900. Mr. Brown, how- 

 ever, secured an additional example of the rabbit of the islands — Lejms 

 incitatus — which was previously known by the type alone. This speci- 

 men, an adult female, taken in San Miguel Island, Feb. 29, 1904, is in 



