MAMMALS OF THE MEXICAN- BOXJNDABY. 



101 



Station No. 34. — San Pedro Eiver at Monument No. 98-, 395 kilo- 

 meters (245 miles) west of the Rio Grande. Altitude, 1,298 meters 

 (4,259 feet). The San Pedro River at this point is a good-sized 

 stream, containing many fish, batrachians, and turtles, and its 

 waters and banks are inhabited by numerous aquatic species of mam- 

 mals and birds. There are, however, no meadows or marshes of any 

 considerable extent along its banks in this part of its course. Trees 

 are limited to the edge of the stream, where willow, ash, boxelder, 

 Cottonwood, and mesquite are the common species. (Plate X, fig. 

 2.) The. adjacent Huachuca Mountains, of Arizona, crossed at their 

 southern extremity by the International Boundary Line some 13 

 kilometers (8 miles) to the westward, are well wooded to the base. 

 I was at this station from October 10 to November 1, 1892; July 27 

 to August 2, and October 10, 1893. Mr. Holzner, from October 10 

 to November 2, 1892. Important collections were made. 



Flora of San Pedro Valley. — The collections of plants made near 

 Monument No. 98 includes the varieties indicated in the lists below. 



The trees are : 



Juglans rupestris Bngelmann. 



Salix nigra Marshall. 



Sulix occidentalis longipes (Anders- 

 son) Bebb. 



Salix taxifoUa Humboldt, Bonpland, 

 and Kunth. 



Populus fremontii Watson. 



Geltis reticulata Torrey. 



Morus celtidifolia Humboldt, Bon- 

 pland, and Kunth. 



Platanus wrightii Watson. 



Acacia greggii Gray. 



Acacia consiricta Bentham. 



Prosopis glandulosa Torrey. 



Acer negundo Linnseus. 



Sapindus marginatus Willdenow. 



Fraxinus velutina Torrey. 



GMlopsis linearis (Cavanilles) Sweet. 



Other conspicuous vegetation includes : 



Yucca glauca Nuttall. 

 Atriplex sp. 

 Rhus glahra Linnseus. 

 Mimosa dysOcarpa Bentham. 

 Acacia filiculoides (Cavanilles) 

 lease. 



Tre- 



Covillea tridentata (de Candolle) Vail. 

 Opuntia (several species). 

 Cucuriita fcetidissima Humboldt, Bon- 

 pland, and Kunth. 

 Apodanthera undulata Gray. 

 Perezia sp. 



Station No. 35. — Huachuca Mountains, Arizona. This isolated 

 but extensive range (called Sierra Espuela by the early explorers') 

 rises from a base level of 1,275 meters (4,183 feet) to the height of 

 2,887 meters (9,472 feet). It is almost wholly within the United 

 States, extending nearly north from Monument No. 102 for a dis- 

 tance of 32 kilometers (20 miles) . It is 407 kilometers (253 miles) 

 west of the Rio Grande. The highest point, Hasslops Peak, is 14^ 

 kilometers (9 miles) north of the Mexican line. The higher timber 

 line is not reached by any of the mountains visible from the Mexican 

 Boundary Line. In the Huachuca range the lower timber line de- 



