FreB., 1912. MamMAts oF ILLINOIS AND WISCONSIN — Cory. 285 
ES 
KEEWATIN , fi 
oy ee i 
a Cc A A % < S bent {} ; 
quese® ( nv. ®* 17 
’ 
y ‘ iC 2 
Vt LM QNTARIO. | ay yy é N 
hi 3 > 
Se )) Y ae? Tv 
E ) 
Oe & 
eS 0) 
f. 2) é 
Z ! 
Ng 
y Ae . 
4 ads oN 
& 
= 
Nog 
NX 
Goa? Bh 
: ‘ ae YS 
St HEHE 
U, FE We 0 H HH aan: Felis couguar 
OF mMEX _ 
noe 4 be F. coryi 
Map illustrating the probable former distribution of Cougars or Panthers in eastern United States. 
At the present time F. couguar is rare, having been exterminated nearly throughout its former range. 
F, ¢, coryi is still not uncommon in the wilder portions of Florida. 
Felis couguar KERR. Type locality — Pennsylvania. Description as previously 
given. 
Felis c. coryi (BANGS). (Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, 1899, p. 15.) New name for 
Felis concolor floridana Cory (preoccupied) described in “‘ Hunting and Fishing 
in Florida,” 1896, p. 109. Type locality — Southeast of Lake Okeechobee, west 
of Hillsboro River, Dade Co., Florida. (Type No. 1155, Field Mus. Nat. Hist.) 
Color ferrugineous brown; legs long; feet small; nasals large. 
Felis c. arundivaga (HOLLISTER).* (Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XXIV., 1911, p. 176.) 
Type locality — Twelve miles southwest of Vidalia, Concordia Parish, Louisiana. 
General color of upper parts grayish fawn-color, not rusty or red brown as in 
coryt, or paler and uniformly colored as in azteca; cranial characters approaching 
coryt. 
* Described after cut of map was made. 
