360 



NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



or in part to our lack of skill in former days in trapping it successfully" 

 ('96, p. 194). Mearns: " Two specimens were trapped, the first ... in 

 a balsam swamp at 3700 feet altitude and the second ... on the actual 

 summit of Hunter mountain " ('98b, p. 355). 



I have found the masked shrew common at Peterboro, Madison co. 

 and Elizabethtown, Essex co. In both localities it is generally dis- 

 tributed. 



Mr Savage writes: " Sorex personalis is abundant in the low flat land 

 known as the 'Tifft farm' near Buffalo. Here I have frequently heard 

 them squeaking all around me." 



Of the masked shrew Mr Helme writes: "This diminutive mammal 

 is not rare in most parts of Long Island. It builds a small spherical 

 nest of dry leaves in some cavity under a log or old stump. I once 

 found six specimens under an old log in a nest of leaves and bits of dry 

 seaweed." 



Sorex hoyi Baird Hoys shrew 

 1858 Sorex hoyi Baird, Mamm. X. Am. p. 32. 



1895 Sorex hoyi Merriam, North American fauna, no. 10. 31 Dec. 

 1895. p. 89. 



Type locality. Racine, Wisconsin. 



Fatinal position. Hoy's shrew is probably an inhabitant of the transi- 

 tion and boreal zones. Its faunal position is not well understood. 



Habitat This animal is so little known that its habitat cannot be 

 definitely stated. Apparently it is more often found in cleared land 

 than in woods or forests (see Miller, 97b, p. 37). 



Distribution in New York. While this species probably occurs 

 throughout the northern half of the state it has as yet been taken 

 at Locust Grove, Lewis co. only (Merriam, '95, p. 90). 



Blarina brevicauda (Say) Short-tailed shrew 



1823 Sorex brevicaudns Say, Long's exped. to the Rocky mts. 

 1837 Sorex dekayi Bachman, Acad. nat. sci. Philadelphia. Jour. pt. 2. 

 7: 377- 



1842 Sorex dekayi De Kay, Zoology of New York, Mammalia, p. 17 

 (part). 



1842 Sorex brevicaudns De Kay, Zoology of New York, Mammalia, 

 p. 18 (part). 



1842 Sorex caroluiensis De Kay, Zoology of New York, Mammalia, 

 p. 21 (part). 



