m NORTH AMERICAN FAUNA 66 



31 ; Oldtown, 9 miles E, 12 ; Rawlings, 2 ; Sideling Hill Creek, 8. Anne 

 Arundel County: Annapolis, 3 miles WW, 12; Priest Bridge, 4; South 

 River (at U.S. Route 50), 10. Baltimore County: Lake Roland, 5; 

 Loch Raven, 7 ; Notch Cliff, 1. Calvert County : Battle Creek (Cypress 

 Swamp), 4; Cove Point, 3; Drum Point, 2; Scientist Cliffs, 1; Solo- 

 mons, 2; Solomons, 31^ miles N, 17. Charles County: Nanjemoy Creek, 

 2; Newport, 6; Zekiah Swamp, 4. Dorchester County: Cambridge, 5. 

 Garrett County: Cranberry Swamp, 7 ; Grantsville, 4; Swallow Falls, 

 2 miles S, 2; Swanton, 3. Howard County: Atholton, 6. Montgomery 

 County : Burnt Mills, 2; Cabin John (vicinity of), 4; Cupids Bower 

 Island (vicinity of), 5; Forest Glen, 1; Great Falls, 1; Kensington, 

 5; Linden, 2; Plummers Island, 4; Rockville (vicinity of), 6; Seneca 

 Creek (at Clopper Road), 5; Silver Spring, 26; Takoma Park, 1; 

 Woodside, 1. Prince Georges County: Anacostia River, NW Branch, 

 3 ; Bladensburg, 7 ; Branchville, 2 ; Broad Creek (Indian Head Bluff) , 

 4; CoUingwood (= Collington?) 1 mile S, 2; Hyattsville, 4 ; Lanham, 

 4; Laurel, 10; Oxon Hill, 12; Riggs Mill, 1 ; Riverdale, 3. Washington 

 Cownty : Bear Creek, just N of U.S. Route 40, 2. 'Wicomico County: 

 Powellsville, 1. Worcester County: Snow Hill, 1 mile NE, 1; Ocean 

 City, 5 miles S, 1. District of Columbia: 62. 



Other records amd reports, — Allegany County: La Vale (Coll. U. 

 Md.). Anne Arundel County: Dorsey (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serv- 

 ice files). Cecil County: Rising Sun (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 

 files). Garrett County: Muddy Creek Falls (Mansueti and Flyger, 

 1952, p. 250). Kent County: Chestertown (U.S. Fish and Wildlife 

 Service files). Prince Georges County: Bowie (Lucille F. Stickel, 

 1946, p. 301). 



Remarks. — Specimens from the Eastern Shore section (Cambridge, 

 Powellsville, Snow Hill, and Assateague Island), as well as Virginia 

 specimens from Accomack and Northampton Counties on the lower 

 Delmarva Peninsula, are not typical novehoracensis but are somewhat 

 darker in coloration, and smaller in size, and appear to be intergrades 

 with P. I, leucojms (Rafinesque). The type locality of P. I. leu^opus 

 is in western Kentucky, which is also an area of intergradation. Mary- 

 land specimens from the Eastern Shore section are only slightly larger 

 and paler than specimens from western Kentucky near the type lo- 

 cality of P, I. leucopus. Nevertheless, they are considerably different 

 from P. I. leucofus from southern Louisiana (where the subspecies is 

 best characterized) both in size and coloration, and are more closely 

 related to P. I. novehoracensis from central New England where nove- 

 horacensis is best characterized) than to Louisianan P. I. leucopus. 



