﻿10 NORTH AMERICAN FAUNA. [No.n. 



Furtliermore, Ictis has been already revived by Scliulze (Faunae 

 Saxouica?, Mammalia, 170, 1893), thoii,i>li used by liim in a mncli more 

 compreliensive sense than that originally intended^ 



List of Noj^ih American Weasels wiih iype localities. 





Name. 



CTvpe loccility. 



1 





Northeastern North America (north of lat. 41°) 



o 



cicOQlXCLTlX TicJiClvd SO'lll - 



Fort FraBlcliii, Great Bear Lake. 



3 





Juneau, Alaska. 



4 





Skagit Valley, Washington. 



5 



rixosns 



Usler, Saskatcliewan. 



g 





Point Barrow, Alaska. 







Ivadiak Island, Alaska. 



0 



o 





State of New York. 



Q 





Trout Lake, Mount Ailanip, VTashington. 



10 





Tarpon Springs, Florida. 



11 





Carlton House, Saskatchewan. 



12 





Tort Snelling, Minn. 



13 





Si.skiyou Mountains, Oregon. 



14 



arizonensis 



Flagstaff, Arizona. 



15 





Black Hills, South Dakota. 



16 





Southern California. 



17 



xanthogenys oregonensis 



Eogue Eiver Valley, Oregon. 



18 





Valley of Mexico. 



19 





Pinabete, Chiapas, Mexico. 



20 



frenatus leucoparia 



Patzcuaro, Michoacan, Mexico. 



21 





Jico, Vera Cruz, Mexico. 



22 





Colombia, South America. 



PUTORIUS CICOGNANI Bonap. Bonaparte's Weasel. 



(PI. II, figs. 3, 3ft, 4, 4a.) 



1829. Musiela {Piitorius) vulgaris Richardson: Fauna Boreali- Americana, Mammalia, 

 pp. 45-46, 1829. 



1838. Alustela cicognanii Bonaparte: Iconografia Fauna Italica, I, fasc. XXII, p. 4, 



1838; Charles worth's Mag. Nat. Hist., II, p. 37, Jan., 1838. 



1839. Putorius cjco<7?m«u Richardsou : Zoology Beechey's Voyage, p. 10*, 1839. 

 1857. Baird : Mammals North America, pp. 161-163, 1857. 



1891. Mearus : Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., N. Y., Ill, p. 235, May, 1891. 

 1896. Putorius richardsoni cicoynani Bangs : Proc. Biol. Soc.Wash., X, jij). 18-21, Feb. 25, 

 1896. 



1877. Putorius vulgaris Cones: Fur-Bearing Animals, pp. 102-109, 1877. Merriam : 

 Mammals Adirondacks, pp. 54-56, 1882 (habits) ; and most recent antliors. 



Type locality. — ^sTortheastern North America. 



Geographic distribution. — Boreal forest covered parts of North Amer- 

 ica from New England and Labrador to coast of southeastern Alaska 

 (Juneau^ Wrangel, and Loring), and south in the Rocky Moud tains to 

 Colorado (Silverton). It occurs in the interior of British Columbia (at 

 Sicamous), but in the Puget Sound region is replaced by a smaller and 



1 Schulze included in Ictis the two European wea&els, vulgaris and erminea, and 

 also the mink, lutrcola, and polecat, putoria. 



