A65a 



ISLAND LIFE 



PART II 



but local varieties and species probably introduced by 

 man have been omitted. 



w > 



1^ 



List of the Terrestrial Mammalia of Celebes. 



{Those in italics are pemiliar.) 



Macacus maurus. 



,, cynomolgus. Perhaps introduced. 



Cympithcc'us niger. 



Tarsius fuscus. Allied to T. spectrum of Borneo. 

 rCrocidura fuliginosa, Tenasserim. 

 \Pachyura murina. China and Malaya. 



{Viverra tangahmga. Borneo, &c. 

 Paradoxurus hermaphroditus. Borneo, &c. 

 mussclienhroeki. 

 f Sciurus leucomus. 



tonkeanus. 

 ,, weberi. 

 ,, notatus. Borneo. 

 sarasinorum. 

 prevosti. Borneo. 

 , , murinus. Sumatra. 

 rubrivcntcr. 

 Mus neglectus. Borneo. 

 niuUeri. Borneo, 

 ephippium. Borneo, 

 musschenbrocki. 

 calUtrichus. 

 , , helhoaldi. 



xantliurus, 

 , , fabcri. 



bcccarii. 

 , , minahassa. 

 , , ccelcstis. 



giganteus. " The bandicoot." India, (introduced.) 



Gymnoviys celcbcnsis. 



Leuomys meycri. Allied to New Guinea and Philippine groups . 

 Craiirothrix leucura. 

 Acanthion javanicum ? Malay Islands. 

 / Sus celebensis. 



Babirusa alfuriis. The habirusa or " Hog-deer." 

 / Cervus moluccensis. Moluccas. Allied to C. hippelajjhus of 

 I Borneo. 

 [ Anoa depressiGornis. 



Manis javanica ? Borneo and Java. 

 fPhalycr ('^«») J~;}Mars„,,iaIs of Papuan type. 



We have here forty well-marked species of truly 

 terrestrial mammals, of which twenty-three are peculiar. 

 This gives a proportion of nearly two-thirds, which is 



