MAMMALIA. 
12 
Fdis. On the large Felidce of Central India, see Forsyth, ‘ Highlands of 
Central India.’ The Lion was last seen in 1851 (p. 28). 
Felis tiff ns. A pair of Tigers breed regularly every year in the Zoologica 
Garden at Dresden ; and two of the young born last year were reared. Zool. 
Gart. 1871, p. 371. 
Fells tiff ris. Chinese specimens not a distinct species, M.-Edwards,'lle- 
cherch. Mamrnif. p. 200. — Notes on the same variety (a?mirensis) by M. Dodo, 
1\ Z. S. 1871, p. 480. 
Felis fontanierii described by M. -Edwards, 1. c. p. 208, pis. 29-31. 
y/Felis concolor. Cranium figured by R. O. Cunuinghaui in ^ Notes on the 
Natural History of the Straits of Magellan,’ on a plate, p. 118. 
Felis aurata (Temm.) = F. rutila (Waterh.) = E. celidoff aster (Temm.) = F. 
nefflecta (Gray) = F’. chalyheata (H. Smith), from the Gold Coast, is distinct 
from 
Felis 7noormensis (IIodgs.) = E. aui'ata (Gray &c.) = F. temminckii (Vig. & 
Ilorsf.), from Nepal, Borneo, Sumatra. Elliot, P. Z. S. 1871, p. 758. 
Felis ruhiffmosa. Notes on a variety from Ceylon {F.jerdonii) by Holds- 
worth, P. Z. S. 1871, pp. 760-758. — It is identical with Leopardus sumatra^ius 
(Gray), Elliot, P. Z. S. 1871, p. 700. 
Felis euptiluraj sp. n. (an= -F. undata^ Badde ?), Elliot, P. Z. S. 1871, p. 700, 
pi. 70, Siberia. 
‘ Felis catus. F. Leydig confirms the Wild Cat’s possession of anal glands, 
and mentions that ho once observed a distinct brush on the tip of the ear of 
a Domestic Cat. Wurttemb. Jahresh. 1871, p. 202. 
Felis domestica. F. Lenormant has made researches into the history of the 
Domestic Cat in ancient times, Compt. Rend. 1870, Ixxi. pp. 738-743. One 
of the most interesting points of this paper is, that the author has arrived at 
the same conclusion as Prof. Rolleston (whose memoir seems to have been 
unknown to him, see Zool. Rec. iv. p. 26), viz. that the ancient Greeks and 
Romans kept in a state of domestication the Common Marten, but not the 
Cat. 
IlycBna hnmnea. On the female generative organs, viscera, and fleshy 
parts, Murie, Trans. Zool. Soc. vii. 1871, pp. 603-612, pi. 63. 
Viverra civetta(?). An example from Quiah, north of the Cameroons, has 
provisionally been thus named by Sclater, P. Z. S. 1871, p. 299, and is figured 
on pi. 29. 
Ca7iis lateralis (Sclater, 1870)= C. (^undeval). Gray, A. k M. N. H. 
1871, vii. p. 19. 
Cunis occidentalis in Greenland, R. Brown, A. & M. N. H. 1871, vii. 
p. 65. 
Putorius fontanierii) sp. n., M. -Edwards, Recherch. Mamrnif. p. 205, pi. 61. 
fig. 1, Peking. 
XJrsus arctos. Some observations on its habits, made in Russia by Count 
zu Miinster, Zool. Gart. 1871, pp. 97-103. 
Ursus ornatus. Notes taken from a living specimen by Max Schmidt, 
Zool. Gart. 1871, pp. 304-306. 
Ursus nasutus (Sclater) = U. a7uericanus, Sclater, P. Z. S. 1871, p. 232. 
Cef’coleptes caudivolvulus. On the inyologv of the limbs, .1. BesAvick- 
Perrin, P. Z. S. 1871, pp. 547-559. 
