General Notes. 
219 
THF. SPOTTED TKJER-CAT IN TEXAS.* 
In his report on the nniinnuUs of the I'hnory survey of the United States 
and JNIexican houndary, Baird recorded three sj)eciinens of Feiis pardalis, 
two of whicli weri! from Eagle Pass, Texas. These same three skins were 
listed in tlie Mammals of North America, 1857, and are still i)reserved, in 
excellentcondition, in the collection of the United States National Museum. 
One Plagle Pass skin, number 25, received from Col. S. Coo])er, proves to 
be not an ocelot, however, hut a cat of the Fells wiedii group, not here¬ 
tofore recorded north of Sinaloa, Alexico. It differs from several skins of 
the Mexican representative of this group. Fells ghvucida Thomas, in its 
much richer, less grayish color. The pelage is long and full and the 
spots are almost solid, with only slight indications of light centers. In 
general tone of coloration it resembles somewhat a Costa Pica specimen, 
probably referable to Fells plrrensls (Toldman, which is also a member of 
the wledll group. The hairs of the nape in this group of cats seem to be 
either reversed or normal in specimens of the same form. So little is 
known of the color variations in Fells glaucula, that in the absence of a 
skull with the Eagle Pass skin it would be unwise to treat the Texas form 
as distinct. 
The record of a representative of this group of cats along the Rio Grande 
is of great interest, and possibly explains the “ long-tailed yellow lynx ” 
reported to Bailey from west of Corpus Christi in 1902. t Such a descrip¬ 
tion fits the Eagle Pass specimen of tiger-cat much better than it does any 
heretofore known cat of Texas. — N. Hollister. 
* Piiljlished by permission of the Secretary of tlic Smithsonian Institution, 
t North Amer. Fauna, No. 25, p. 109,1905. 
