MAMMALS. 
17 
LEPUS AUDUBONII, Baird.—Audubon’s Hare. 
Plate VIII. 
Baird, Gen. Rep. Mammals, 1857, 608. 
Sp. Ch.— Size a little less than that of L. sylvaticus; ears longer than the head; hind feet rather short, but longer than the 
ears, fully furred beneath. Tail rather long. 
Above, mixed yellowish brown and black, paler on the sides and throat; beneath, pure white. Thighs and rump grayish. 
Back of neck rusty; fore legs somewhat similar. Hairs lead color at the base, on the middle of the back (over the loins) 
passing directly through dark brown to black, then yellowish brown; on the sides, rump, and fore part of back, the passage into 
the first brown or black ring is through grayish, yellowish, or reddish brown. 
This species we found somewhat abundant in the markets of San Francisco. 
LEPUS TROWBRIDGUI, Baird. 
Plate XIV. 
Lepus trowbridgii, Baird, Pr. A. N. Sc. Phila. VII, April, 1855, 333.— Ib. Gen. Rep. Mammals, 1857, 610. 
Sp. Ch. —Size small, less than that of L. auduboni. Head small. Ears about equal to it in length. Tail very short, almost 
rudimentary; hind feet very short, well furred, considerably shorter than the head. Color above, yellowish brown and dark 
brown; beneath, plumbeous gray. Sides not conspicuously different from the back, but paler. Back of neck pale rusty. 
Ears grayish and black on the external band; ashy gray elsewhere, with little indication of darker margin or tip. 
This species was found associated with the preceding in the San Francisco market. Both 
appear to be quite common near the coast, as far south as San Diego. 
ANTILOCAPRA AMERICANA, Ord.—Prong Horn Antelope ; Cabree. 
Plate XVI. 
Antilope americana, Ord, Guthrie's Geog. (2d Amer. edition) II, 1815, 292, 308. 
Antilocapra americana, Ord, Bull. Soc. Philom. 1818, 146. —Ib. Journal de Physique, LXXXVII, 1818, 149. 
Add. & Bach. N. Am. Quad. II, 1851, 198; pi. lxxvii. 
Baird, Gen. Rep. Mammals, 1857, 666. 
Sp. Ch —Color above yellowish brown, or pale dun color ; a narrow transverse band between the eyes, the top and sides of 
the muzzle, and a patch beneath the ear, (wanting in the female,) liver brown; edges of upper lip, chin and sides of face, spot 
behind the ear, a narrow crescent on the upper part of the throat, a triangular patch below this, the entire under parts and a 
square patch on the rump, white. Horns, hoofs, and naked parts of the nose, black. 
Horns rudimentary or wanting in the female. 
Many individuals of this species were observed in Texas and New Mexico. One specimen 
was collected in the San Francisco mountains, New Mexico. 
OVIS MONTANA, Cuv.—Mountain Sheep ; Bighorn. 
Ovis montana, Cuvier, R. An. I, 1817,267. 
Aud. & Bach. N. Am. Quad. II, 185], 163; pi. Ixxiii. 
Baird, Rep. U. S. Pat. Off. Agricultural for 1851, (1852,) 123, fig. plate.—I b. Stansbury’s Exped. 
Great Salt Lake, 1852, 312. 
Tape, a species of sheep, Barton’s Med. and Physical Journal, II, 1806, 106. (Refers to Bighorn, I, 1805, 75.) 
Sp. Ch. —Much larger than the domestic sheep. Horns, in the male very large, curving round, but not completing a full 
circle, and with but little of a spiral twist, compared with other species. The tips of the horns not more than twenty inches 
apart. General color grayish brown, paler about the head; a light patch under the lower jaw. Legs like the body, with a 
3 b 
