The Project Gutenberg eBook of Geographic Variation in the Harvest Mouse, Reithrodontomys megalotis, On the Central Great Plains And in Adjacent Regions This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: Geographic Variation in the Harvest Mouse, Reithrodontomys megalotis, On the Central Great Plains And in Adjacent Regions Author: J. Knox Jones B. Mursaloglu Release date: August 1, 2009 [eBook #29563] Language: English Credits: Produced by Chris Curnow, Joseph Cooper and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GEOGRAPHIC VARIATION IN THE HARVEST MOUSE, REITHRODONTOMYS MEGALOTIS, ON THE CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS AND IN ADJACENT REGIONS *** Produced by Chris Curnow, Joseph Cooper and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net [Transcriber's Note: The last name of one of the author's is spelled with a breve over the letter g. This accent is shown as [)G]. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PUBLICATIONS MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Volume 14, No. 2, pp. 9-27, 1 fig. in text July 24, 1961 Geographic Variation in the Harvest Mouse, Reithrodontomys megalotis, On the Central Great Plains And in Adjacent Regions By J. KNOX JONES, JR. AND B. MURSALO[)G]LU UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE 1961 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PUBLICATIONS, MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Editors: E. Raymond Hall, Chairman, Henry S. Fitch, Robert W. Wilson Volume 14, No. 2, pp. 9-27, 1 fig. in text Published July 24, 1961 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas PRINTED IN THE STATE PRINTING PLANT TOPEKA, KANSAS 1961 Geographic Variation in the Harvest Mouse, Reithrodontomys megalotis, On the Central Great Plains And in Adjacent Regions By J. KNOX JONES, JR. AND B. MURSALO[)G]LU The western harvest mouse, _Reithrodontomys megalotis_, inhabits most parts of the central Great Plains and adjacent regions of tall grass prairie to the eastward, shows a marked predilection for grassy habitats, is common in many areas, and is notably less variable geographically than most other cricetids found in the same region. _R. megalotis_ occurs (see Hall and Kelson, 1959:586, map 342) from Minnesota, southwestern Wisconsin, northwestern Illinois, Iowa and Missouri westward to, but apparently not across, the Rocky Mountains from southeastern Alberta to Colorado; it is known in Oklahoma only from the Panhandle, thence southward through the Panhandle and Trans-Pecos areas of Texas to southern México, westward across the mountains in New Mexico to the Pacific Coast, and northward to the west of the Rockies to southern British Columbia. Hoffmeister and Warnock (1955) studied western harvest mice from Illinois, Iowa, northeastern Kansas, Minnesota and Wisconsin, concluded that one subspecific name (_Reithrodontomys megalotis dychei_ J. A. Allen, 1895, with type locality at Lawrence, Douglas Co., Kansas) applied to all, and relegated _Reithrodontomys megalotis pectoralis_ Hanson, 1944 (type locality at Westpoint, Columbia Co., Wisconsin) to synonymy under _dychei_. Our study, based upon an examination of 1350 specimens, concerns the area west of the Missouri River from Kansas and Nebraska westward to Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and northern New Mexico. Our objectives were to study variation in _R. megalotis_ in the region indicated and to decide what subspecific names properly apply to populations of the species that occur there. Aside from the name _R. m. dychei_, currently applied to western harvest mice from a large part of the region here under study, three other subspecific names need consideration: "_Reithrodontomys aztecus_" J. A. Allen, 1893 (type locality, La Plata, San Juan Co., New Mexico), currently applied to specimens from northern New Mexico and southern Colorado (and adjacent parts of Arizona and Utah) east to southwestern Kansas and the Oklahoma Panhandle; "_Reithrodontomys megalotis caryi_" A. H. Howell, 1935 (type locality, Medano Ranch, 15 mi. NE Mosca, Alamosa Co., Colorado), proposed for, and currently applied to, harvest mice from the San Luis Valley, Colorado, but possibly a synonym of _aztecus_ according to Hooper (1952:218); and "_Reithrodontomys dychei nebrascensis_" J. A. Allen, 1895 (type locality, Kennedy, Cherry Co., Nebraska), proposed for harvest mice from western Nebraska and adjacent areas, but regarded as a synonym of _dychei_ by A. H. Howell (1914:30-31). Our comments concerning the taxonomic status of these several names appear beyond. We are grateful to Dr. W. Frank Blair, University of Texas, for the loan of a specimen from the Texas Panhandle (TU), and to Dr. Richard H. Manville, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, for the loan of specimens of _R. m. caryi_ from the Biological Surveys Collection (USNM). We are grateful also to persons in charge of the following collections for allowing one of us (Jones) to examine Nebraskan specimens of _R. megalotis_ in their care: University of Michigan Museum of Zoology (UMMZ); University of Nebraska State Museum (NSM); and U.S. National Museum (USNM). A research grant from the Society of the Sigma Xi facilitated travel to the institutions mentioned. Specimens not identified as to collection are in the Museum of Natural History of The University of Kansas. All measurements are in millimeters, and are of adults (as defined by Hooper, 1952:12) unless otherwise noted. Secondary Sexual Variation Hooper (1952) did not accord separate treatment to males and females in taxonomic accounts of Latin American harvest mice because (p. 11): "In no species ... does sexual dimorphism in the measurements, if present at all, appear to be sufficient to warrant separating the sexes in the analysis." Hooper did not statistically test the validity of treating the sexes together in _R. megalotis_. He did test a series of _R. sumichrasti_ from El Salvador, in which he found no basis for separate treatment of males and females. Some authors (Verts, 1960:6, for instance) have recorded females of _R. megalotis_ as larger than males in external measurements, whereas others (Dalquest, 1948:325, for instance) have recorded males as the larger. In order to learn something of secondary sexual variation, and to decide whether or not to separate the sexes in our study, we compared adult males and females from the southern part of the Panhandle of Nebraska (Cheyenne, Keith, Kimball, Morrill and Scotts Bluff counties) in four external and twelve cranial measurements (see Table 1). The external measurements are those customarily taken by collectors and were read from the labels of the specimens; cranial measurements were taken to the nearest tenth of a millimeter by means of dial calipers, and are those described by Hooper (1952:9-11). Females from our sample averaged larger than males in all external and several cranial measurements, but individual variation greatly exceeded secondary sexual variation in each of these measurements and in no case was the greater size of females statistically significant. Therefore, and because we found no qualitative external or cranial differences between the sexes, males and females have been considered together in each population studied. TABLE 1. ANALYSIS OF SECONDARY SEXUAL VARIATION IN ADULT REITHRODONTOMYS MEGALOTIS FROM THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE NEBRASKA PANHANDLE. FOR EACH MEASUREMENT, THE NUMBER OF SPECIMENS USED, THE AVERAGE, THE EXTREMES, AND ONE STANDARD DEVIATION ARE GIVEN. CHARACTER | Males | Females -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+----------+----- Total length |27|135.0|(121-149) |±6.14 |32|141.0|(127-149) |±5.36 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+----------+----- Length of tail- vertebrae |27| 63.9|( 56-74) |±4.63 |32| 65.2|(58-73) |±4.06 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Length of hind foot |27| 17.0|( 16-18) |±0.60 |32| 17.3|(15-19) |±0.81 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Length of ear from notch |27| 12.9|( 12-14) |±0.55 |32| 13.0|(12-14) |±0.61 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Greatest length of skull |27| 21.0|( 20.2-21.8)|±0.43 |28| 21.3|(20.4-22.2)|±0.48 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Zygomatic breadth |25| 10.7|( 10.3-11.0)|±0.21 |28| 10.9|(10.4-11.3)|±0.25 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Breadth of braincase |27| 10.0|( 9.6-10.5)|±0.22 |28| 10.1|(9.8-10.7) |±0.18 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Depth of cranium |26| 7.9|( 7.4-8.4) |±0.20 |28| 7.9|( 7.7-8.3) |±0.15 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Length of rostrum |27| 7.3|( 6.8-7.6) |±0.21 |28| 7.4|( 6.9-8.0) |±0.27 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Breadth of rostrum |27| 3.8|( 3.6-4.1) |±0.11 |28| 3.8|( 3.5-4.0) |±0.12 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Length of incisive foramen |27| 4.4|( 4.1-4.6) |±0.10 |28| 4.5 ( 4.1-4.9) |±0.19 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Length of palate |26| 3.5|( 3.1-3.8) |±0.18 |28| 3.5 ( 3.2-4.0) |±0.15 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Alveolar length of maxillary tooth-row |27| 3.4|( 3.2-3.7) |±0.14 |28| 3.4|( 3.2-3.7) |±0.13 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Interorbital breadth |27| 3.1|( 2.9-3.3) |±0.12 |28| 3.1|( 2.8-3.3) |±0.11 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Breadth of zygomatic plate |27| 1.9|( 1.8-2.1) |±0.10 |28| 2.0|( 1.9-2.3) |±0.12 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Breadth of mesopterygoid fossa |26| 0.9|( 0.6-1.1) |±0.12 |28| 0.9|( 0.8-1.2) |±0.12 -------------+--+-----+------------+------+--+-----+-----------+----- Pelage and Molt Western harvest mice that attain adulthood acquire at least three distinct types of pelage in sequence in the course of their development. The first of these, the juvenal pelage, is short, relatively sparse, and characteristically grayish brown. The molt (post-juvenal molt) from juvenal pelage to subadult pelage seemingly occurs at an early age, perhaps frequently before the young leave the nest, as individuals in juvenal pelage are few among specimens studied by us. Judging from study skins alone, the progress of post-juvenal molt in _R. megalotis_ is similar to that described for _R. humulis_ by Layne (1959:69-71). The subadult pelage is thicker, longer and brighter than juvenal pelage and closely resembles the pelage of adults; it differs from adult pelage dorsally in being somewhat duller and in having less contrast between back and sides. The pelage of adults varies depending on season. In summer the individual hairs are relatively short (5-6 mm. at the middle of the back) and sparse. The over-all color of the dorsum, sides and flanks is brownish to dark brownish, and the venter is grayish. In winter the pelage is dense, long (8-9 mm. at the middle of the back) and lax. The over-all color dorsally in fresh winter pelage in most specimens is paler (more buffy) than summer pelage, the sides are markedly buffy, and the venter is whitish; even the tail is more pilose and more sharply bicolored than in summer. Adults molt, usually completely but occasionally only partially, at least twice a year--once in spring (in May and June in Nebraskan specimens) from winter to summer pelage, and once in autumn (in October and November in Nebraskan specimens) from summer to winter pelage. Of the two molts, the one in spring is most easily discernible because the contrast in color between worn winter pelage and fresh summer pelage is considerably greater than that between worn summer pelage and fresh winter pelage, and because the progress of spring molt is seemingly more regular than that of autumn molt. In spring, molt proceeds posteriorly in a more or less regular line on both dorsum and venter; in most specimens it is completed first on the venter. In autumn, molt is irregular, or at best is coincident over large parts of the body, and frequently is seen only by searching through the pelage with a fine probe or dissecting needle. In both spring and autumn, molt seemingly is delayed in females that are pregnant or lactating. In both winter pelage and summer pelage, the upper parts have blackish or grayish guard hairs and shorter, more numerous cover hairs. All the cover hairs are gray basally; some have a buffy band terminally and others have a buffy subterminal band with a terminal black tip. The generally darker over-all color of upper parts in summer pelage results (as seen in Nebraskan specimens) from a narrower band of buff on the cover hairs (only approximately one half the width of the band on hairs in winter pelage), a darker buffy band (ochraceous buff rather than pale ochraceous or straw color), and a relative sparseness of the pelage, which allows the gray basal portion of some hairs to show on the surface. The more grayish venter of summer-taken specimens results from much more of the grayish basal portion of the white-tipped hairs showing through than in the longer, denser pelage of winter. Wear on the pelage seems in general to produce a paler over-all color of upper parts, evidently due mostly to abrasion of the terminal black tip of the cover hairs, but possibly actual fading of the pelage is involved also. Worn winter pelage is especially notable for its paleness; the buffy tones are accentuated and the upper parts, especially posteriorly, may even appear fulvous. The difference in color of upper parts between specimens in worn winter pelage and fresh summer pelage (or for that matter specimens in fresh _versus_ worn winter pelage) from the same locality is greater in our material than the difference between some specimens in comparable pelages from localities more than 500 miles apart. We have seen no specimens taken in winter in which we could discern that the autumn molt had been incomplete, but three old adult males in summer pelage indicate that spring molt is not always completed. KU 50154, obtained on August 14, 1952, 5 mi. N and 2 mi. W Parks, Dundy Co., Nebraska, has the entire posterior back and sides still in old winter pelage and does not appear to have been actively molting; the entire venter is in summer pelage. KU 50146, obtained on August 22, 1952, 3 mi. E Chadron, Dawes Co., Nebraska, has small patches or tufts of winter pelage remaining on the rump and likewise does not appear to have been actively molting. KU 72085, obtained on October 13, 1956, 4 mi. E Barada, Richardson Co., Nebraska, is in the process of molting from summer to winter pelage, but has tufts of old winter pelage on the rump. Geographic Variation Geographic variation, both in color of pelage and in external and cranial dimensions, is less in _R. megalotis_ in the region studied than in most other cricetine species that occur there. Nevertheless, meaningful variation is present. The assumption that variation in _R. megalotis_ paralleled in degree that of other species, _Peromyscus maniculatus_ for example, led to untenable taxonomic conclusions by some previous workers. _Color of Pelage_ Color of pelage is remarkably uniform, considering the geographic extent of the area involved, over most of the northern part of the central grasslands. Perhaps this uniformity results partly from the predilection of the western harvest mouse for grassy habitats, for in most areas on the Great Plains the species is restricted to riparian communities, principally along river systems, where soils, cover, and other conditions approximate those of corresponding habitats farther to the east to a much greater degree than do conditions in upland habitats. Differential selective pressure, therefore, theoretically would be less between eastern and western populations of _R. megalotis_ than in an upland-inhabiting species. In any event, specimens from western Nebraska, Wyoming, northern Colorado, and adjacent areas average only slightly paler dorsally than specimens in corresponding pelages from the eastern parts of Nebraska and Kansas, and many individuals from the two areas can be matched almost exactly. To the southwest, on the other hand, a trend toward paler (pale brownish, less blackish) upper parts is apparent. Specimens from southwestern Kansas and adjacent parts of Colorado and Oklahoma average slightly paler in comparable pelages than specimens from northeastern Kansas and eastern Nebraska, but most specimens from farther southwest, in northern New Mexico and southwestern Colorado, are discernibly, although not markedly, paler than mice from northern and eastern populations. A "pectoral spot," fairly common in some populations of _R. megalotis_ east of the Missouri River (see Hoffmeister and Warnock, 1955:162-163), is present in only a small percentage of the specimens we have studied, and when present is usually only faintly developed. _External and Cranial Size_ [Illustration: FIG. 1. Geographic variation in five measurements of _Reithrodontomys megalotis_ on the central Great Plains. The size of each sample is given, along with total length, length of tail expressed as a percentage of the head and body, length of ear, greatest length of skull, and length of rostrum. The approximate distribution of the species in the region shown and the approximate boundary between the subspecies _R. m. aztecus_ and _R. m. dychei_ also are indicated.] As seen in Figure 1, the tail and especially the ear are longer in mice from New Mexico and adjacent areas than in specimens from northern localities. The ear, only slightly variable in size in the northern part of the region, is markedly longer in the southwest, averaging more than 2 mm. longer in specimens from New Mexico and adjacent southwestern Colorado than in specimens from Nebraska and eastern Kansas; specimens in a zone from central Colorado through southwestern Kansas and adjacent Oklahoma generally have ears of a size between the two extremes. As concerns the tail we note a slight trend toward increasing length (best expressed as percentage of length of body) from north to south throughout the central plains, but in general the trend is more pronounced southwestwardly. Variation in length of tail and length of ear, therefore, appear to be in accord with Allen's Rule. Length of body and length of hind foot seem not to vary significantly in specimens we have studied. The skulls of specimens examined differed only slightly, except that the rostrum is significantly longer and relatively, if not actually, narrower in specimens from the south and southwest than in mice from the rest of the region under study. The rostrum is longest (average 7.7 mm.) in specimens from the vicinity of the type locality of _R. m. aztecus_, but is relatively long (7.5-7.6 mm.) in populations from as far north as northeastern Colorado and southwestern Nebraska. An average greater occipitonasal length (greatest length of skull) in specimens from the south and southwest results mostly from the longer rostrum. Recognition of two subspecies of _R. megalotis_ on the central Great Plains seems justified on the basis of the geographic variation discussed above. One subspecies, for which the name _R. m. aztecus_ is applicable, occurs in the southwest and is characterized by the culmination of trends in the region studied to paler upper parts, longer tail, longer ear, and longer, relatively narrower rostrum--characters that appear at least partly independent of each other as concerns gradation toward the smaller, darker-colored populations to the northward. The latter, while exhibiting some differences in color (slightly paler westwardly) and length of tail (shorter northwardly), stand more or less as a unit in contrast to the mice from the southwest, and represent, in our judgment, a single subspecies, _R. m. dychei_. The area of intergradation between the two subspecies is relatively broad, considering all the characters mentioned, and assignment of some intergrades is admittedly difficult. _Reithrodontomys megalotis aztecus_ J. A. Allen _Reithrodontomys aztecus_ J. A. Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 5:79, April 28, 1893 (type locality, La Plata, San Juan Co., New Mexico). _Reithrodontomys megalotis aztecus_, A. H. Howell, N. Amer. Fauna, 36:30, June 5, 1914. _Reithrodontomys megalotis caryi_ A. H. Howell, Jour. Mamm., 16:143, May 15, 1935 (type locality, Medano Ranch, 15 mi. NE Mosca, Alamosa Co., Colorado). _Distribution._--Western and southern Colorado, southeastern Utah, northeastern Arizona and northern New Mexico, east to the panhandles of Texas and Oklahoma and to southwestern Kansas. _External measurements._--Average and extremes of 10 adults (5 males, 5 females) from San Juan County, New Mexico, and adjacent Montezuma County, Colorado, are: total length, 140.1 (126-150); length of tail-vertebrae, 67.4 (56-71); length of hind foot, 17.3 (16-18); length of ear from notch, 15.1 (13-17); tail averaging 92.7 per cent of length of body. Corresponding measurements of 13 adults (7 males, 6 females) from Bernalillo and Guadalupe counties, New Mexico, are: 142.1 (129-156); 69.4 (60-75); 17.9 (17-19); 16.3 (15-18); tail averaging 95.4 per cent of length of body. Corresponding measurements of 22 adults (17 males, 5 females) from Meade County, southwestern Kansas, are: 147.1 (139-162); 71.3 (65-77); 17.6 (17-19); 13.8 (13-15); tail averaging 94.1 per cent of length of body. For cranial measurements see Table 2. _Remarks._--For comparisons with _Reithrodontomys megalotis dychei_, geographically adjacent to the northeast, see account of that subspecies. When Howell (1935:143) named _Reithrodontomys megalotis caryi_ from the San Luis Valley of Colorado he compared it directly only with _R. m. megalotis_ from southern New Mexico and northern Chihuahua. Few adults were available to Howell from the San Luis Valley, accounting for the fact, we think, that the published measurements of _caryi_ average less than those given for _R. m. aztecus_ by Howell (_op. cit._:144) and herein. We have examined 16 of the 23 specimens from Medano Ranch and the single specimen from Del Norte that Howell listed. Unfortunately, none is fully adult. The specimens from Medano Ranch, collected in late October and early November, are mostly in fresh winter pelage or molting from subadult pelage, and closely resemble topotypes of _aztecus_ in comparable pelages. Comparison of skulls of the specimens from Medano Ranch with skulls of topotypes and other individuals of _aztecus_ of approximately equal age indicates that the Coloradan specimens may average slightly smaller and have somewhat shorter rostra. Externally, topotypes of _caryi_ have the relatively long tail of _aztecus_ and approach it in length of ear (measured on dry specimens). To us, they appear to be intergrades between _aztecus_ and _dychei_, but to bear closer resemblance to the former, and we tentatively regard _caryi_ as a synonym of _aztecus_. Benson (1935:140) noted that two adult topotypes of _caryi_ were "similar to adult topotypes of _aztecus_." Specimens from southern Colorado east of the San Luis Valley, assigned to _aztecus_, are intergrades between it and _dychei_, as are two specimens from El Paso County, to the north, which resemble _aztecus_ in color but resemble _dychei_ in other characters and are tentatively assigned to the latter. Specimens from southwestern Kansas and adjacent Oklahoma, herein referred to _aztecus_, also are intergrades with _dychei_. Individuals from Meade County, for example, are intermediate on the average between typical specimens of the two subspecies in color of upper parts (if anything, nearer _dychei_), resemble _dychei_ in length of ear, but resemble _aztecus_ in length of tail and rostral proportions (consequently also in length of skull). Although a case could be made for assignment of the specimens from Meade County (and elsewhere in southwestern Kansas) to _dychei_, they are, everything considered, nearer _aztecus_, to which subspecies they have been assigned consistently since first reported from the area by Hill and Hibbard (1943:24). Of two specimens examined from 10 mi. S and 1 mi. W Gruver, Hansford Co., in the Panhandle of Texas, the one adult is clearly assignable to _aztecus_ as is the specimen from 9 mi. E Stinnett, Hutchinson Co., Texas, that was referred to _dychei_ by Blair (1954:249). _Reithrodontomys megalotis aztecus_ has had a rather unstable taxonomic history. Allen, who originally named the subspecies (1893:79), regarded it two years later (1895:125) as a synonym of _R. m. megalotis_, the subspecies with geographic range to the south and west of that occupied by _aztecus_. Howell (1914:30) recognized _aztecus_ as valid, but he, too, questioned its distinctness from _megalotis_ in a later paper (1935:144). Hooper (1952:218), the most recent reviewer, supported the validity of _aztecus_ because specimens available to him averaged "distinctly larger in skull length and size of brain case" than specimens of _megalotis_. Our comparisons of typical specimens of _aztecus_ with specimens of _megalotis_ from southern New Mexico and southwestern Texas confirm Hooper's observations and indicate also that _aztecus_ has a longer rostrum and slightly longer ear. _Specimens examined._--205, as follows: COLORADO. _Alamosa County_: Medano Ranch, 15 mi. NE Mosca, 16 (USNM). _La Plata County_: 1 mi. NW Florida, 6700 ft., 1; Florida, 6800 ft., 1. _Las Animas County_: 1 mi. S, 7 mi. E Trinidad, 2. _Montezuma County_: 1 mi. W Mancos, 5; north end, Mesa Verde Nat'l Park, 7000 ft., 3; Far View Ruins, Mesa Verde Nat'l Park, 7700 ft., 3; Park Point, Mesa Verde Nat'l Park, 8525 ft., 2; within 3 mi. Rock Springs, Mesa Verde Nat'l Park, 7500-8200 ft., 6. _Prowers County_: Lamar, 2. _Rio Grande County_: Del Norte, 1 (USNM). KANSAS. _Finney County_: 1 mi. S, 2 mi. E Garden City, 4. _Ford County_: 1/2 mi. NW Bellefont, 10; 6-1/4 mi. N Fowler, 2. _Grant County_: 2 mi. S, 9 mi. W Santanta, 1. _Kearney County_: 3-1/2 mi. N, 4 mi. E Lakin, 4. _Meade County_: within 2-1/2 mi. Fowler, 10; Meade County State Park, 14 mi. SW Meade, 48; 17 mi. SW Meade, 5. _Morton County_: 7-1/2 mi. S Richfield, 4; 8 mi. N Elkhart, 1; 7-1/2 mi. N, 1-1/2 mi. W Elkhart, 2. _Seward County_: 3 mi. NE Liberal, 1. _Stanton County_: 1 mi. N, 6-7-1/2 mi. W Manter, 2; dam of Lake Stanton, 1. NEW MEXICO. _Bernalillo County_: 6-1/2 mi. E Alameda, 11; 5 mi. W Albuquerque, 3. _Catron County_: 1 mi. NE Apache Creek, 4; Apache Creek, 2. _Guadalupe County_: 4 mi. SW Santa Rosa, 4700 ft., 10. _McKinley County_: Upper Nutria, 7200 ft., 2. _Rio Arriba County_: 4 mi. N El Rito, 1; 1 mi. SE El Rito, 1. _Sandoval County_: 3 mi. N La Cueva Rec. Area, 1. _San Juan County_: 2 mi. N La Plata, 15. _Santa Fe County_: 1 mi. W Santa Fe Municipal Airport, 1; La Bajada Grade, 20 mi. W Santa Fe, 1. _Socorro County_: 2 mi. S San Antonio, 4. OKLAHOMA. _Beaver County_: 7 mi. S Turpin, 1. _Texas County_: 3-1/2 mi. SW Optima, 8. TEXAS. _Hansford County_: 10 mi. S, 1 mi. W Gruver, 2. _Hutchinson County_: 9 mi. E Stinnett, 1 (TU). _Reithrodontomys megalotis dychei_ J. A. Allen _Reithrodontomys dychei_ J. A. Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 7:120, May 21, 1895 (type locality, Lawrence, Douglas Co., Kansas). _Reithrodontomys megalotis dychei_, A. H. Howell, N. Amer. Fauna, 36:30, June 5, 1914. _Reithrodontomys dychei nebrascensis_ J. A. Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 7:122, May 21, 1895 (type locality, Kennedy, Cherry Co., Nebraska). _Distribution._--Southwestern Wisconsin, southern Minnesota, northwestern Illinois, Iowa, Missouri and northwestern Arkansas, west through Kansas (except southwestern part), Nebraska and the Dakotas to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains from central Colorado to southeastern Alberta. _External measurements._--Average and extremes of 17 adults (11 males, 6 females) from Douglas County, Kansas, are: total length, 134.2 (115-151); length of tail-vertebrae, 64.2 (59-72); length of hind foot, 16.7 (15-18); length of ear from notch, 13.4 (12-15); tail averaging 91.7 per cent of length of body. Corresponding measurements of 20 adults (14 males, 6 females) from Cherry County, Nebraska, are: 135.3 (122-155); 62.9 (56-72); 17.5 (17-18); 13.0 (12-14); tail averaging 86.9 per cent of length of body. For cranial measurements see Tables 1 and 2. _Remarks._--From _Reithrodontomys megalotis aztecus_, geographically adjacent to the southwest, _R. m. dychei_ differs as follows: upper parts averaging darker (especially in summer pelage), owing principally to more suffusion of blackish middorsally; tail slightly shorter; ears markedly shorter, rostrum shorter and relatively broader; occipitonasal length shorter owing to shorter rostrum. "_Reithrodontomys dychei nebrascensis_," named by Allen (1895:122) from Kennedy, Nebraska, was distinguished in the original description from _dychei_ by "slightly larger size, relatively longer ears, and more strongly fulvous coloration." Allen applied the name _nebrascensis_ to harvest mice from Montana south to central Colorado and western Nebraska. Howell (1914:30-31) placed _nebrascensis_ in synonymy under _dychei_ because he found specimens from Kennedy to be "indistinguishable from specimens of typical _dychei_ in comparable pelage." We concur with Howell. Topotypes of _nebrascensis_ that we have examined average only slightly paler than topotypes of _dychei_ in the same pelage (some specimens from each series can be matched almost exactly), and do not differ significantly in any external or cranial measurements. The "fulvous" upper parts of the series from Kennedy (all taken in late April) that was available to Allen resulted from worn winter pelage. We think that Allen was led astray also by his erroneous assumption that geographic variation in color of _R. megalotis_ on the Great Plains paralleled that found in _Peromyscus maniculatus_. Actually, _R. megalotis_ varies in color much less geographically in the region concerned than does _P. maniculatus_. Specimens from the northwestern part of the range of _dychei_ (Wyoming, Montana and western South Dakota), like those from western Nebraska, average slightly paler dorsally than topotypes and other specimens from eastern Kansas and Nebraska (a few approach _aztecus_ in this regard), but do not otherwise differ. Most specimens from northern Colorado, southwestern Nebraska (Hitchcock and Dundy counties) and western Kansas average slightly paler than typical specimens and have longer rostra, approaching _aztecus_ in these particulars, but have the shorter ears and shorter tail of _dychei_. In general, these intergrades resemble _dychei_ to a greater degree than _aztecus_ and are accordingly assigned to the former. One exception is a series from Muir Springs, 2 mi. N and 2-1/2 mi. W Ft. Morgan, Colorado. Specimens in this series approach typical _dychei_ in color, but resemble _aztecus_ in having long ears and long rostra (average 15.3 and 7.5, respectively, in 13 adults). The specimens from Muir Springs resemble _aztecus_ to a greater degree than _dychei_, but are assigned to the latter because specimens from farther west and farther south in Colorado are assignable to _dychei_. Howell (1914:31) earlier noted that specimens from northern and central Colorado were intergrades between the two subspecies. The geographic range occupied by _R. m. dychei_ (from east of the Mississippi River in Illinois and Wisconsin to the foothills of the Rockies) is large (although not so large as that currently ascribed to _R. m. megalotis_, which ranges from southern British Columbia to central México). Most other small rodents that occur in the same geographic area occupied by _dychei_ are represented there by at least two subspecies, a dark one in the east and a pale one in the west. Eastern populations of _dychei_ have, it is true, somewhat darker upper parts than mice from western localities, but the differences are slight; also, judging from the literature, the "pectoral spot" is more common in eastern mice. It should be noted that _R. m. dychei_ probably has extended its range both eastward and westward in the last century as a result of agricultural practices--clearing of land in the east and irrigation in the west. _Specimens examined._--1145, as follows: COLORADO. _Adams County_: South Platte River, 5 mi. N Denver, 1; 3 mi. S, 1 mi. W Simpson, 1. _El Paso County_: 5 mi. E Payton, 1; 4 mi. S maingate of Camp Carson, 1. _Larimer County_: 3 mi. N Loveland, 1; 9-1/4 mi. W, 1/2 mi. N Loveland, 5600 ft., 1; 16 mi. W Loveland, 6840 ft., 1; 3-1/2-4-1/2 mi. W Loveland, 5030 ft., 7; 6 mi. W, 1/2 mi. S Loveland, 5200 ft., 14; 7 mi. W, 2-1/2 mi. S Loveland, 5370 ft., 1. _Morgan County_: Muir Springs, 2 mi. N, 2-1/2 mi. W Ft. Morgan, 21. _Washington County_: Cope, 6. _Yuma County_: 1 mi. W to 1 mi. E Laird, 6. KANSAS. _Atchison County_: 1-1/2 mi. S Muscotah, 10; 4-1/2 mi. S Muscotah, 2. _Barton County_: 3 mi. N, 2 mi. W Hoisington, 3. _Brown County_: 1 mi. E Reserve, 2; 5 mi. S Hiawatha, 4. _Cheyenne County_: 23 mi. NW St. Francis, 1; 1 mi. W St. Francis, 12; 8 mi. S, 1-1/2 mi. W St. Francis, 1. _Decatur County_: 1 mi. N, 2 mi. E Oberlin, 4; 5 mi. S, 8 mi. W Oberlin, 1. _Doniphan County_: Geary, 2. _Douglas County_: 5 mi. N, 1/2 mi. E Lawrence, 1; 1 mi. NW Midland, 1; 4-1/2 mi. N Lawrence, 2; 4 mi. N, 1-3/4 mi. E Lawrence (sec. 8, T. 12 S, R. 20 E), 10; 1/2 mi. NW Lecompton, 1; 2-1/2 mi. N, 1 mi. W Lawrence, 2; 2 mi. N Lawrence, 2; U.P. Railroad tracks, N of Lawrence, 1; 9-1/5 mi. W Lawrence, 1; 5 mi. W Lawrence, 1; 2 mi. W Lawrence, 4; 1 mi. W Lawrence, 4; Fort Lake, Lawrence, 1; Lawrence, 24; 1 mi. SW Lawrence, 2; 1 mi. S, 1-1/2 mi. W Lawrence, 2; 1-3/4. mi. S, 3-1/2 mi. E Lawrence, 1; 2 mi. SW Lawrence, 2; 7-7-1/2 mi. SW Lawrence, 4; Rock Creek, 850 ft., 10 mi. SW Lawrence, 8; N end Lone Star Lake, 9 mi. S, 7 mi. W Lawrence, 1; no specific locality, 6. _Ellis County_: 1/2 mi. S, 3-1/2-4 mi. W Hays, 2250 ft., 12. _Franklin County_: 4 mi. N Ottawa, 2; 1/2 mi. S, 1-3/4 mi. E Ottawa, 4. _Gove County_: Castle Rock, 4; no specific locality, 1. _Jackson County_: 1/2 mi. N, 3 mi. W Holton, 4. _Leavenworth County_: Ft. Leavenworth, 2; no specific locality, 3. _Logan County_: no specific locality, 2. _Marshall County_: 2 mi. N, 4 mi. E Oketo, 1; 1/2 mi. N, 1-1/2 mi. E Waterville, 1; 1 mi. E Waterville, 5; 1/2 mi. SW Waterville, 4. _Mitchell County_: 1/2 mi. S, 3-1/2 mi. W Beloit, 1500 ft., 4. _Nemaha County_: Nebraska-Kansas line, 7 mi. N Sabetha, 1; 10-1/2 mi. N Seneca, 1; 2-1/2 mi. S Sabetha, 6. _Norton County_: 1-1/2 mi. N, 1/4 mi. E Norton, 1; 1/2 mi. N, 4 mi. E Norton, 5; 1 mi. SW Norton, 10; 4 mi. W, 1 mi. S Logan, 3. _Osage County_: 3 mi. N Lyndon, 1. _Osborne County_: 1/2 mi. W Downs, 5. _Phillips County_: 2-1/4 mi. SE Long Island, 1. _Pottawatomie County_: 1 mi. NW Fostoria, 1. _Rawlins County_: 2 mi. NE Ludell, 17; 2 mi. S Ludell, 2; Atwood, 3; Atwood Lake, 2. _Republic County_: 1-1/2 mi. S, 1 mi. E Belleville, 1; Rydal, 8. _Scott County_: State Park, 2. _Shawnee County_: 1 mi. S Silver Lake, 857 ft., 2. _Sherman County_: 1/2 mi. S, 1-1/2 mi. E Edson, 1. _Smith County_: 2 mi. E Smith Center, 9. _Stafford County_: 16 mi. N, 4 mi. E Stafford, 1. _Thomas County_: 10 mi. N, 6 mi. E Colby, 5. _Trego County_: 16 mi. S, 4-1/2 mi. E Wakeeney, 1. _Wichita County_: 15 mi. W Scott City, 5. MONTANA. _Big Horn County_: Big Horn River, 14 mi. S Custer, 2750 ft., 4. _Dawson County_: 1 mi. W Glendive, 2070 ft., 3. _Phillips County_: 1 mi. N, 1 mi. W Malta, 2248 ft., 1. _Powder River County_: Powderville, 2900 ft., 1. NEBRASKA. _Antelope County_: Neligh, 16 (6 NSM, 9 USNM). _Boyd County_: 5 mi. WSW Spencer, 1; 5 mi. S, 2 mi. E Spencer, 2; 6 mi. SSE Spencer, 1. _Box Butte County_: Alliance, 2 (USNM). _Buffalo County_: Kearney, 2 (USNM). _Burt County_: 1 mi. E Tekamah, 3. _Butler County_: 2 mi. N, 2 mi. W Bellwood, 2 (NSM); 4-5 mi. E Rising City, 11; 4 mi. E, 1 mi. S Rising City, 5. _Chase County_: 2 mi. SE Enders, 1. _Cherry County_: W of Crookston, 1 (NSM); Valentine, 2 (USNM); Ft. Niobrara Nat'l Wildlife Refuge, 4 mi. E Valentine, 5 (3 NSM); 3 mi. SSE Valentine, 4; 3 mi. S Valentine, 12; 8 mi. S Nenzel, 2; Niobrara River, 10 mi. S Cody, 2 (1 USNM); 11 mi. S, 2 mi. W Nenzel, 1; 18 mi. NW Kennedy, 8 (2 NSM, 6 USNM); Two Mile Lake, 6 (4 NSM, 2 USNM); Watt's Lake, Valentine Nat'l Wildlife Refuge, 3; Hackberry Lake, 12 (UMMZ); 2 mi. W to 4 mi. E Kennedy, 25 (4 UMMZ, 12 USNM); no specific locality, 1 (USNM). _Cheyenne County_: 15 mi. S Dalton, 4300 ft., 1; 3 mi. N Sidney, 6; 4 mi. E Sidney, 42. _Cuming County_: Beemer, 1 (USNM). _Custer County_: 7 mi. NW Anselmo, 1 (UMMZ); within 1 mi. Victoria Spring, 9 (UMMZ); 2 mi. E Lillian, 1 (UMMZ); Comstock, 1 (NSM); Callaway, 3 (USNM); 6 mi. SE Mason City, 1 (UMMZ). _Dawes County_: Wayside, 1; 3 mi. E Chadron, 2; 6 mi. S Chadron, 1 (NSM); 8 mi. S Chadron, 1 (NSM); 10 mi. S Chadron, 1 (UMMZ); 1 mi. W Crawford, 2 (NSM); Crawford, 2 (UMMZ). _Dawson County_: 1/2 mi. S Gothenburg, 5; 3 mi. SSE Gothenburg, 4. _Deuel County_: 1 mi. N, 2 mi. W Chappell, 3. _Dixon County_: 3 mi. NE Ponca, 4. _Dundy County_: Rock Creek Fish Hatchery, 5 mi. N, 2 mi. W Parks, 42; 2 mi. N, 2 mi. W Haigler, 1; Arikaree River, Parks, 2; 2 mi. SW Benkleman, 7; Haigler, 3 (1 NSM, 2 USNM). _Franklin County_: 1-1/2-2 mi. S Franklin, 10. _Gage County_: 1 mi. SE DeWitt, 3; 1/4 mi. W Homestead Nat'l Mon., 1; 1 mi. S, 1 mi. W Barnston, 1; 1-1/2 mi. S, 2 mi. E Barnston, 18. _Garden County_: Crescent Lake Nat'l Wildlife Refuge, 1; 1/2 mi. S Oshkosh, 1. _Hall County_: 6 mi. S Grand Island, 5. _Harlan County_: 1 mi. W Alma, 17. _Hitchcock County_: Republican River, Trenton, 3. _Hooker County_: Kelso, 3 (UMMZ). _Holt County_: 6 mi. N Midway, 4; 1 mi. S Atkinson, 4 (2 NSM); Ewing, 1 (USNM). _Jefferson County_: 7 mi. S, 2 mi. W Fairbury, 6; 3 mi. S, 1 mi. W Endicott, 1. _Johnson County_: 1 mi. S, 1-1/2 mi. E Burr, 1. _Kearney County_: 1-3/4-3-3/4 mi. S Kearney, 6. _Keith County_: 4 mi. WNW Keystone, 69. _Keya Paha County_: 12 mi. N Springview, 8; 12 mi. NNW Springview, 5. _Kimball County_: 3 mi. E Kimball, 1; Smeed, 40. _Knox County_: 3 mi. W Niobrara, 2; 1 mi. SE Niobrara, 5; 2 mi. S Niobrara, 2; Verdigre, 2 (USNM). _Lancaster County_: within 5 mi. Lincoln, 21 (8 NSM). _Lincoln County_: 2 mi. N North Platte, 1; Conroy Canyon, SW corner sec. 4, T. 11 N, R. 27 W (5 mi. S, 2-1/2 mi. W Brady), 2 (NSM). _Logan County_: 1-2 mi. NE Stapleton, 11. _Madison County_: Norfolk, 1 (USNM). _Morrill County_: 1 mi. N Bridgeport, 4. _Nemaha County_: 2 mi. SW Peru, 6; 3 mi. S, 1-1/2 mi. E Peru, 2. _Nuckolls County_: 2 mi. WSW Superior, 5; 1 mi. SSW Hardy, 9. _Otoe County_: 1 mi. SE Nebraska City, 3; 3 mi. S, 2 mi. E Nebraska City, 3. _Pawnee County_: Turkey Creek, 4 mi. NW Pawnee City, 2 (NSM); 4 mi. S, 8 mi. W Pawnee City, 7; 1 mi. S Du Bois, 4. _Platte County_: Columbus, 3 (USNM). _Polk County_: 15 mi. W Osceola, 2. _Red Willow County_: 5 mi. S, 2-1/2 mi. E McCook, 2; 8 mi. S, 3 mi. E McCook, 2. _Richardson County_: 5 mi. N, 2 mi. W Humboldt, 2 (1 NSM); 4 mi. E Barada, 16; 3-1/2 mi. S, 1 mi. W Dawson, 6; 2 mi. N Falls City, 2; 4-6 mi. W Falls City, 4; 1/2 mi. S, 1-1/2 mi. W Rulo, 1. _Saline County_: 2 mi. NE Crete, 1; 1/2 mi. W DeWitt, 1. _Sarpy County_: 1 mi. W Meadow, 1. _Saunders County_: 2 mi. NW Ashland, 3. _Scotts Bluff County_: 8 mi. NNW Scottsbluff, 1; Mitchell, 1 (NSM); 1/2-1 mi. S Mitchell, 13; 5 mi. S Gering, 10; 7 mi. S Gering, 1; 11-12 mi. S Scottsbluff, 4600-4800 ft., 8; 12 mi. SSW Scottsbluff, 4700 ft., 5. _Sioux County_: 1 mi. S, 4 mi. W Orella, 1 (NSM); 8 mi. N Harrison, 2 (UMMZ); 6-1/2-7 mi. W Crawford, 3 (1 NSM); 8 mi. N, 1 mi. E Glen, 1 (NSM); 3 mi. NE Glen, 1 (NSM); Glen, 3 (NSM); Agate, 4600 ft., 1. _Stanton County_: 1-1/2 mi. S Pilger, 3; 6 mi. SE Norfolk, 1. _Thomas County_: 1 mi. W Halsey, 2; Halsey, 1 (NSM). _Thurston County_: 1 mi. S Winnebago, 8. _Valley County_: 2 mi. W Ord, 1; 2 mi. S, 4 mi. E Ord, 6. _Washington County_: 1 mi. E Blair, 6; 3 mi. SE Blair, 2; 6 mi. SE Blair, 7; 3 mi. S, 2 mi. E Ft. Calhoun, 1 (NSM). _Wayne County_: 1/2 mi. W-2-1/2 mi. E Wayne, 3. _Webster County_: 3 mi. S Red Cloud, 2. SOUTH DAKOTA. _Buffalo County_: 2 mi. S, 3 mi. E Ft. Thompson, 1370 ft., 4. _Clay County_: 2-1/2 mi. N, 1/2 mi. W Vermillion, 1. _Pennington County_: 2 mi. S, 3 mi. W Scenic, 1. _Stanley County_: 1.2 mi. S, 4 mi. W Ft. Pierre, 1484 ft., 1. WYOMING. _Albany County_: 27 mi. N, 8 mi. E Laramie, 6420 ft., 2. _Big Horn County_: 7-1/2 mi. E Graybull, 4050 ft., 1; 7 mi. S, 1/2 mi. E Basin, 3900 ft., 1. _Campbell County_: 4 mi. N, 3 mi. E Rockypoint, 3800 ft., 3; 1-3/5 mi. N, 3/4 mi. E Rockypoint, 2; Rockypoint, 5; 5 mi. S, 4 mi. W Rockypoint, 1; Ivy Creek, 5 mi. N, 8 mi. W Spotted Horse, 2. _Crook County_: 1-1/2 mi. NW Sundance, 5000 ft., 3. _Fremont County_: 2 mi. N, 3 mi. W Shoshoni, 4650 ft., 1; 3/10 mi. NW Milford, 5357 ft., 1; Milford, 5400 ft., 1. _Hot Springs County_: 3 mi. N, 10 mi. W Thermopolis, 4900-4950 ft., 7. _Johnson County_: 1 mi. W, 8/10 mi. S Buffalo, 4800 ft., 5; 6-1/2 mi. W, 2 mi. S Buffalo, 5620 ft., 4; 1 mi. WSW Kaycee, 4700 ft., 8. _Laramie County_: Horse Creek, 5000 ft., 3 mi. W Meriden, 1; 1 mi. N, 1/2 mi. W Pine Bluffs, 5040 ft., 4; 1 mi. S Pine Bluffs, 5100 ft., 1; 2 mi. S Pine Bluffs, 5200 ft., 2. _Natrona County_: 1 mi. NE Casper, 5150 ft., 1; 2-1/4 mi. W Casper, 5250 ft., 1; 7 mi. S, 2 mi. W Casper, 6370 ft., 1. _Niobrara County_: 2 mi. S, 1/2 mi. E Lusk, 5000 ft., 1. _Park County_: 4 mi. N Garland, 2; 13 mi. N, 1 mi. E Cody, 5200 ft., 2; 6/10 mi. S, 3-2/10 mi. E Cody, 5020 ft., 1. _Platte County_: 2-1/2 mi. S Chugwater, 5300 ft., 4. _Sheridan County_: 3 mi. WNW Monarch, 3800 ft., 4; 5 mi. NE Clearmont, 3900 ft., 6. _Washakie County_: 1 mi. N, 3 mi. E Tensleep, 4350 ft., 5. TABLE 2. CRANIAL MEASUREMENTS OF TWO SUBSPECIES OF REITHRODONTOMYS MEGALOTIS. Key to Table Headings: A =NUMBER AVERAGED AND SEX B = Greatest length of skull C = Zygomatic breadth D = Breadth of braincase E = Interorbital breadth F = Depth of cranium G = Length of rostrum H = Breadth of rostrum I = Length of incisive foramen J = Length of palate K = Alveolar length of maxillary tooth-row --------------------------+----+----+----+---+---+---+---+---+---+---- A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K --------------------------+----+----+----+---+---+---+---+---+---+---- _R. m. dychei_, Douglas County, Kansas Av. 17 (11 male, 6 female)|20.9|10.5|10.1|3.1|7.9|7.2|3.8|4.3|3.5|3.3 Minimum |20.4|10.0| 9.8|3.0|7.7|6.8|3.6|4.0|3.2|3.1 Maximum |21.9|10.9|10.3|3.3|8.2|7.9|4.0|4.5|3.9|3.4 --------------------------+----+----+----+---+---+---+---+---+---+---- Cherry County, Nebraska Av. 20 (14 male, 6 female)|21.0|10.9|10.3|3.1|7.9|7.3|3.8|4.4|3.6|3.5 Minimum |20.4|10.0| 9.8|2.9|7.5|6.8|3.5|4.3|3.4|3.2 Maximum |22.1|11.3|10.7|3.3|8.4|7.8|4.1|4.7|3.9|3.7 --------------------------+----+----+----+---+---+---+---+---+---+---- _R. m. aztecus_, San Juan County, New Mexico, and Montezuma County, Colorado Av. 10 (6 male, 4 female) |21.5|10.8|10.2|3.1|8.1|7.7|3.7|4.5|3.4|3.5 Minimum |20.5|10.4| 9.9|2.9|7.9|7.2|3.5|3.9|3.1|3.2 Maximum |22.7|11.1|10.6|3.3|8.4|8.2|3.9|4.8|3.7|3.7 --------------------------+----+----+----+---+---+---+---+---+---+---- LITERATURE CITED ALLEN, J. A. 1893. List of mammals collected by Mr. Charles P. Rowley in the San Juan region of Colorado, New Mexico and Utah, with descriptions of new species. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist, 5:69-84, April 28. 1895. On the species of the genus Reithrodontomys. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist, 7:107-143, May 21. BENSON, S. B. 1935. The status of Reithrodontomys montanus (Baird). Jour. Mamm., 16:139-142, 1 fig., May 15. BLAIR, W. F. 1954. Mammals of the Mesquite Plains Biotic District in Texas and Oklahoma, and speciation in the central grasslands. Texas Jour. Sci., 6:235-264, 1 fig., September. DALQUEST, W. W. 1948. Mammals of Washington. Univ. Kansas Publ., Mus. Nat. Hist., 2:1-444, 140 figs., April 9. HALL, E. R., and K. R. KELSON 1959. The mammals of North America. Ronald Press, New York, vols. 1:xxx + 1-546 + 79 and 2:viii + 547-1083 + 79, 553 figs., 500 maps, 178 unnumbered text figs., March 31. HILL, J. E., and C. W. HIBBARD 1943. Ecological differences between two harvest mice (_Reithrodontomys_) in western Kansas. Jour. Mamm., 24:22-25, February 20. HOFFMEISTER, D. F., and J. E. WARNOCK 1955. The harvest mouse (Reithrodontomys megalotis) in Illinois and its taxonomic status. Trans. Illinois Acad. Sci., 47:161-164, 1 fig. HOOPER, E. T. 1952. A systematic review of the harvest mice (genus Reithrodontomys) of Latin America. Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool., Univ. Michigan, 77: 1-255, 9 pls., 24 figs., 12 maps, January 16. HOWELL, A. H. 1914. Revision of the American harvest mice (genus Reithrodontomys). N. Amer. Fauna, 36:1-97, 7 pls., 6 figs., June 5. 1935. The harvest mice of the San Luis Valley, Colorado. Jour. Mamm., 16:143-144, May 15. LAYNE, J. N. 1959. Growth and development of the eastern harvest mouse, Reithrodontomys humulis. Bull. Florida State Mus., 4:61-82, 5 figs., April 27. VERTS, B. J. 1960. Ecological notes on _Reithrodontomys megalotis_ in Illinois. Nat. Hist. Misc., Chicago Acad. Sci., 174:1-7, 1 fig., July 25. _Transmitted March 30, 1961._ *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GEOGRAPHIC VARIATION IN THE HARVEST MOUSE, REITHRODONTOMYS MEGALOTIS, ON THE CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS AND IN ADJACENT REGIONS *** Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will be renamed. Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project Gutenberg™ electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG™ concept and trademark. 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