Part 2 (2/2)

_Myotis thysanodes_ Miller, N. Amer. Fauna, 13:80, October 16, 1897, type from Old Fort Tejon, Kern County, California.

_Range._--Known only from Patzcuaro.

_Remarks._--In the original description five specimens are recorded from Patzcuaro and Miller and Allen (1928:127) mention the same locality of occurence.

=Myotis californicus mexica.n.u.s= (Saussure)

California Myotis; Spanish, Murcielago de California

_V[espertilio]. mexica.n.u.s_ Saussure, Rev. et Mag. de Zool., 12 (ser. 2):282, 1860, type from somewhere in the warmer part of the state of Mexico.

_Myotis californicus mexica.n.u.s_, Miller, N. Amer. Fauna, 13:73, October 16, 1897.

_Range._--Known in Michoacan only from Patzcuaro.

_Remarks._--Specimens from Patzcuaro are recorded by Miller and Allen (1928:160).

=Eptesicus fuscus miradorensis= (H. Allen)

Big Brown Bat; Spanish, Murcielago Fusco

_S[cotophilus]. miradorensis_ H. Allen, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci.

Philadelphia, p. 287, 1866, type from Mirador, Veracruz.

_Eptesicus fuscus miradorensis_, Miller, N. Amer. Land Mamm., 1911, p. 62, December 31, 1912.

_Range._--Probably statewide.

_Specimen examined_, 1: no. 91909, Univ. Michigan, Mus. Zool., from Rancho Escondido, one mile north of Apo, 6,000 feet elevation, June 29, 1947, female adult, taken by W. H. Burt.

=Lasiurus borealis mexica.n.u.s= (Saussure)

Red Bat; Spanish, Murcielago Rojizo

_A[talapha]. mexicana_ Saussure, Rev. et Mag. de Zool., 13(2):97, March, 1861, type probably from Veracruz, Puebla or Oaxaca.

_Lasiurus borealis mexica.n.u.s_, Miller, N. Amer. Fauna, 13:111, October 16, 1897.

_Range._--Probably larger part of state.

_Specimen examined_, 1: no. 89446, Univ. Michigan, Mus. Zool., from Nuevo San Juan (Los Conejos), 5 mi. SW Uruapan, May 23, 1945, by W. H.

Burt.

_Remarks._--This specimen, a male with much worn teeth, answers well to the description of _L. b. mexica.n.u.s_ except that the minute premolar between the canine and fourth premolar is missing on each side of the upper jaw. This, however, seems the less remarkable after examination of 18 skulls of _L. b. borealis_ from the United States in two of which these minute premolars are likewise absent; one of the two specimens from the United States has unworn teeth and the other much worn teeth.

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