Additional records: Sierra San Carlos (El Mulato and Sardinia) (Dice, 1937:256).
=Odocoileus virginia.n.u.s veraecrucis= Goldman and Kellogg
1940. _Odocoileus virginia.n.u.s veraecrucis_ Goldman and Kellogg, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 53:89, June 28, type from Chijol, 200 ft., Veracruz.
_Distribution in Tamaulipas._--Tropical area, reported only from Soto la Marina (Miller and Kellogg, 1955:806) and Savinito Tierre [= Tierra] Caliente (J. A. Allen, 1881:184) and Tampico (_ibid._) as _Cariacus virginia.n.u.s mexica.n.u.s_.
=Mazama americana temama= (Kerr)
Red Brocket
1782. _Cervus temama_ Kerr, The Animal kingdom ..., p. 303.
Type locality, restricted to Mirador, Veracruz, by Hershkovitz (Fieldiana-Zool., Chicago Nat. Hist. Mus., 31:567, July 10, 1951).
1951. _Mazama americana temama_, Hershkovitz.
Fieldiana-Zool., Chicago Nat. Hist. Mus., 31:567, July 10.
_Distribution in Tamaulipas._--Southern part of state in tropical area.
The specimen examined is conspicuously darker than specimens from Veracruz and Chiapas, being especially more brownish and less reddish.
_Records of occurrence._--One specimen examined from Rancho Pano Ayuctle (skin only).
Additional records: Alta Cima (Goodwin, 1954:15); Rancho del Cielo (Hooper, 1953:10).
=Antilocapra americana mexicana= Merriam
p.r.o.nghorn
1901. _Antilocapra americana mexicana_ Merriam, Proc. Biol.
Soc. Washington, 14:31, April 5, type from Sierra en Media, Chihuahua.
_Distribution in Tamaulipas._--Originally in the northern part of state; now absent from Tamaulipas.
_Antilocapra_ is here included on the basis of a skull recorded by Baird (1858:669) from Matamoros. J. A. Allen (1881:184) doubted the occurrence of this animal in Tamaulipas because Dr. Palmer found no indications of the presence of _Antilocapra_ in any portion of the area that he traversed, which apparently was only southern Tamaulipas.
I am sure that the p.r.o.nghorn is extinct in Tamaulipas, but its occurrence in the northern part of the state in relatively recent time (more than 100 years ago) seems possible because the habitat in northern Tamaulipas is suitable for the p.r.o.nghorn.
LITERATURE CITED
ALLEN, H.
1862. Descriptions of two new species of Vespertilionidae, and some remarks on the genus Antrozous. Proc. Acad. Nat.
Sci. Philadelphia, pp. 246-248, between May 27 and August 1.
1894. A monograph of the bats of North America. Bull. U. S.
Nat. Mus., 43:ix + 198, 38 pls., March 14.
ALLEN, J. A.
1881. _List of mammals collected by Dr. Edward Palmer in northeastern Mexico, with field-notes by the collector._ Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., 8:183-189, March.
1891. _On a collection of mammals from southern Texas and northeastern Mexico._ Bull. Amer. Nat. Hist., 3:219-229, December.
1891. A preliminary study of the North American opossums of the genus Didelphis. _Ibid._, 14:149-188, 4 pls., June 15.
ALVAREZ, T.
1961. Taxonomic status of some mice of the Peromyscus boylii group in eastern Mexico, with description of a new subspecies. Univ. Kansas Publ., Mus. Nat. Hist., 14:111-120, 1 fig., December 29.
1962. A new subspecies of ground squirrel (Spermophilus spilosoma) from Tamaulipas, Mexico. _Ibid._, 14:121-124, March 7.
ANDERSON, S.
1956. Extensions of known ranges of Mexican bats. _Ibid._, 9:347-351, August 15.
ANTHONY, H. E.
1923. Mammals from Mexico and South America. Amer. Mus.
Novit., 54:1-10, 2 figs., January 17.
BAILEY, V.
1895. Biological survey of Texas. N. Amer. Fauna, 25:1-222, 23 figs., 8 pls., October 24.
BAIRD, S. T.
1855. _Characteristics of some new species of Mammalia, collected by the U. S. and Mexican Boundary Survey, Major W.
H. Emory, U. S. A. Commissioner._ Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci.
Philadelphia, 7:331-333, April.
1858. Mammals. _In_ General report upon the Zoology of the Several Pacific railroad routes. U. S. P. R. R. Exp. and Surveys, pp. xlviii + 757, 60 pls., July 14.
BAKER, R. H.
1951. Mammals from Tamaulipas, Mexico. Univ. Kansas Publ., Mus. Nat. Hist., 5:207-218, December 15.
1956. Mammals of Coahuila, Mexico. _Ibid._, 9:125-335, 75 figs., June 15.
1958. El futuro de la fauna silvestre en el norte de Mexico.
a.n.a.l. Inst. Biol., Mexico, 28:349-357, June 14.