. Bulletin. Science. DISTRIBUTION OF SPINY POCKET MICE IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 61. I I San Diego Pocket Mouse -|- +1 Crosses Indicate Areas 1+ 4- I of Presumed Intergradation JACUMBA Fig. 3. Approximate distribution of two species of pocket mice in southwestern California. Grinnell (1933) and Williams et al. (1993) described the range of dispar as ex- tending south only to Los Angeles County, and the California range of femoralis as limited to San Diego County, thus ignoring all of Orange County. Specimens in MVZ labeled dispar come from the southern foothills of the San Gabriel Moun- tains (Va


. Bulletin. Science. DISTRIBUTION OF SPINY POCKET MICE IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 61. I I San Diego Pocket Mouse -|- +1 Crosses Indicate Areas 1+ 4- I of Presumed Intergradation JACUMBA Fig. 3. Approximate distribution of two species of pocket mice in southwestern California. Grinnell (1933) and Williams et al. (1993) described the range of dispar as ex- tending south only to Los Angeles County, and the California range of femoralis as limited to San Diego County, thus ignoring all of Orange County. Specimens in MVZ labeled dispar come from the southern foothills of the San Gabriel Moun- tains (Vaughan 1954) and the Palos Verdes Peninsula in Los Angeles County, and near Laguna Beach, Orange County. MVZ specimens labeled femoralis extend north to the vicinity of Las Pulgas Creek, San Diego County and Aguanga in southwestern Riverside County. Pequegnat (1951) considered the Santa Ana Mountains to represent an intergradation zone between these two subspecies; he. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Southern California Academy of Sciences. Los Angeles, Calif. : The Academy


Size: 1459px × 1713px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookcollectionbiodiversity, booksubjectscience