TABLES OF DISTRIBUTION. In drawing up these tables, showing the distribution of the various classes of animals in the Neotropical region, the following sources of information have been relied on, in addition to the general treatises, monographs, and catalogues used in the compilation of the Fourth Part of this work. Mammalia. D'Orbigny, and Burmeister, for Brazil and La Plata; Darwin, and Cunningham, for Temperate S. America; Tschudi, for Peru; Frazer, for Ecuador; Salvin, for Guatemala; Frantzius, for Costa Rica; Sclater, for Quadrumana N. of Panama; Gundlach, for Cuba; and papers by Dr. J. E. Gray, and Mr. Tomes. Birds. Sclater and Salvin's Nomenclator; Notes by Darwin, and Cunningham; Gundlach, March, Bryant, Baird, Elliot, Newton, Semper, and Sundevall, for various islands of the Antilles; and papers by Hudson, Lawrence, Grayson, Abbott, Sclater, and Salvin. TABLE I. FAMILIES OF ANIMALS INHABITING THE NEOTROPICAL REGION. EXPLANATION. Names in italics show the families which are peculiar to the region. Names enclosed thus (......) indicate families which barely enter the region, and are not considered properly to belong to it. Numbers correspond with those of the series of families in Part IV. 92. Tinamida OPISTHOCOMI. 93. Opisthocomida ACCIPITRES. 97. Pandionidæ GRALLE. 99. Rallidæ 100. Scolopacida 101. Chionidida 102. Thinocorida... 103. Parridæ... 105. Charadriidæ.. 108. Cariamida 109. Aramida 110. Psophiida 111. Eurypygidæ.. 113. Ardeida 114. Plataleidæ 115. Ciconiidæ ... 116. Palamedeida 117. Phoenicopterida VOL. II.-7 1111 All regions but Australian Cosmopolite Cosmopolite Cosmopolite Cosmopolite Cosmopolite Tropical regions. Cosmopolite |