Evaluation of Characters
The following paragraphs treat the characters listed by Howell, Ellerman, and Bryant, and such additional characters as I have found useful in characterizing the genera and subgenera of chipmunks. Some of the findings, I think, illustrate how study of such mammalian structures as the baculum, malleus, and hyoid apparatus—structures that seem to be little influenced by the changing external environment—clarifies relationships, if these previously were estimated only from other parts of the anatomy of Recent specimens.
The structural features and characters to be discussed, or listed, below may be arranged in three categories as follows: 1) Characters in which the subgenera Eutamias and Neotamias agree but are different from the genus Tamias; 2) Characters in which the subgenus Eutamias and the genus Tamias agree but are different from the subgenus Neotamias; 3) Structural features that are too weakly expressed to be of taxonomic use.