Specimens examined.—Total, 74, all from Utah, distributed as follows: Iron County: 11 mi. SE Lund, 50 (46 RH; 4 MVZ); 4-1/2 mi. NW Summit and 6 mi. W Parowan, 9 (RH); 10 mi. W Cedar City, 1 (USAC); 5 mi. W Cedar City, 1 (USAC); Cedar City, 2 (BYU). Washington County: Diamond Valley, 9 (RH); N end Mountain Meadows, 2 (RH).

Dipodomys ordii fetosus [Durrant and Setzer]

Dipodomys ordii fetosus [Durrant] and [Hall], Mammalia, 3:14, March, 1939.

Type.—Female, adult, no. 48451, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California; 2 mi. N Panaca, 4,800 ft., Lincoln County, Nevada; obtained on June 24, 1931, by Ward C. Russell, original no. 1658.

Range.—Southeastern Nevada and western Beaver and Millard counties, Utah; marginal occurrences in Nevada, 2 mi. SE Pioche, 15 mi. WSW Sunnyside, 16-1/2 mi. WSW Sunnyside, 14 mi. NNE Sharp, 8-1/2 mi. NE Sharp, 15 mi. S Groom Baldy, 10 mi. E Crystal Spring, Panaca; in Utah, Pine Valley, 50 mi. W Milford and 5 mi. S Garrison.

Diagnosis.—Size medium (see measurements). Color dark, entire dorsal surface (16") between Pinkish Cinnamon and Cinnamon-Buff, purest on sides and flanks with strong admixture of black in upper parts; cheeks white; pinnae of ears, arietiform markings, plantar surfaces of hind feet, dorsal and ventral stripes of tail, blackish. Skull medium in size; rostrum wide and short; interorbital region narrow; braincase but slightly vaulted; lacrimal processes large; zygomatic arches weak and bowed laterally; pterygoid fossae large and subcircular.

Comparisons.—From Dipodomys ordii utahensis, D. o. fetosus differs as follows: Hind foot longer; color lighter; skull larger; rostrum, relatively as well as actually, shorter and wider; nasals longer and wider; interorbital region narrower; braincase less vaulted; interparietal region narrower; auditory bullae more inflated laterally, posteriorly and ventrally; foramen magnum smaller.

From Dipodomys ordii celeripes, D. o. fetosus differs as follows: Larger; color darker; arietiform markings present; skull larger; rostrum longer and wider; nasals longer and less inflated distally; interorbital region wider; auditory bullae somewhat more inflated; zygomatic arches more robust.

For comparisons with Dipodomys ordii monoensis, D. o. columbianus, D. o. pallidus, D. o. panguitchensis and D. o. cinderensis see accounts of those subspecies.