Microtus pennsylvanicus funebris [Dale], Jour. Mamm., 21:338, August 13, 1940.
Type.—Obtained at Coldstream. 1,450 ft., 3-1/2 miles southeast of Vernon. British Columbia, by T. P. Maslin. Jr., on August 2, 1937; type in Museum of Vertebrate Zoölogy.
Racial characters.—Size medium; color reddish brown; fur short, harsh; skull small and narrow.
Measurements.—Three males from Newport, Pend Oreille County, average: total length 165; length of tail 40; hind foot 20; ear 15.3.
Distribution.—Northeastern Washington, west to Conconully ([Taylor] and [Shaw], 1929: 24) and east to Newport (W. W. D.).
Remarks.—Specimens from northeastern Washington are larger and darker, more reddish and less gray, than drummondii. They are larger, more reddish, and have relatively narrower skulls, than modestus from Colorado and Idaho. They closely resemble funebris from south-central British Columbia, and are best referred to that race. [Rand] (1943: 123) considers funebris a synonym of modestus but I feel is incorrect in doing so.
Microtus pennsylvanicus kincaidi [Dalquest]
Microtus montanus kincaidi [Dalquest], Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 54:145, September 30, 1941.
Type.—Obtained at The Potholes, 10 miles south of Moses Lake, Grant County, Washington, by W. W. [Dalquest] on March 24, 1940; type in Museum of Vertebrate Zoölogy.