MassWildlife's
State Mammal List
James E. Cardoza, Massachusetts Division of Fisheries & Wildlife
Gwilym S. Jones, Center for Vertebrate Studies, Dept. Biology, Northeastern
University, Boston, MA
Thomas W. French, Massachusetts Division of Fisheries & Wildlife
Unlike birds,
mammals have received comparatively scant attention in Massachusetts.
Except for those of sporting or economic interest and a few highly
adaptable species such as the gray squirrel, most mammals were traditionally
ignored or overlooked. Misconceptions and difficulties in identification
have contributed to a general lack of interest, but a growing environmental
awareness has awakened a new realization of the diversity, abundance,
and values of the state's mammalian fauna. This list is intended
to broaden that awareness. Keep in mind that many species are nocturnal,
reclusive, or localized in distribution. Specific identification
may also require the examination of teeth or other characters which
are difficult to observe. Those species appearing on the current
list of Endangered, Threatened, and Special Concern species in Massachusetts
are indicated with an asterisk (*) . More on List
History and Bibliography follows the species
listing.
|
DIDELPHIMORPHIA:
Didelphidae (New World Opossums)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Virginia Opossum |
Didelphis virginiana |
Statewide except Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
INSECTIVORA:
Soricidae (Shrews)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Masked Shrew |
Sorex cinereus |
Statewide. |
| Rock (Long-tailed) Shrew* |
Sorex dispar |
Reported only from Berkshire County.
Listed as Special Concern. |
| Smoky Shrew |
Sorex fumeus |
Central and western Massachusetts. |
| Pygmy Shrew |
Sorex hoyi |
One record, Berkshire County, 1991. |
| Common Water Shrew* |
Sorex palustris |
Reported from Berkshire, Franklin, Hampden, Hampshire and Worcester
counties. Listed as Special Concern. |
| Northern Short-tailed Shrew |
Blarina brevicauda |
Statewide |
Talpidae
(Moles and Shrew-moles)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Hairy-tailed Mole |
Parascalops breweri |
Northeastern, central, and western Massachusetts.
The putative type locality of "Martha's Vineyard"is undoubtedly erroneous.
|
| Eastern Mole |
Scalopus aquaticus |
Southern Connecticut River Valley, southern Plymouth County, and
Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket counties. |
| Star-nosed Mole |
Condylura cristata |
Statewide except Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
CHIROPTERA:
Vespertilionidae (Vesper Bats)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Eastern Small-footed Bat* |
Myotis leibii |
Reported from Berkshire and Franklin Counties. Listed as Special
Concern. |
| Little Brown Bat |
Myotis lucifugus |
Statewide. |
| Northern Long-eared Bat |
Myotis septentrionalis |
Probably occurs statewide; hypothetical on Nantucket. |
| Indiana Bat* |
Myotis sodalis |
Probably extirpated from Massachusetts; last recorded 1939. Reported
from Berkshire, Hampden, and Worcester counties. Listed as Endangered.
|
| Eastern Red Bat |
Lasiurus borealis |
Migratory. May occur statewide. |
| Hoary Bat |
Lasiurus cinereus |
Migratory. Apparently occurs statewide; we have records for 8 counties.
|
| Silver-haired Bat |
Lasionycteris noctivagans |
Migratory. May occur statewide. |
| Eastern Pipistrelle |
Pipistrellus subflavus |
Statewide. Status hypothetical in Dukes and Nantucket counties.
|
| Big Brown Bat |
Eptesicus fuscus |
Statewide. Status hypothetical in Dukes and Nantucket counties.
|
LAGOMORPHA:
Leporidae (Hares and Rabbits)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Eastern Cottontail |
Sylvilagus floridanus |
Statewide. Introduced, principally S. f. mallurus and S.
f. mearnsii. |
| New England Cottontail |
Sylvilagus transitionalis |
Formerly occurred statewide; distribution now spotty. Probably extirpated
from Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
| European Rabbit |
Oryctolagus cuniculus |
Widely introduced in the 1920's and 1930's. Feral populations still
exist on certain islands in Boston Harbor. |
| Snowshoe Hare |
Lepus americanus |
Statewide except Dukes and Suffolk counties. Also widely introduced,
principally L. a. americanus. |
| Black-tailed Jackrabbit |
Lepus californicus |
Introduced. Now found only on Nantucket island. |
| European Hare |
Lepus europaeus |
Unsuccessfully introduced in Berkshire County and elsewhere prior
to the 1930's. Now apparently absent. |
RODENTIA:
Sciuridae (Tree Squirrels and Marmots)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Eastern Chipmunk |
Tamias striatus |
Statewide except Nantucket County. |
| Woodchuck |
Marmota monax |
Statewide except Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
| Eastern Gray Squirrel |
Sciurus carolinensis |
Statewide. Recently introduced to Nantucket. |
| Red Squirrel |
Tamiasciurus hudsonicus |
Statewide except Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
| Northern Flying Squirrel |
Glaucomys sabrinus |
Northeastern, central, and western Massachusetts. |
| Southern Flying Squirrel |
Glaucomys volans |
Statewide except Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
Castoridae
(Beavers)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| American Beaver |
Castor canadensis |
Northeastern, central, and western Massachusetts. |
Muridae
(Mice, Rats, Voles, and Lemmings)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| White-footed Mouse |
Peromyscus leucopus |
Statewide. |
| Deer Mouse |
Peromyscus maniculatus |
Central and western Massachusetts. |
| Norway Rat |
Rattus norvegicus |
Introduced. Statewide. |
| Black Rat |
Rattus rattus |
Introduced. Formerly occurred in the vicinity of large cities and
seaports. Now eradicated. |
| House Mouse |
Mus musculus |
Introduced. Statewide; distribution spotty. Apparently absent from
Martha's Vineyard. |
| Southern Red-backed Vole |
Clethrionomys gapperi |
Statewide except Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket. |
| Meadow Vole |
Microtus pennsylvanicus |
Statewide. The vole of Muskeget Island, Nantucket County, is sometimes
considered a separate species, M. breweri. |
| Woodland Vole |
Microtus pinetorum |
Statewide except Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
| Common Muskrat |
Ondatra zibethicus |
Statewide except Nantucket County. |
| Southern Bog Lemming* |
Synaptomys cooperi |
Reported from Franklin, Hampshire, Plymouth, and Worcester counties.
Probably occurs elsewhere in the state in areas of suitable habitat.
Listed as Special Concern. |
Zapodidae
(Jumping Mice)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Meadow Jumping Mouse |
Zapus hudsonius |
Statewide. |
| Woodland Jumping Mouse |
Napaeozapus insignis |
Central and western Massachusetts. |
Erethizontidae
(New World Porcupines)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Common Porcupine |
Erethizon dorsatum |
Northeastern, central, and western Massachusetts. |
CARNIVORA:
Canidae (Dogs, Foxes, and Wolves)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Domestic Dog |
Canis familiaris |
Statewide; feral. |
| Coyote |
Canis latrans |
Nearly statewide, including the Elizabeth Islands. Absent from Martha's
Vineyard and Nantucket. |
| Gray Wolf |
Canis lupus |
Extirpated from the state by about 1840; one later record, Berkshire
County, 1918, probably an escaped captive. U.S. Endangered as C.
l. lycaon. |
| Red Fox |
Vulpes vulpes |
Distribution in presettlement period not well known. Widely introduced
from Europe in the 1700's. Now statewide except Martha's Vineyard
and Nantucket. |
| Common Gray Fox |
Urocyon cinereoargenteus |
Statewide except Dukes, Nantucket, and possibly Suffolk counties.
|
Ursidae
(Bears)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Black Bear |
Ursus americanus |
Central and western Massachusetts. |
Odobenidae
(Walruses)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Walrus |
Odobenus rosmarus |
Accidental vagrant. Recorded in Essex (1937) and Plymouth (1734)
counties. |
Phocidae
(Earless or Hair Seals)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Harp Seal |
Phoca groenlandica |
Annual vagrant; recorded in Barnstable, Dukes, Essex, Nantucket,
Plymouth and Suffolk counties. |
| Ringed Seal |
Phoca hispida |
Rare vagrant along coast, Essex to Middlesex counties. |
| Harbor Seal |
Phoca vitulina |
Coastal Massachusetts. |
| Gray Seal |
Halichoerus grypus |
Resident in Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket county waters. Also
recorded elsewhere in the state as a northern vagrant. |
| Hooded Seal |
Cystophora cristata |
Annual vagrant; recorded in Barnstable, Dukes, Essex, Nantucket,
and Plymouth counties. |
| Bearded Seal |
Erignathus barbatus |
One record, Essex County, 2002. |
Procyonidae
(Raccoons, Coatis, and Ringtails)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Common Raccoon |
Procyon lotor |
Statewide except Nantucket County. |
Mustelidae
(Weasels, Minks, Martens, and Otters)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| American Marten |
Martes americana |
Extirpated. Formerly central and western Massachusetts. Last known
record, Worcester County, 1880. One vagrant from Vermont taken in
Worcester County, 1992. A 1993 Worcester County record is believed
to have been an escape from a fur farm. |
| Fisher |
Martes pennanti |
Statewide except Dukes and Nantucket counties. Range expansion into
Barnstable County has occurred recently (2006). |
| Ermine |
Mustela erminea |
Statewide except Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
| Long-tailed Weasel |
Mustela frenata |
Statewide except Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
| American Mink |
Mustela vison |
Statewide except Nantucket and possibly Suffolk counties. The Sea
Mink, M. v. macrodon, now extinct, formerly occurred in coastal
Massachusetts. |
| Wolverine |
Gulo gulo |
Extirpated. Reported to occur in western Massachusetts prior to
1835. |
| Northern River Otter |
Lontra canadensis |
Statewide except Nantucket and possibly Suffolk counties. One record
on Nantucket, 1984. |
Mephitidae
(Skunks)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Striped Skunk |
Mephitis mephitis |
Statewide except Nantucket County. |
Felidae
(Cats)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Domestic Cat |
Felis catus |
Statewide; feral. |
| Mountain Lion (Cougar) |
Puma concolor |
Extirpated; last known record, Hampshire County, ca. 1858. Recent
sight records are suspicious and unverified. U.S. Endangered as F.
c. couguar. |
| Canada Lynx |
Lynx canadensis |
Extirpated. Recorded Hampshire County (1866) and Worcester County
(1884-85). Questionable reports from 1930's may be misidentified bobcats.
At least 2 records in 1991 were wandering lynx released in New York.
|
| Bobcat |
Lynx rufus |
Northeastern, central, and western Massachusetts. |
CETACEA:
Balaenopteridae (Rorqual Whales)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Minke Whale |
Balaenoptera acutorostrata |
Inshore waters; stranded Barnstable, Essex, Norfolk, Plymouth, and
Suffolk counties. |
| Sei Whale* |
Balaenoptera borealis |
Stranded in Barnstable (1910 & 1974) and Plymouth (1948) counties.
Listed as Endangered. |
| Blue Whale* |
Balaenoptera musculus |
One questionable stranding, Essex County, 1755. Recent near-shore
records. Listed as Endangered. |
| Fin Whale* |
Balaenoptera physalus |
Formerly common offshore. Stranded Barnstable, Dukes, Essex, and
Plymouth counties. Listed as Endangered. |
| Humpback Whale* |
Megaptera novaeangliae |
Stranded in Barnstable, Dukes, Essex, Nantucket, Norfolk, and Suffolk
counties. Listed as Endangered. |
Balaenidae
(Right and Bowhead Whales)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Northern [Black] Right Whale* |
Eubalaena glacialis |
Formerly stranded frequently. Now observed in waters of Barnstable,
Dukes, Essex, Nantucket, and Plymouth counties. Listed as Endangered.
|
Monodontidae
(Belugas and Narwhals)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| White Whale (Beluga) |
Delphinapterus leucas |
Observed in waters of Barnstable, Dukes and Essex counties; killed
in Barnstable County (prior to 1904) and stranded in Dukes County
(1983). |
Delphinidae
(Dolphins and Pilot Whales)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Bottle-nosed Dolphin |
Tursiops truncatus |
Inshore waters; stranded Barnstable and Plymouth counties. |
| Pantropical Spotted Dolphin |
Stenella attenuata |
Two records, coastal Massachusetts. |
| Striped Dolphin |
Stenella coeruleoalba |
Pelagic; reported from Barnstable, Dukes, Essex, Nantucket and Plymouth
counties. |
| Saddle-backed (Common) Dolphin |
Delphinus delphis |
Reported from Barnstable, Dukes and Nantucket counties. |
| Atlantic White-sided Dolphin |
Lagenorhynchus acutus |
Coastal waters; stranded in Barnstable, Dukes, Essex, Nantucket
and Norfolk counties. |
| White-beaked Dolphin |
Lagenorhychus albirostris |
Coastal waters; reported from Barnstable and Essex counties. |
| Risso's Dolphin (Grampus) |
Grampus griseus |
Offshore; stranded Barnstable, Dukes and Norfolk counties. |
| False Killer Whale |
Pseudorca crassidens |
One record, Barnstable County, 1997. |
| Short-finned Pilot Whale |
Globicephala macrorhychus |
One record, Dukes County, 1980. |
| Long-finned Pilot Whale |
Globicephala melas |
Occurs in schools, frequently stranded. Reported from Barnstable,
Dukes, Essex, and Nantucket counties. |
| Killer Whale |
Orcinus orca |
Offshore waters; stranded in Barnstable and Dukes counties and observed
in Plymouth and Suffolk county waters. |
Phocoenidae
(Porpoises)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Harbor Porpoise |
Phocoena phocoena |
Coastal waters; reported from Barnstable, Bristol, Dukes, Essex,
Plymouth, and Suffolk counties. |
Ziphiidae
(Beaked Whales)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Goose-beaked Whale |
Ziphius cavirostris |
Pelagic; strandings in Barnstable (1958 & 1961) and Dukes (1963)
counties. |
| North Atlantic Bottle-nosed Whale |
Hyperoodon ampullatus |
Pelagic; stranded in Barnstable (1869) and Essex (1923) counties.
|
| North Atlantic Beaked Whale |
Mesoplodon bidens |
Two records, Nantucket County (1867 & 1973). |
| Dense-beaked Whale |
Mesoplodon densirostris |
One record, Essex County, 1898. |
| Gervais' Beaked Whale |
Mesoplodon europaeus |
One record, Barnstable County, 1997. |
| True's Beaked Whale |
Mesoplodon mirus |
One record, Nantucket County, 1982. |
Physeteridae
(Sperm and Pygmy Sperm Whales)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Pygmy Sperm Whale |
Kogia breviceps |
Offshore waters; stranded in Barnstable, Dukes, Essex, Norfolk and
Plymouth counties and recorded in Bristol County waters. |
| Sperm Whale* |
Physeter catodon |
Formerly abundant offshore. Strandings in Barnstable, Dukes, Essex,
and Nantucket counties. Listed as Endangered. |
ARTIODACTYLA:
Cervidae (Deer, Elk, and Moose)
|
| Common Name |
Scientific Name |
Distribution |
| Fallow Deer |
Dama dama |
Introduced, Dukes County. None reported since the early 1980s. |
| Wapiti (Elk) |
Cervus elaphus |
Extirpated. Occurred infrequently in western Mass. in colonial times.
Last known record, Worcester County, ca. 1732. |
| White-tailed Deer |
Odocoileus virginianus |
Statewide with the apparent exception of Suffolk County. |
| Moose |
Alces alces |
Now breeds locally in northeastern, central, and western Massachusetts;
vagrants also occur. |
STATE MAMMAL LIST INFORMATION AND
HISTORY
The first formal list of Massachusetts mammals was prepared by Edward
Hitchcock in 1835 (Catalogues of animals and plants. Pages 525-652.
in A report on the geology, mineralogy, botany, and zoology of Massachusetts.
J.S. & C. Adams, Amherst, Mass.). Hitchcock recognized 45 mammal "species".
However, his list included one fish (the swordfish) and three mammals
now recognized as subspecies, leaving 41 species as now known. The present
list recognizes 101 species. This includes 58 native land mammals, 33
marine mammals, seven introduced species, and three feral domestic species.
Of these, seven have been extirpated, three unsuccessfully introduced,
and four seals recognized as vagrants, leaving 60 mammals (exclusive of
27 cetaceans) potentially present in the state. The list does not include
the caribou (Rangifer tarandus) and the bison (Bison sp.)
which have been recorded in the state from archaeological evidence, but
undoubtedly did not occur after European settlement. It also does not
include the fox squirrel (Sciurus niger) which was of doubtful
occurrence in Massachusetts. Early references to this squirrel probably
confused it with melanistic gray squirrels (S. carolinensis). At
least 10 other mammals have escaped or been released in the state (see
Fauna Series #6, 1993); however, none of these have established populations.
State records are accepted on the basis of specimen or photographic evidence,
including those reported in the technical literature or otherwise known
to personnel of the Division of Fisheries and Wildlife. Certain cetaceans
and extirpated species are accepted without specimen evidence due to post-mortem
examination by competent scientists or identifiable descriptions in the
historical literature.
Distributional information, in most instances, is given by county or
region and is based on published records, cooperator reports, and on file
notes of the Division of Fisheries and Wildlife. Distributions are not
necessarily definitive, however, and in many instances reflect the need
for further investigations of certain species.
Nomenclature follows Jones, C. et al. (Revised check-list of North American
mammals north of Mexico, 1997. Occ. Pap. Mus. Texas Tech. Univ. 173:1-21,
1997), except for marine species which follow Wilson and Reeder (Mammal
species of the world, 2nd ed., Smithsonian Inst. Press, 1993). Subspecific
names are omitted from this edition, but may be found in the second edition
or in Hall (The Mammals of North America, 2nd ed., J. Wiley, 1981).
A selected bibliography of Massachusetts and regional
faunal lists dealing is listed below.
Persons interested in reporting locality information for species on
this list should contact MassWildlife's
Natural Heritage and Endangered Species Program (508-389-6300 x200)
for rare animal observation forms. Locality information for such species
remains confidential except for official purposes.
All native mammals are protected by state law (M.G.L. c. 131, §
5) and may not be hunted, trapped, captured, or possessed except under
license or permit or when otherwise allowed by statute or regulation.
Queries may be addressed to MassWildlife, 251 Causeway
Street, Boston 02114, or MassWildlife, Field Headquarters,
1 Rabbit Hill Road, Westborough 01581 or email:
Mass.Wildlife@state.ma.us
STATE MAMMAL LIST BIBLIOGRAPHY
The following bibliography contains all the regional and state and most
local mammalian faunal lists pertaining to Massachusetts known to us.
It does not contain listings referable to only a single species or to
a few species. It also does not contain references dealing only with archaeological
records. Some of the references listed contain errors and it would be
wise to check the original sources, wherever possible. All publications
listed have been seen by us. The historical references cited are not,
strictly speaking, faunal lists but they contain much data on the larger
mammals of the Colonial period not elsewhere available. Faunal references
for the approximate period 1675-1850 are scanty, but some information
may be derived from town and county histories and other early records.
HISTORICAL REFERENCES:
- Josselyn, J. 1672. New-England's rarities discovered. G. Widdowes,
London, 114pp. [Reprinted by Wm. Veazie, Boston, 1865]
- Josselyn, J. 1674. An account of two voyages to New England. G. Widdowes,
London, 279pp. [Reprinted by Wm. Veazie, Boston, 1865]
- Morton, T. 1637. New English Canaan or New Canaan. J.F. Stam, Amsterdam,
188pp. [Microfilmed by University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Mich., on reel
967 of the series "English Books, 1475-1640". Also reprinted in several
editions]
- Wood, W. 1634. New England's prospect. Tho. Cotes for J. Bellamie,
London, 98pp. [Microfilmed by University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Mich.,
on reel 1162 of the series "English Books, 1475-1640". Also reprinted
in several editions]
REGIONAL REFERENCES:
- Allen, G.M. 1904. Fauna of New England. 3. List of the mammalia. Occ.
Pap. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. 7:1-35.
- Black, A.A. 1891. The land mammals of New England. A thesis for an
advanced degree. Burleigh and Flynt, Printers to the state, Augusta,
Me., 48pp.
- DeGraaf, R.M., G.W. Witman, and D.D. Rudis. 1981. Forest habitat for
mammals of the Northeast. U.S. Dept. Agriculture, Forest Service, n.p.,
182pp.
- Godin, A.J. 1977. Wild mammals of New England. Johns Hopkins Univ.
Press, Baltimore, 304pp.
- ______. 1981. Wild mammals of New England: field guide edition. DeLorme
Publ. Co., Yarmouth, Me., 207pp.
- Goodwin, G.G. 1936. Big game animals in the northeastern United States.
J. Mamm. 17:48-50.
- Grayce, R.C. 1957. Checklist of New England mammals. Bull. Mass. Audub.
Soc. 41(1):15-24, 26.
- Hamilton, W.J., Jr. 1943. The mammals of eastern United States. Comstock
Publ. Co., Ithaca, N.Y., 432pp. (2nd ed., Hamilton and J.O. Whitaker,
1979; 3rd ed., Whitaker and Hamilton, 1998)
- Harper, F. 1929. New England's land mammals. Nature Mag. 13(5):311-314,
345.
- Jordan, D.S. 1929. Manual of the vertebrate animals of the northeastern
United States, inclusive of marine species. World Book Co., Yonkers-on-the
Hudson, N.Y., 446pp.
- Katona, S.K., V. Rough, and D.T. Richardson. 1993. A field guide to
whales, porpoises, and seals from Cape Cod to Newfoundland (4th ed.)
Smithsonian Press, Wash., D.C., 316pp.
- Leatherwood, S., D.K. Caldwell, and H.E. Winn. 1976. Whales, dolphins,
and porpoises of the western North Atlantic: a guide to their identification.
N.O.A.A. Tech. Rept. N.M.F.S. Circ. 396, 176pp.
- Miller, G.S., Jr. 1900. Key to the land mammals of northeastern North
America. Bull. N.Y. State Mus. 38(8):60-160
- True, F.W. 1904. The whalebone whales of the western North Atlantic.
Smithsonian Contrib. Knowl. 33:1-322. [Reprinted, 1983, Smithsonian
Inst. Press]
- Waters, J.H. and C.J. Rivard. 1962. Terrestrial and marine mammals
of Massachusetts and other New England states. Published by the senior
author, Standard-Modern Printing Co., Brockton, Mass., 151pp.
STATE REFERENCES:
- Allen, J.A. 1869. Catalogue of the mammals of Massachusetts; with
a critical review of the species (Cetacea). Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. 1:143-252.
- Emmons, E. 1840. A report on the quadrupeds of Massachusetts. in
Reports on the herbaceous plants and on the quadrupeds of Massachusetts.
Folsom, Wells, and Thurston, Cambridge, 277+86pp.
- Hitchcock, E. 1835. Catalogues of animals and plants. Pages 525-652
in A report on the geology, mineralogy, botany, and zoology of
Massachusetts. J.S. & C. Adams, Amherst, Mass., 702pp.
- Roth, C. 1978. An introduction to Massachusetts mammals. Mass. Audubon
Society, Lincoln, 50pp.
- Samuels, E.A. 1862. State cabinet. Pages 137-195 in Ninth Ann.
Rept. Sec. Mass. State Board Agric., W. White, State Printer, Boston,
303pp.
COUNTY REFERENCES:
- Andrews, J.C. and M.B. Epstein. 1980. Mammals of Nantucket county.
Maria Mitchell Assoc., Nantucket [3]pp.
- Bowditch, A.J. 1965. Terrestrial mammals of Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts,
with special reference to Peromyscus. Smith College, Northampton,
Mass., 64pp.
- Brown, C.E. 1913. A pocket list of the mammals of eastern Massachusetts,
with especial reference to Essex county. Peabody Acad. Science, Salem,
Mass., 53pp.
- Crane, J. 1931. Mammals of Hampshire county, Massachusetts. J. Mamm.
12:267-273.
- Jones, G.S. and K. Driscoll. 1979. Inventory of the mammals of Martha's
Vineyard. Felix Neck Nat. (1979):15-30.
- Keith, A.R. 1969. The mammals of Martha's Vineyard. Dukes County Intelligencer
11(2):47-98.
- Parker, H.C. 1938. The mammalian geography of Worcester county, Massachusetts.
M.S. thesis, Clark Univ., Worcester, Mass., 77pp.
- ______. 1939. A preliminary list of the mammals of Worcester county,
Massachusetts. Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. 41:403-415.
- Thompson, E.H. 1884. Worcester county mammals. Worcester Daily Spy,
6 May, page 6. [As of 1980, this newspaper had not been microfilmed
and the bound set, very fragile, in the Worcester Public Library may
be the only source for this reference]
- Warfel, H.E. 1937. Notes on some mammals of western Massachusetts.
J. Mamm. 18:82-85.
- Wetherbee, D.K. 1945. The birds and mammals of Worcester county, Massachusetts.
Century Press, Worcester, 192pp.
- Zube, E.H. and C.A. Carlozzi, eds. 1966. Selected resources of the
Island of Nantucket. An inventory and interpretation. Univ. Mass., Amherst,
Coop. Ext. Serv., Publ. No. 4, 135pp.
LOCAL REFERENCES:
- Anderson, K.S. n.d. Mammals. In Hockomock, wonder wetland.
Mass. Audubon Society, Lincoln, [34]pp.
- Caron, L.M. 1958. A study of the small mammal populations of three
communities in the Amherst, Mass., region. M.A. thesis, Univ. Mass.,
74pp.
- Chase, H.B., Jr. 1972. Mammals of the Great Woods. Page 26 in
The Great Woods. Mass. Audubon Society, Lincoln, 31pp.
- Copeland, M. 1912. Notes on the mammals of Mt. Greylock, Massachusetts.
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 25:157-162.
- Hatt, R.T. 1930. Annotated list of the mammals. Pages 636-645 in
The relations of mammals to the Harvard Forest. Roosevelt Wildl. Bull.
5(4):625-671.
- Holt, D.W., R.C. Humphrey, and J.P. Lortie. 1987. The mammals of Monomoy
National Wildlife Refuge. Cape Nat. 15:63-69.
- Lawrence, B. and C.P. Lyman. 1974. List of mammals of eastern Massachusetts.
Harvard Univ., Mus. Comp. Zool., Concord Field Sta., Guide to Res. No.
7, 23pp.
- McDaniel, M.D. 1964. A small mammal survey on parts of Cadwell Memorial
Forest in Pelham, Massachusetts. M.S. thesis, Univ. Mass., Amherst,
79pp.
- Stone, C.E. 1937. Fifty years with the birds of Lunenburg, Mass. Annotated
list. Mimeographed. 53pp. On file at Ritter Memorial Library, Lunenburg,
Mass. [Despite the title, pages 47-53 are a list of the mammals of the
area]
- Sumner, F.B., R.C. Osburn, and L.J. Cole. 1911 [1913]. A biological
survey of the waters of Woods Hole and vicinity. Section III. A catalogue
of the marine fauna of Woods Hole and vicinity. Bull. U.S. Bur. Fish.
31(2):547-860. [Mammalia, pages 780-782]
Questions? Comments? Email us! Mass.Wildlife@state.ma.us
Date Last Updated: May 19, 2006
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