We have mentioned elsewhere that three different mammalian faunas occur in Washington. These may be described as follows. 1. The Great Basin Fauna. This fauna is best typified by such genera as Perognathus and Dipodomys. Species that, at least in Washington, are confined to this fauna are:
The break between the Great Basin Fauna and the other two faunas is extremely sharp, probably as a consequence of a sharp break in the flora. 2. The Pacific Coastal Fauna. The mammals of the humid coastal district range from the Fraser River, British Columbia, southward to the vicinity of Monterey Bay, California. In Washington typical genera are Aplodontia, Neurotrichus and Scapanus. The following species are typical of the Pacific Coastal Fauna in Washington:
Some species which range outside this faunal area have strongly marked races confined to it. Glaucomys sabrinus oregonensis and Lepus americanus washingtonii are examples. The Pacific Coastal Fauna is a forest fauna. Like the Great Basin Fauna, it reaches its northern limit of distribution in Washington and is better represented farther south. Unlike the Great Basin Fauna, the break between the Pacific Coastal and the surrounding fauna is not sharp, because forests continue into the more boreal faunal areas to the north and east. There, some mingling of coastal and Rocky Mountain faunas occurs. 3. Rocky Mountain Fauna. If this fauna be thought of as including mammals of the Rocky Mountains of the United States, and also those of the subarctic faunal area to the east of these mountains in Canada, the species in Washington are as follows:
Of the three, the Great Basin Fauna is the most distinct. Only about twenty species which occur within the Great Basin Faunal Area, occur also outside of it in one or both of the two other faunal areas. Most of these twenty are subspecifically different in the Great Basin Faunal Area as contrasted with one or both of the other areas. Each of the other two areas has no less than 32 species that are not restricted to it. |