Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley.
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Transcription
RIBBLE,
D.O.
1980
Journal
(8)
Hastings Reservation, Monterey Co., CA.
June (cont.) Trapline St. ID# SPP. Sex, Age, Breeding
I 1. 1952. P.californicus, ♂, mature, nonbreeding
234-126-26-24. Left ear has two notches, and one small notch. Tail tip dark. Escaped to stream bank.
1. 1931. P.californicus, ♀, mature, pregnant, white tail tip RECAPTURE
Escaped to hole in base of deciduous tree (willow spp?), SE of station
2. 1953 P.californicus, ♂, early mature (head gray), nonbreeding
223-121-26-24. Tail dark. Escaped to stream bank, NW of station.
3. 1953 P.californicus, ♂, probably juvenile (all gray) RECAPTURE
Escaped under log, 2.5m from station to NE.
3 1954 N.fuscipes, ♀, subadult. Vulva slightly open, mostly brown color w/some grey. Smaller animal, < 300mm total length. Escaped down to stream bank to what looks like beginnings of nest.
4 1955 P.boylii, ♂, mature, nonbreeding all brown, tail stripe ½ cm
178-89-22-19 ± 18cm. Hole in middle of left pinnae. Species has habit of rolling its tail in circular motion d3. Escaped to hole in ground by trap.
5 1956 P.boylii, ♀, mature, vulva intermediate. Tail broken, hole in right pinnae
145*- I let this animal go because it seemed to be dying. It was 0.16, and escaped to the stream bank
7 1957 P.californicus, ♂, mature, nonbreeding. Big animal. Dark tail tip
229-128-28-24. Escaped to stream bank
7 1936 P. californicus, ♂ RECAPTURE, White tail tip. Escaped to stream bank
RECAPTURE
8 1939 P.californicus, ♀, mature, vulva open w/crust, doesn't look parasitic
Dark tail tip. Escaped away from stream in grassland, stopped 5m away in grass and stood still with nose down in grass. I shooed her around with my pen, and she finally retreated under poison oak.
8 1958. P.boylii, ♂, early mature, nonbreeding
175-94-22-20. Brown w/some gray. Escaped to stream bank.