Vulpes
From Palaeos
<==Vulpes |--*V. vulpes Linnaeus 1758 | |--V. v. vulpes | `--V. v. fulva |--V. alopecoides |--V. bengalensis |--V. cana |--V. chama |--V. chikushanensis |--V. cinereoargenteus [=Urocyon cinereoargenteus] |--V. corsac |--V. ferrilata |--V. littoralis [=Urocyon littoralis] |--V. pallida |--V. pattisoni |--V. pulcher |--V. rueppelli |--V. velox [incl. V. macrotis] | |--V. v. velox | |--V. v. devia [=V. macrotis devia] | |--V. v. hebes | `--V. v. mutica [=V. macrotis mutica] `--V. zerda [=Fennecus zerda]
Inorganic: Fennecus zerda minilorientalus Okamura 1987
* Type species of generic name indicated
References
Burton, J. A., & V. G. Burton. 1987. Collins Guide to the Rare Mammals of the World. Collins: London.
Deng T., Wang X., Ni X. & Liu L. 2004. Sequence of the Cenozoic mammalian faunas of the Linxia Basin in Gansu, China. Acta Geologica Sinica (English Edition) 78 (1): 8-14.
Macdonald, D. W. 1984. Foxes. In All the World’s Animals: Carnivores (D. Macdonald, ed.) pp. 60-67. Torstar Books Inc.: New York.
Masui, M. 1976. Nihon no Doobutsu. Kogakukan: Tokyo.
Okamura, C. 1987. New facts: Homo and all Vertebrata were born simultaneously in the former Paleozoic in Japan. Original Report of the Okamura Fossil Laboratory 15: 347-573.
Savage, R. J. G. 1978. Carnivora. In Evolution of African Mammals (V. J. Maglio & H. B. S. Cooke, eds.) pp. 249-267. Harvard University Press: Cambridge (Massachusetts).
Credits
Christopher 06:49, 20 June 2008 (PDT)
