By VERNON BAILEY
[p.1] INTRODUCTION
In the preliminary survey of the wild life of North America information has
been gathered on the birds and mammals of the country at large, and provisional
maps of the life zones of the continent and subdivisions of it have been published.
Much of the general information gathered on birds and mammals has been given
in bulletins, circulars, and annual reports. The present publication is prepared
in accordance with the general plan of providing for definite subdivisions more
detailed information on the natural life zones and on the distribution and habits
of the native species of birds and mammals. Part I discusses the life zones
of North Dakota and Part II the mammals of the State. The publication of the
report on the birds will be arranged for separately.
The field work on which this report is largely based has been carried on in
North Dakota by the Biological Survey at intervals from the year following its
first organization as the Division of Economic Ornithology and Mammalogy in
1886. In 1912 a definite plan of cooperation for covering the State comprehensively
by field work and for gathering the specimens and notes necessary for a better
understanding of the animal life was entered into between the Biological Survey
and organizations in North Dakota, including the State university, the agricultural
experiment station, the agricultural and geological survey, and other State
educational institutions. Under this plan field work was carried on each season
during the subsequent four years.1 In addition to the Biological Survey material, the collections of specimens at the agricultural college at Fargo and of those at the biological laboratory at Devils Lake, with the many field notes and reports
gathered in connection with these, have been freely drawn upon in the preparation
of this report.
The Flora of North Dakota, by Herbert F. Bergman (1918), published in the Sixth
Biennial Report of the North Dakota Soil and Geological Survey, has been of
great assistance in the preparation of the life-zone report and the map. Also,
free use has been had of [p.2] a manuscript report on the Geographical
Distribution of North Dakota Plants, by O. A. Stevens, of the agricultural college.
Important material was obtained from notes and records from the private collections
of Morris J. Kernall, of the normal school, at Valley City; of Alfred Eastgate,
of the fish and game commission, at Devils Lake; of H. V. Williams, taxidermist,
at Grafton; of O. J. and M. C. H. Murie, of Moorhead, Minn.; and of other local
naturalists. Much valuable information has also been gathered from ranchers
and other residents of the State, and especially from early settlers familiar
with conditions during pioneer days.
Of published reports consulted, there may be mentioned the following: The journal
of Alexander Henry, the Younger (1897), in charge of the Northwest Company's
trading posts in the Red River Valley from 1800 to 1808, edited by Elliott Coues
and published in 1897; Lewis and Clark's (1893) journals of their trip up the
Missouri River through North Dakota, in 1803 and 1804, edited by Doctor Coues
in 1893; Maximilian's (Wied, 1839-1841) journal and notes made during his trip
up the Missouri River through North Dakota in 1833, his wintering at the Mandan
villages, and his return journey in 1834; John James Audubon's journals of his
trip up the Missouri River to Fort Buford in 1843, edited in 1897 by his granddaughter,
Miss Maria Audubon, and Doctor Coues; and also Audubon and Bachman's Quadrupeds
of North America, in which many of Audubon's North Dakota notes were first published
in 1851.
Elliott Coues, naturalist of the Northern Boundary Survey, in crossing the northern
part of the State in 1873, collected many specimens and has included his records
in various monographs and publications. J. A. Allen (1875, pp. 33-44), as naturalist
of the North Pacific Railroad Expedition of 1873, traveled from Fort Rice, on
the Missouri, west to the Yellowstone River in Montana and returned by nearly
the same route, and published a list of the mammals observed. Col. Theodore
Roosevelt (1900, 1919), from his cattle ranch in the Little Missouri Badlands
(1884 to 1886), gave a full and delightful account of the game and natural history
of the region in his "Hunting Trips of a Ranchman," "Hunting Trips on the Prairie,"
and "Hunting the Grisly." Ernest Thompson Seton, in his "Mammals of Manitoba"
(1886), and later in his "Life-histories of Northern Animals" (1909), has included
many important notes from the State. All these publications have been consulted.
In C. Hart Merriam's Report of the Ornithologist for 1887, there is a summary
of Bailey's (1888) field notes of the year, taken on a trip from Fargo to Pembina,
Devils Lake, the Turtle Mountains, and Fort Buford. In 1914 a brief preliminary
report on the Mammals of North Dakota, by the writer (1914), collaborating with
W. B. Bell, then of the agricultural college, and Melvin A. Brannon, of the
State university, was published as Circular No. 3 of the North Dakota Agricultural
Experiment Station. This was largely in the nature of an appeal for additional
information on the mammals of the State.
1 The field work of the Biological Survey was carried on with the assistance of H. E. Anthony, Alfred Eastgate, Stanley G. Jewett, Remington Kellogg, J. Alden Loring, Edward A. Preble, H. H. Sheldon, and H. V. Williams. In 1893 A. K. Fisher made a trip across the State and collected specimens and important mammal notes. The field work of the agricultural college was done by W. B. Bell, assisted by U. S. Ebner, H. V. Williams, and other students at the college. At the State university the work was begun by M. A. Brannon, with the assistance of Alfred Eastgate, and later continued by R. T. Young.
Scanned and formatted by Kathryn Thomas
North Dakota State University Libraries
June 3, 2002