NILS GYLDENSTOLPE, MALAYAN BIRDS AND MAMMALS. 31 



Royal Asiatic Society, No. 53, 1909, p. 47) as a point of 

 characteristic for S. v. peninsularis is certainly only a juve- 

 nile character, clearly visible even in the two yonnoj males 

 in the present collection. 

 Skull mesaurements: 



9 



Greatest median Jength • i 344 inm 



Greatest breadth i 131,5 » 



Antero-posterior length of bullse . . i 24 > 



Least interorbital breadth 69 >' 



Least postorbital breadtli 70 » 



Length of nasals mesially j — 



Palatal length to posterior margin of i 



foramina incisiva IGl 



Length of foramina incisiva .... i 15,7 

 Breadth of palate between last molar 25 > 



Length of upper molar series .... 117 » 



164 



31 

 112 



160 



The Malayan Maned Pig inhabits Peninsular Siarn and 

 the northern parts of the Malay Peninsula, beiog replaced 

 in the most southern parts by Sus vittatus 'peninsularis 

 Miller. 



14. Tragulus ravus Miller. — 1 o^ "^/* \^\6. Nose to 

 vent=470 mm.; Tail = 85 mm.; Hindf oot == 1 3 1 mm. 



Quite a typical specimen of this form, which inhabits 

 the southern parts of the Mala}^ Peninsula north to about 

 the Siamese Province of Bandon. In Peninsular, Central 

 and South-eastern Siam, Cambodia and Cochin China replaced 

 by the allied Tragulus kanchil ajfinis Gray. For measure- 

 ments vide: Kungl. Svenska Vetenskapsakademiens Hand- 

 lingar, Band 57, N:o 2, 1917, p. 53. 



Tryckt den 8 februari 1917. 



Uppsala 1917. Almqvist & Wiksells Boktryckeri-A.-B. 



