46 BULLETIN 99, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 
Family PONGID. 
Genus PAN Oken. 
1812. Troglodytes Georrroy, Ann. Mus. Hist. Nat., vol. 19, p. 87. (T. niger=P. 
satyrus. Not of Vieillot, 1806.) 
1816. Pan OxKeEN, Lehrb. Nat., 3ter Theil, 2te Abth., pp. xi, 1230. (P. africanus= 
P. satyrus.) 
1820. Mimetes Leacu, Ann. Philos., vol. 16, p. 104. August. (Simia troglo- 
dytes=P. satyrus. Not of Hiibner, 1816.) 
1821. Mimeles Gray, Lond. Med. Repos., vol. 15, p. 279. (pro Mimetes.) 
1828. Theranthropus Brookes, Cat. Anat. & Zool. Mus. Joshua Brookes, p. 28. 
(Nomen nudum.) 
1838. Anthropopithecus BuaINvILLE, Ann. Frang., Paris, vol. 2, p. 360. (A. 
troglodytes=P. satyrus.) 
1842. Hylanthropus GuogEeR, Handb. Nat., vol. 1, pp. xxvii, 34. (H. troglo- 
dytes=P. satyrus.) 
1863. Pseudanthropos REicHENBACH, Vollstind. Nat. Affen, p. 191. (pro Troglo- 
dytes Geoffroy.) 
1866. Hngeco HanckeEL, Gen. Morph. Organism, vol. 2, p. cl. (EH. troglodytes=P. 
satyrus. ) 
1866. Pongo Harcxet, Gen. Morph. Organism., vol. 2, p. cl. (pro Troglodytes 
Geoffroy.) 
1884. Antropopithecus Amuaurino, Filogenia, p. xxxvill. (pro Anthropopithe- 
cus.) 
1895. Anthropithecus HarcKket, Syst. Phyl. Wirbelth., vol. 3, p. 600. (pro 
Anthropopithecus.) 
The chimpanzee occurs in isolated forests, along the western border 
of the region covered by this report, from southern Sudan to German 
Kast Africa. 
PAN SCHUBOTZI (Matschie). 
1914. Anthropopithecus schubotzi Marscui®, Sitz.-ber. Ges. nat. Freunde Berlin, 
p. 335. July. (Upper Ituri, between Kilo and Irumu, 2 days’ march 
northwest of southern extremity of Albert Nyanza, Belgian Congo; type 
in Berlin Museum.) 
Specimens.—Three, as follows: 
Uaanpa: Budonga Forest, 3 (Raven). 
This lot includes an adult female, skin and skull; a young female, 
skin and skull; and a young male preserved in alcohol. The adult 
female from Nabea, Budonga Forest, weighed 69 pounds and 
measured: Head and body, 780 mm.; hind foot, 210 mm. 
No less than 14 forms of the chimpanzee have now been described 
from central Africa from extreme southern Sudan to Lake Tangan- 
yika. The nearest type locality to the Budonga Forest is that of 
Pan schubotzi (Matschie). This species was described from the skull 
only of an adult male, and from the available material it is impossible 
to state if the Budonga Forest animal is the same or represents still 
another undescribed form. 
