96 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



suddenly compressed and sharply differentiated from the 

 palms, which are " edged." 

 Xo specimen in collection. 



T^~Bos cafTer hylseus. 



Bubalus caffer hylseus, Schwarz, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 8, vol. xiii, 

 p. 44, 1914. 



Typical locality Ja Valley, south-east Cameruns. 



Type in Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt-am-Main. 



Very similar to B. c. dielili, but smaller ; skull narrower, 

 especially in the region of the muzzle, which is propor- 

 tionately longer, with less prominent orbits ; horns small, 

 with narrow, flat palms, practically devoid of basal thicken- 

 ing, and more inclined backwards than in B. a. diehli, 

 although less so than in the type of B. c. nanus, and with 

 long, slender tips, lying in the main behind frontal plane, 

 and directed Ijackwards and slightly inwards and downwards 

 at extremities ; general colour of female deep I'eddish brown, 

 richer and clearer on flanks and under-parts, with more or 

 less black on face and the throat orange-brown ; neck with 

 black mane ; shoulders and thighs with an admixture of 

 black, and legs wholly black ; tail paler than back, with 

 black tip. This is the smallest of all the races ; the horns 

 lack the inward curvature of the type of B. c. nanus. 



No specimen in collection. 



T^.— Bos caffep adametzi. 



Bubalus adametzi, Matschie, Berbf. Inst. JagdJiunde, vol. ii, pp. 167 

 and 169, fig. 81, 1913. 



Typical locality Donga Valley, a tributary of tlie Benue, 

 Cameruns. 



Type in Berlin Museum. 



A red buffalo, with broad horns, of which the short tips 

 are directed mainly upwards, so as to be nearly parallel, and 

 to form approximately a right angle with the axis of the 

 basal half of the horn. 



No specimen in collection definitely referable to this 

 race. 



