GEKVID.E 31 



70. 2. 10. 82, So, and 85. Three frontlets, with antlers. 

 Formosa ; same collector. Purchased, 1870. 



93. 12. 5. 7. Skull and skm. Formosa; collected by- 

 Mr. P. A. Hoist. A menagerie specimen. 



Presented hj H. SeeboJim, Esq., 1893. 



93. 12. 5. 8. Skull and skin, young. Same locality and 

 collector. Same history. 



94. 11. 22. 7. Skull and skin, female. Tougapo, southern 

 Formosa; same collector. Piir chased, 1^^ 4:. 



8. 4. 1. 55. Skull, imperfect, and skin. Central Formosa ; 

 collected by Mr. A. Owston. Pnrchaseel. 



8. 4. 1. 57. Skull, imperfect posteriorly, with antlers, 

 and skin. Banhora, central Formosa ; same collector. 



Same history. 



IV. MUNTIACUS SINENSIS. 



Cervulus sinensis, Hilzheimer, Zool. Anz. vol. xxix, p. 297, 1905, 

 Ahh. Mus. NaturJc. Magdeburg, vol. i, p. 165, pi. ii, fig. 1, 1906, 



Cervulus bridgemani, Lydehher, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1910, p. 989, Abstr. 

 p. 38 ; Ward, Bccords of Big Game, ed. 6, p. 82, 1910, ed. 7, p. 82, 

 1914. 



Typical locality, probably the Hwai Mountains (Hwei- 

 Yas Shan), An-hwei (Ngau-hwei) district of Central China ; 

 the type specimen was a captive individual at Kiu-kiang, 

 near Hankau, to the south of the Yang-tsi. 



Type in Magdeburg Museum. 



Allied to the preceding species, but larger and darker ; the 

 shoulder- height being about 19 inches, and the general colour 

 blackish brown mingled with yellow, owing to the presence 

 of yellow subterminal rings to the otherwise dark hairs 

 of the middle of the back and rump ; in females the annu- 

 lated area includes the flanks ; whole forehead, occiput, and 

 basal two-thirds of backs of ears leather-yellow in males, 

 blackish in females ; black frontal streaks uniting into a 

 patch behind ears and continued posteriorly as the nuchal 

 stripe. Antler-pedicles, at least frequently, more divergent 

 than in 31. rccvesi, and nasals without lateral expansion at 

 first contact with maxilhe ; lachrymal pits as large as or 

 rather larger than orljits, with which they are in contact 

 only for a very small space, extending anteriorly some 



