THE HY^NA DOG IO7 



3. Specimen figured in Cassells' "Natural History." 

 Very irregular black brindling ; ill- defined pale areas 

 on neck and centre of body ; hind-leg white poste- 

 riorly from middle downwards. Terminal half of tail 

 apparently j)/^//<9wz>/2, not white. Since it is labelled 

 "cynhysena" it may have been one of Delegorgue's 

 specimens, or perhaps the example which Delalande 

 brought home in 1815. A somewhat similar pale 

 specimen is now in the Liverpool Museum. Cape 

 race. 



4. Example figured in the Rev. J. G. Wood's 

 " Natural History." A white litura at junction of 

 neck with shoulder and another on the hind quarters. 

 Various white marks without liturae. The black 

 is flecked sparingly over the hide as small spots, 

 not as brindling. Facial stripe present; throat-ruff 

 white. Cape race. 



5. Example shown in Mivart's " Monograph of 

 the Canidae": mainly ochreous \:iv& sparingly flecked 

 with black. Hardly any white areas at all. N^o 



facial streak. Cape race. 



6. Animal figured in the " Royal Natural History." 

 A very handsome example, with well-proportioned 

 colouring ; a good deal of black above and a good 

 deal of white below. Black ruff on throat, and 

 a good deal of black on legs; interfacial line 

 present, tail-tip apparently yellowish. Mozambique 

 race. 



