58 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



Gazella arabica, Temminck, Esquiss. Zool. Guine, p. 193, 1853 ; 

 Tristram, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1866, p. 86, Faiona and Flora of 

 Palestine, p. 26, 1884, ; Fitzinger, Sitzher. k. Ak. Wiss. Wien, 

 vol. lix, pt. 1, p. 159, 1869 ; Blanford, Zool. Abyssinia, p. 261, 

 1870; Brooke, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1873, p. 544, 1874, p. 541; 

 Jentink, Cat. Osteol. Leyden Mus. {Mits. Pays-Bas, vol. ix) 

 p. 137, 1887, Cat. Mamm.' Leyden Mus. {op. cit. vol, xi) p. 168, 

 1892 ; W. L. Sclater, Cat. Mamm. Ind. Mtis. pt. ii, p. 458, 1891 ; 

 Ward, Becords of Big Game, p. 114, 1892, ed. 6, p. 251, 1910, 

 ed. 7, p. 249, 1907 ; Li/dekker, Horns and Hoofs, p, 179, 1893, 

 Great and Small Game of Europe, etc. p. 202, 1901 ; Sclater, 

 Proc. Zool. Soc. 1897, p. 812; Sclater and Thomas, Book of 

 Antelopes, vol. iii, p. 115, pi. lix, 1898 ; Anderson and de Winton, 

 Zoology of Egyx>t, Mamm. p. 342, 1902 ; 0. Neumann, Sitzher. 

 Ges. nat. Freunde, 1906, p. 244 ; Pocock, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1910, 

 p. 887. 



Ghasal (Arabic) ; Ariel, or Aiel (Syriac). 



Typical locality Farsan Island, on Arabian coast of 

 Eed Sea. 



Type in Berlin Museum. 



Differs from cuvieri by its rather smaller size, smoother 

 and darker coat, and smoky brown pygal and flank bands. 



Size medium, shoulder-height 24 or 25 inches. Horns 

 rather short and thick, nearly parallel, with a slight backward 

 curve, and a forward inclination at the tips; general colour 

 dark smoky fawn, darker than in any of the allied species ; 

 median face-stripe dark rufous fawn, with a black nose-spot ; 

 ears medium, l^rownish fawn on backs ; flank- and pygal 

 bands dark smoky brow^i ; limbs more rufous than body. 

 Basal length of skull about 6f inches, maximum breadth 3^, 

 length from muzzle to orbit 3| inches. Good horns measure 

 from 8^ to 10^ inches in lengtb, with a basal girth of from 

 4 to 4^, and a tip-to-tip intervnl of from 4 to 4^ inches. 



The range is restricted to western Arabia. 



The species has been divided into three local races, 

 distinguished as follows : — 



A. Flank-band present. 



a. General colour dark smoky fawn G. a. erlangeri, 



b. General colour pale sandy fawn like that of 



dorcas G. a. rueppelli. 



B. Flank-band wanting G. a. arabica. 



Whether these characters are constant, the specimens in 

 the Museum are insufli3ient to determine. 



