164 CATALOGUE OP UNGULATES 



and chest white ; fore-legs with a black line in front, which 

 is wanting in hind-pair ; white patches at sides of knees 

 and above hoofs ; tail uniformly fulvous brown above. 



12. 2. 10. 1-2. Two skulls, with horns, and skins, 

 immature. Boran country, southern Abyssinia, 180 miles 

 north of Marsabit. Preseyitcd hy Lord Cranworth, 1912. 



12. 2. 10. 3. Skull and skin, immature female. Same 

 locality. Same history. 



13. 3. 2. 3-5. Three skulls, with horns, and skins, 

 immature. Baber Valley, southern Abyssinia. 



Presented hy L. C. G. ClarU, Esq., 1913. 



L.— Tragrelaphus scriptus bor. 



Tragelaphus bor, Heuglin, Eeise Nordost-Afrika, vol. ii, p. 122, 1877 ; 

 Lunnberg, Arhiv Zool. vol. ii, no. 15, p. 5, 1905 ; Matschie, 

 Sitzber. Ges. nat. Freuncle, 1912, p. 544. 



Tragelaphus scriptus bor, Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1900, p. 806; 

 Lonnberg, Arkiv Zool. vol. ii, no. 15, p. 5, 1905 ; LydekJcer, 

 Oame Animals of Africa, p. 324, 1908 ; Ward, Becords of Big 

 Game, ed. 6, p. 308, 1910, ed. 7, p. 306, 1914; Roosevelt, African 

 Game Trails, p. 486, 1910 ; Schwarz, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 8, 

 vol. xiii, p. 41, 1914. 



Typical locality Bor, on the White Nile, Bahr-el-Ghazal. 



Neck fully haired ; dorsal crest black, diffuse ; general 

 colour pale brownish, with from three to five transverse 

 white stripes, of which two only are conspicuous ; upper longi- 

 tudinal band very short or wanting, lower broken up into 

 spots ; white leg-markings well developed. Basal length 

 of skull 7^ inches (193 mm.). Female bright rufous, with 

 nape and middle of back fuscous brown, nine or ten stripes, 

 and imperfect upper and lower longitudinal bands. 



0. 11. 7. 16. Skin, female. Eighty miles north-east of 

 Lado. Presented hy Dr. Donaldson Smith, 1900. 



2. 9. 2. 2. Skin and loose horns. Wau, Bahr-el-Ghazal. 

 Presented hy Capt. A. E. Haynes, 1902. 



M.— Tragelaphus scriptus pictus. 



Tragelaphus scriptus i^ictus, Schwarz, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 8, 

 vol. xiii, p. 41, 1914. 



Typical locality Dugnia, Lower Shari Valley, Lake Chad 

 district. 



