162 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



10. 4. 20. 7. Skull, with horns. Takaungu, north of 

 Mombasa. Presented hy G. L. Muir, £Jsq., 1910. 



0. 2. 1. 42. Skin. Niain Hill, British East Africa ; 

 collected by A. J. Mackinder, Esq. Purchased, 1900. 



0. 2. 1. 43. Skull, with horns, and skin (head-skin 

 separate). Same locality and collector. Same history. 



3. 2. 16. 1. Skull and skiu, female. Koroma, Kikuyu 

 district, British East Africa. 



Presented by B. Crawshay, Esq., 1903. 



10. 1. 15. 5-6. Two skulls, with horns, and skins. 

 Mombasa, British East Africa. 



Presented by S. L. Hinde, Esq., 1910. 



C— Neotragus mosehatus deserticola. 



Nesotragus mosehatus deserticola, Heller, Smithson. Misc. Collect. 

 voL Ixi, no. 7, p. 2, 1913. 



Typical locality Maji-ya-chumvi, British East Africa. 



Type in U. S. National Museum. 



General colour considerably lighter than in typical race 

 — cinnamon-rufous, only a little darker on middle line of 

 back; white of throat interrupted only by very narrow 

 fulvous band ; legs light fulvous, with dark fuscous pasterns ; 

 tail whitish, with middle dorsal line dusky brown. 



Some of the specimens entered under heading of preceding 

 race may belong to this form. 



II. NEOTRAGUS (NESOTEAGUS) 

 LIVINGSTONIANUS. 



Nesotragus livingstonianus, KirJc, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1864, p. 657 ; Gray, 

 Cat. Buminants Brit. Mus. p. 31, 1872, Hand-List Bumi^iants 

 Brit.Mus. p. 100, 1873; Sclater and Thomas, Book of Antelo;pes, 

 vol. ii, p. 55, 1895 ; Thomas, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 7, vol. ii, 

 p. 317, 1898 ; W. L. Sclater, Fauna S. Africa, Mamm. vol. i, 

 p. 179, 1900 ; Lonnberg, ArUv Zool. vol. v, no. 10, p. 4, 1909. 



Nanotragus livingstonianus, Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1893, p. 237. 



Nesotragus livingstonei, LydeJcker, Great and Small Game of Africa, 

 p. 255, 1899. 



Neotragus livingstonianus, Lydehher, Game Animals of Africa, 

 p. 186, 1908 ; Ward, Records of Big Game, ed. 6, p. 182, 1910. 



Typical locality Shupanga, Zambesia. 



Size larger than in N. mosehatus, the shoulder-height 



