REDUNCIXyE 219 



8. 1. 15. 1. Skull, with horns. Binder Valley, Blue 

 Nile. Presented hi/ J. Hoiuland Ward, Esq., 1908. 



0. 11. 7. 17. Skull, with lioriis. North of Lake Rudolf. 

 Presented hjj Dr. Donaldson Smith, 1900. 



12. 11. 1?>. ?K Mounted head. Binder Valley, Blue Nile ; 

 shot by Capt. jM. E. T. Gunthorpe. The horns are of the 

 character of typical cottoni. 



Presented hy Col. E. J. GitnthorjM, 1912. 



12. 11. 13. 4. ^Mounted head. Same locality and 

 donor. The horns are somewhat intermediate between 

 those of the preceding and the following specimen. 



Same history. 



12.11.13.5. Mounted head. Same locality and collector. 

 The tips of the horns show the strongly marked inbending 

 characteristic of donaldsoni. Sccme history. 



F.— Redunca redunca nigeriensis. 



Cervicapra bohor nigeriensis, Blaine, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 8, 



vol. xi, p. 290, 1913. 

 Cervicapra redunca tvpica, Alexander, From Niger to Nile, vol. ii, 



p. 392, 1907, nee '^Lydehher. 



Typical locality Ibi, Northern Nigeria. 



Similar in size to r. vxtrdi, but with the body-colour of a 

 more uniform shade of fawn, as in r. redunca. General colour 

 light fulvous fawn, slightly darker along middle line of Ijack, 

 and paler on flanks, where it merges into white of under- 

 parts ; a pale dusky stripe down front of lower portion of 

 fore-legs. Hair short and close, not waved. Horns with the 

 main axis depressed below level of frontal plane ; stout at 

 the base, then slightly curving downwards and outwards, and 

 finally hooking forwards at the tips, although not so strongly 

 as in r. redunca or r. hohor ; good specimens range from 9 to 

 10| inches in length, with a girth of from 4 J to Qh, and a 

 tip-to-tip interval of from 4^ (in one instance 2|-) to 

 73 inches. Length of skull 10^ inches (256 mm.), of upper 

 series of cheek-teeth 63 mm. 



7. 7. 8. 234. Skull, with horns. Ibi, Northern Nigeria ; 

 Alexander-Gosling Expedition. Type. 



Presented hy the Alexander-Gosling Expedition, 1907. 



