278 Lloyd's natural history. 



Young Male. — Similar to the adult, but the mane shorter, and 

 more curly ; and the brown colour, wherever it occurs in the 

 male, is lighter in colour. 



Female. — Coloured like the young male, but smaller than the 

 adult male, and with shorter hair, darker at the tips; hair 

 longest between the shoulders ; loins paler than in the male ; 

 nude chest and throat-spaces united into one, which is carun- 

 culated along its borders, and without white hairs along the 

 margins ; callosities carunculated. 



Distribution. — Southern Abyssinia ; in the provinces of Here- 

 mat and Godjan. 



HaMtc. — The habits of the " Gelada," as it is named by the 

 natives of its own country, are similar to those of the Baboons 

 i^Cynocephalus). They live in large companies, and when full- 

 grown — the males especially — are very ferocious, pugnacious, 

 and dangerous. It is a common habit of these animals to roll 

 down stones from the rocky cliffs amid which they live, upon 

 any approaching animal — the Arabian Baboon being an especial 

 object of their animosity. Their food consists of all sorts of 

 fruits, as well as grass, and the cultivated crops of the natives. 

 They are chiefly found in barren rocky regions, ascending the 

 mountains' to an altitude of from 7,000 to 8,000 feet above 

 the sea. 



n. THE DUSKY GELADA. THEROPITHECUS OBSCURUS. 



The7'opithecus obscuriis, Heuglin, Act. Acad. Leop., xxx., Nach- 

 trag, p. 10 (1863); Schl., Mus. Pays Bas, vii., p. 107 

 (1876). 



? Theropithecus setiex^ Schimper et Puch., Rev. Zool., 1857, p. 



?44- 



