252 PITHECUS 



The above alcoholic specimen has been made up into a skin, and 

 in color is precisely like the example called apoensis by Dr. Mearns, 

 except that the feet and hands are darker. The distance separating the 

 Sulu Island Cagayan, in the Sulu Sea near Borneo, from Luzon and 

 Mindanao, favors the supposition that the Macaque is distinct from 

 the Philippine, P. philippinensis. 



PiTHECUS PUMILUS (Miller). 



Macacus pumilus Miller, Proc. Wash. Acad. Scien., II, 1900, p. 

 241. 



Type locality. Pulo Bunoa, Tambelan Islands. Type in United 

 States National Museum. 



Genl. Char. Size small, tail longer than head and body. 



Geogr. Distr. Pulo Bunoa and Pulo Wai, Tambelan Islands ; and 

 Pulo Siantan and Jimaja, Anambas Islands. 



Color. Superciliary stripe grayish white ; face covered with dark 

 grayish brown hair; space between and above eyes flesh color; head 

 above, hind neck, and upper parts of body, ochraceous rufous and 

 black; outer side of thighs similar but paler; outer side of arms 

 ochraceous buff and black ; sides of neck, throat, under parts and inner 

 side of limbs yellowish white; tail at base above, like back, grading 

 into olive gray, beneath yellowish white ; hands like outer side of arms ; 

 feet like outer side of legs, a smoky buff. Ex type in United States 

 National Museum. 



Measurements. Total length, 990; tail, 559; foot, 120. Skull 

 total length, 110; occipito-nasal length, 90; intertemporal width, 38 

 Hensel, 77.1; median length of nasals, 20.3; palatal length, 40.8 

 length of upper molar series, 39.2 ; length of mandible, 79.5 ; length of 

 lower molar series, 35.9. 



This is a small Macaque with the coloring on the upper parts 

 similar to Erythrocebus, a rich dark tawny and black hues mingled. 



PiTHECUS suLUENsis (Meams). 



Cynomolgos ( !) suluensis Mearns, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 

 XXVIII, 1905, p. 430. 



Type locality. Crater Lake Mountain, Island of Sulu, Philippine 

 Islands. 



Color. None given. "Larger than P. mindanensis and differently 

 colored ?" 



