125 
they were killed. A very young fawn (perhaps hardly born), which 
was brought home from the Cape by M. Verreaux, is darker, and the 
reddish tint extends over nearly the whole body. 
Thunberg described the South African species, but says that there 
is a specimen in the Stockholm Museum, brought by Afzelius from 
Sierra Leone, which agrees with his animal; so he evidently did not 
observe the difference between the two species. 
14. CEPHALOPHUS MELANORHEUS. The BLACK-RUMPED 
GuEVEI. 
Grey brown ; throat and sides paler; rump and upper part of tail 
black ; chin, chest, abdomen, back and front edge of thighs and under 
part of tail white ; narrow streak over the eyes whitish ; feet like the 
back ; fur soft, pale grey, with intermixed rather rigid black hairs. 
Cephalophus melanorheus, Gray, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 1846 ; 
Knowsley Menag. 11. t. 10.—C. Philantomba, Gray, Cat. Mamm. B. 
M. 163 (not H. Smith). 
Inhabits Fernando Po (J. Thompson, Esq.). Brit. Mus. 
This species is coloured like the Guevei from W. Africa, but smaller, 
and have the soft fur and interspersed black hair of the Cape Guevei, 
C. monticola, but they are easily known by the black mark on the 
rump. 
15. CEPHALOPHUS PUNCTULATUS. The GRISLED GUEVEI. 
Dark fulvous brown; sides and legs rather paler; narrow streak 
over the eyes and inside of ears pale brown; chin, throat, chest, belly 
and front of thighs and under part of tail white ; hair grey at the base, 
with brown ends and yellow subterminal rings ; crown and upper part 
of tail darker; feet pale, varied. 
Cephalophus punctulatus, Gray, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 1846 ; 
Knowsley Menag.-11. t. 11. f. 1. 
Inhabits Sierra Leone. Brit. Mus. A young specimen presented 
by Colonel Sabine, R.E. 
It is at once known from the other Gueveis by the fulvous colour 
which is produced by the yellow subterminal rings of the hairs. 
Colonel H. Smith indicates a species under the name of C. Philan- 
tomba, but so indistinctly, that it is impossible to know for what it is 
intended. 
16. CePpHALOPHUS WHITFIELDII. The WHITE-FOOTED GUE- 
VEI. 
Yellowish ash ; shoulders, outside of limbs and hinder parts of back 
rather darker ; ears and crown pale yellowish brown ; streak over the 
eyes, cheeks, throat, belly, inside of the limbs and ring round the feet 
above the hoof ashy white ; hair ashy grey; of the back brown at the 
end, with a yellow tip. 
Cephalophus Whitfieldii, Gray, Knowsley Menag. 12. t. 11. f. 2. 
Inhabits Gambia (Mr. Whitfield). Mus. Brit. Young. 
Smaller than the Grisled Guevei, and much paler and yellower. 
