we KEKE 197 
Var.? Horns very large, larger than those of the Wapiti. 
Hab. Assyrian Mountains; Lord Arthur Hay. 
Var.? Half-fed specimens. 
Bai! de Corse, Buffon, H. N. vi. 95. t.11; Cuvier, Oss. Foss. iv. 
oad Elaphus Corsicanus, Eral., from Buffon. 
Elaphus Corsicanus, J. Brookes, Cat. Mus. 61. 
Cervus Mediterraneus, “ Blainv, ”; Pucheran, Comptes Rendus, 
1849, 779. 
Cervus ‘Corsicus, Bonaparte; Gervais. 
Hab. Corsica. 
Buffon observes, of the Cerf de Corse, which has been regarded 
as a variety to be distinguished by the smallness of its size, that 
he “‘ believes the size to depend on the scarcity of nourishment ; 
for when moved to better pastures, in four years they become 
higher, larger, and stouter than the Common Stag.”—Buffon, 
Hist. Nat. vi. 95. 
Var. Algeria. Caudal disc to base of the tail pale brown. Horns 
large. 
Cerf commune d’Algerie, Geoffroy in Jardin des Plantes, Paris, 
1851. 
Hab. Algeria. Living in Garden of Plants, Paris. 
3. Cervus BARBARUS. The BARBARY DEER. 
Dark brown, obscurely white spotted, with a very indistinct, 
greyish brown, broad dorsal lme; with a pale yellow spot ex- 
tended considerably above the base of the tail. Back of haunches 
white, with a dark stripe on each side. 
Cervus Barbarus, Bennett, Catal. Gardens Zool. Soc. 
Bush Goat (Al Wassai), Moors, see Griffith A. K. v.775; Fra- 
zer, Zool. Typica, t.; Gray, Knowsley Menag.; Proc. Zool. 
Soc. 1850. 
Hab. Coast of Barbary; Tunis. 
OsTEOLOGY. 
Horns (of animal in Zool. Soc. Gardens). Tunis. 
Chiefly distmguished from the common Stag, or the Algerian 
variety of it, by its smaller size, stouter form, and more perma- 
nently spotted fur. 
4. Cervus WA.uLIicHII. The Bara SincGaA or Mort. 
Brown, with a very large white spot on the rump, extending 
on back of the haunches, and far above the base of the tail. The 
horns with two basal and one or two apical branches. 
