MACROPUS. 55 
Dimensions.—Head and body about thirty-one inches; tail 
about twenty-nine. 
Habitat.—Southern parts of West Australia. 
as, B.M. Catal. p. 40, pl. x. fig. 6 (rhinarium); 
Gould, “Mamm. Austr. ii. pls. xx., xxi. 
11. Macropus parryI, Bennett (1834). 
Parry's Wallaby. 
Size medium; form slender and graceful. Fur soft, almost woolly. 
General color above clear gray with a bluish tinge ; below, chin 
white, chest, belly, and inner sides of limbs grayish-white. Face 
markings distinct. Twodark whisker-marks. Cheek-stripe pure 
white, passing backwards to beneath the eye. A white nuchal 
stripe reaching to half-way down the neck, witha darker mark on 
each side of it. Ears long, white inside, basal half and extreme 
tips of outside brown, the rest white. Arms and legs gray, hands 
and feet becoming nearly or quite black on the digits. Tail very 
long, pale gray ; an inconspicuous black or gray crest below the 
tip. 
Dimensions.—Head and body about thirty-seven inches ; tail 
about thirty-two inches. 
Habitat.—Mountain Ranges of New South Wales and Queens- 
land. 
References.—Thomas, B. M. Catal. p. 39, pl. x. fig. 4 (fourth 
premolar) ; Gould, Mamm. Austr. ii. pls. xii., xiii. 
12. Macropus porsaLis, Gray, sp. (1837). 
Black-striped Wallaby. 
Size medium; forms light and delicate. Rhinarium wholly naked. 
General color gray ; rich rufous on the fore-quarters; below 
white or grayish-white. A narrow black line from the occiput to 
the centre of the back. Face-markings nearly obsolete; upper 
lip white ; a white spot at the base of the outer edge of the ear. 
Back of ears rufous darkening towards the tips. A distinct white 
hip-stripe, Arms rufous ; legs gray ; fingers and toes becoming 
black towards their tips. Claw on the central hind toe shorter 
than usual. Tail gray ; the extreme tip black. 
Dimensions.—Head and body about thirty-two inches; tail 
about twenty-four inches. 
Habitat.—Interior of New South Wales and Queensland. 
References,—Thomas, B.M. Catal, p. 37, pls. v. fig. 5 (rhinariwm) 
and x. fig. 3 (fourth premolar); Gould, Mamm. Austr. ii. pls. 
XXV1., XXVil. 
