THE BANDED WALLABIES. 61 
Agreeing with D. /umholtai in having the general colour of the 
body, limbs, and tail grey, and the face dark, it may be distin- 
guished therefrom by having the whole of the back and sides 
dark grizzled grey, instead of the back pale grey and the flanks 
white. 
Distribution. New Guinea, 
IV. DORIA’S TREE-KANGAROO, DENDROLAGUS DORIANUS. 
Dendrolagus dorianus, Ramsay, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. South 
Wales, vol. viil. p. 17 (1883); Thomas, Cat. Marsup. 
Brit. Mus., p. 98 (1888). 
Characters.—A large, imperfectly-known species, with the tail 
considerably shorter than the head and body, characterised by 
the forward direction of the fur of the whole of the back. The 
general colour is uniform dark brown, with the face paler, and 
- the tail black. 
Distribution.-—South-eastern New Guinea. 
THE BANDED WALLABIES. GENUS LAGOSTROPHUS, 
Lagostrophus, Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc., 1886, p. 544. 
Form as in Macropus; nose naked; hind feet covered 
with long bristly hairs, concealing the claws; back cross- 
banded. 
BANDED WALLABY. LAGOSTROPHUS FASCIATUS. 
Kangurus fasciatus, Péron and Lesueur, Voyage Terres Austr., 
vol, i., p. 114 (1807). 
Halmaturus fasciatus, Goldfuss, Isis, 1819, p. 268. 
Macropus fasciatus, Fischer, Synops. Mamm., p. 284 (1829). 
Lagorchestes fasciatus, Gould, Mamm. Austral., pl. lvi. (1849). 
Lagostrophus fasciatus, Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1886, p. 544; 
Cat. Marsup. Brit. Mus., p. 104 (1888). 
