Siu© WATERBUCKS AND REEDBUCKS CHAP. 
smallest species do not exceed the dimensions of a Hare. None 
are really large. 
Tetraceros is an Indian genus characterised, as its name 
denotes, by the fact that it possesses four horns. It is the 
posterior pair which correspond to the single pair of Cepha- 
lophus. The anterior pair, which are much smaller and are 
sometimes absent, are a new pair. The female of this Antelope is 
hornless. Sheep are occasionally four-horned, and there is indeed 
a breed of such in Kashmir. <A  four-horned Chamois was 
described by the late Mr. Alston. 
The Klhpspringer, Oreotragus saltator, is the first type of a 
third section; as its name denotes, it is an Antelope with Goat- 
like habits, being found particularly among rocks. The horns 
are short and straight. This, the only species of the genus, is 
African in range, of which its Dutch name gives evidence. 
A specimen in the Zoological Society’s Gardens (as has been 
pointed out to me by Mr. Mercer) had the habit of depositing the 
secretion of the tear gland upon a mass of concrete in its 
enclosure, the secretion thus exuded forming a pointed heap of 
hardish matter. It may be that the object of this is to guide its 
fellows to its whereabouts. 
Ourebia is a less-known genus, larger in size, but with horns 
of the same character, though longer. 
The Grysbok and the Steinbok, genus Raphiceros, have similar 
horns. This as well as the last two genera have horns in the 
male only. 
One of the smallest of Antelopes belongs to an allied genus ; 
this is Neotragus pygmaeus. It is known as the Royal Antelope, 
a name apparently derived from Bosman’s statement that the 
negroes called it “the king of the harts.” Its horns are very 
small. The height of the animal is only 10 inches. Horns are 
present in the male alone. The last three genera are African. 
The Cervicaprine series, which is also African, includes the Water- 
bucks and Reedbucks, so called on account of their water-loving 
propensities. As in the last series, from which they are separated by 
Sclater and Thomas, but with which they are united by Flower, 
there are horns in the male only. These horns, though not twisted, 
are long. The typical genus is Cobus, of which there are eleven 
species. The Waterbuck, C. ellipsiprymnus, and the Sing-sing, 
C. wnetuosus, are perhaps the best-known species; the former is 
