PECORA. THE GOAT TRIBE. 57 



reous at its lower part ; near the end there is a bar of black, and the 

 point is yellow. Ears covered with long hair, and pale yellow in the 

 inside. Hairs on the face black, tipped with ash-colour; and the 

 spaces bordering on the eyes and mouth black. Chest, belly, and 

 insides of thighs of yellowish white. Rump perfectly white. 



Found in a wild state in seyeral of the mountainous districts of 

 Scotland. 



Cervus cornibus ramosis teretibus erectis: summitate 6i~ 

 jida; corpore fusco-rufo. Cervus capreolus. Linn. Syst. 

 Nat. Gmel. i. p. 180. Erxleben, Syst. regn. animal, gen. 

 30, sp. 7, p. 313. 



Cervus capreolus. Roe. Turton, i. p. 110. Kerr, p* 

 302. 



Capreolus.* Brisson, regn. animal, p. 89. 



Cervus minimus, capreolus, cervulus caprea, cornibus 

 brevibus ramosis, annuatim deciduis. Klein, quadr. disp. 

 p. 24. 



Capreolus vulgo. Raii. Syn. quadr. p. 89. 



Caprea, capreolus, sive dorcas. Gesner, p. 296. 



Le Chevreuil. Buff. Sonn. xxiv. p. 156, tab. 8. Cuv, 

 Tab. Element, p. 160. 



Roe. Penn. Quadr. i. p. 120. Penn. Brit. Zool. i. p. 

 49, tab. 4. 



Common Roe. Shaw's Gen. Zool. ii. p. 291. 



Roe Deer. Smellie's Buffon, iv. p. 120, tab. 56, 57. 



THE GOAT TRIBE. Horns hollow, turning up- 

 wards and backwards, compressed, rough : front-teeth in 

 the lower jaw eight: no tusks : chin bearded. CAPJRA. 

 Linn. Syst. Nat. Gmel. gen. 30, i. p. 193. 



Horns unbranched, transversely wrinkled, permanent, 

 standing almost close at the base. W. B. 



39. THE 



