Mammals from Bali and Mysol. 505 



to be new. Tliese are mainly from Bali, an island whence 

 but few mammals have come to Europe. As might be 

 expectoJ, they are all closely alliiul to Javan forms, but are 

 in each case subspecifically separable. 



The Mysol kani^aroo proves also to need a special name. 



A full list of Mr. Stresemanll^s collections will be given 

 later in connection witii the general account of the expedition. 



All the specimens referred to have been most generously 

 presented to the British Museum by Mr. Stresemann. 



Tupaia Javanica halina^ subsp. n. 



Simihar in essential characters to true javanica, but 

 smaller, and the colour — in January — of the comparatively 

 warmer browner tone of August ^aya/i/ca, the latter being in 

 January clearer olive-grey. 



General colour above grizzled brown, nearest to " mummy- 

 brown " ; under surface clay-colour on belly, the hairs slaty 

 ba^^ally, buflfy on throat and axilla?. Shoulder-streak and 

 orbital rings well marked. Hands and feet brown, not so 

 grey as \n javanica; inner side of hind limbs washed with 

 buffy whitish. Tail like body, the middle of the under 

 surface suffused with cinnamon. 



Dimensions of the type (measured in the flesh) : — 



Head and body 117 mm. ; tail 153 ; hind foot 31 ; ear 15. 



(Skull lost.) 



Bab. Gunong Bratan, Bali. Alt. 4000'. 



Ti/pe. Adult female. B.M. no. 13. 3. 6. 12. Original 

 number 10. Collected 27th January, 1911. 



This Tupaia, collected in January, is strikingly different 

 from any of the long series from Java obtained in that same 

 month by Mr. Shortridge and presented to the Museum by 

 Mr. Balston. Curiously enough, however, it is not unlike 

 one killed in August at Buitenzorg, but what the Bali form 

 turns to in August we have as yet no evidence to show. In 

 size the Bali Tupaia has a hind foot from 2-1 mm. shorter 

 than that oi true javanica. 



Sciurus notatus stresemanni^ subsp. n. 



Most nearly allied to -S'. w. madurcBj Thos., but the colour 

 throughout much more buffy. 



General colour above approaching " clay-colour," less grey 

 than in madurce, paler and more buffy than in true notatus. 

 Under surface rather more strongly ochraceous than in 

 madurce, much more so than in notatus. Head everywhere 

 more warmly suffused with buffy or clay-colour, so that the 



