328 



UNGULATA 



tributed over Europe and Western Asia, being one of the species 

 found in the British Isles. The male is somewhat over two feet 

 in height at the withers, of a dark reddish-brown colour in summer, 

 with a white patch on the rump. The small antlers are approxi- 

 mated at their bases, and consist of a rugged beam rising vertically 

 for some distance, then bifurcating, and the posterior branch again 

 dividing. The Roe dates from the Pleistocene period. Extinct 

 Deer from the Continental Pliocene have been provisionally referred 

 to Capi-eolus. 



Hydropotes. 1 No antlers in either sex. Lachrymal fossa deep 

 and short (Fig. 134); lachrymal vacuity of moderate size. Orbits 



PIG. 134. The left lateral view of the skull of a male Chinese Water Deer (Hydropotes 

 inermis), with the wall of the maxilla cut away to show the root of the canine. J natural 

 size. (From Sir V. Brooke, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1872, p. 524.) 



small and but slightly prominent. Auditory bulla much inflated. 

 Angle of mandible much produced backwardly (Fig. 134); alveolar 

 margins of mandible in diastema sharp and everted. Canines of 

 male very large, and slightly convergent. Vertebrae : C 7, D 1 2, 



L 6, S 4, C 10. No tufts 

 on metatarsals. Foot 

 glands small in fore feet, 

 deep in hind ones. 



The Chinese Water 

 Deer (H. inermis) is the 

 sole representative of this 

 genus. In the absence of 

 antlers and the large can- 

 ines of the male it resem- 

 bles Moschus, although very 



Fio. 135.-Upper surface of the brain of Hydropotes diff erent in Other respects. 

 inermis. (From Garrocl, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1877, p. 792.) Thus the brain (Fig. 135) 



has the hemispheres much 



convoluted, as in other Cerviiue, and approximates to that of Pudua ; 

 1 Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1870, p. 90. 



