62 NEW YORK ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 



toises from the Galapag^os Islands, exhibited during the summer 

 in a yard surrounding the open-air cages of the apes, were 

 swarming with Balantidii, but which had not caused the reptiles 

 the least inconvenience. Since this discovery the giant tor- 

 toises have been most rigidly isolated. The health of the ba- 

 boons, monkeys, and lemurs is excellent, in spite of the crowded 

 condition in which they had to live prior to December 22d. 



Believing that members of the Society will be interested in 

 knowing fully the zoological value of the collection of primates 

 on exhibition in the Primates' House on the opening day, the 

 following list of species is offered : 



PRIMATE COLLECTION. 



Z/s/ of Species Represented in the Ne7v York Zoological Park 

 on January /, iSg2. 



Anthropoid Apes. 



Orang-Utan -. Siinia satyrus Borneo 



Gray Gibbon Hylobates leucisctis " 



Baboons. 



Gelada Theropithecus gelada S. Abyssinia 



Hamadryas Papio hamadryas North Africa 



East African " tlioth ibeanus East ' ' 



Long- Armed Yellow ". langheldi N. E. " 



Golden " babnin North " 



Mandrill " mormon ^Vest " 



Old World Monkeys. 



" Black Ape " Cynopithecus niger Celebes 



Magot : " Barbary Ape " Macacits inuus North Africa 



Japanese Red-Faced Monkey . " fuscatus Japan 



Pig-Tailed Monkey " nemestrinus East Indies 



Lion-Tailed " " silenus India 



Rhesus Monkey " rhesus " 



Common Macaque " cynojnolgus East Indies 



Bonnet Monkey " pileatus Ceylon 



LTnidentified (Young) " ? East Indies 



Entellus Monkey Scmnopithccus entcllus India 



White-Collared Mangabey Cercoeebus collaris Africa 



Sooty Mangabey " fuliginosus " 



Moustache Mangabey Cercopithecus cephus " 



White-Nosed Mangabey " petaurista .... " 



Mona Monkey " mona •- 



