RUPICAPRIN^E 207 



Cernas griseus, Blanford, Fauna Brit. India, Mamm. p. 516, 1891. 

 (?) Cenias cinereus, Blanford, loc. cit. 1891. 



(?) Kemas xanthodeiros, ] 



/ox TT . , . Heude, Mem. Hist. Nat. Emp. Chinois, 



(?) Kemas pmchomanus, } , . Q4a 1ftcu * 



vol. ii, p. 243, 1894. 

 (?) Kemas iodinus, J 



Urotragus griseus, LydeJcker, Great and Small Game of India, etc. 



p. 140, 1900, Game Animals of India, etc. p. 155, 1907 ; Ward, 



Records of Big Game, ed. 6, p. 344, 1910. 

 (?) Urotragus cinereus, LydeJcker, Great and Small Game of India, 



etc. p. 139, 1900, Game Animals of India, etc. p. 156, 1907 ; 



Ward, Eecords of Big Game, ed. 6, p. 344, 1910. 

 Urotragus evansi, Lydekker, Zoologist, ser. 4, vol. ix, p. 83, 1905, 



Game Animals of India, etc. p. 153, 1907. 

 Naemorhedus griseus, PococTc, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1908, p. 201 ; Allen, 



Bull. Mus. Harvard, p. 202, 1912. 



SZE-CHUAN GORAL. 



Typical locality Moupin, Sze-chuan, western China. 



Tail relatively long (about 5 inches exclusive of hair), 

 moderately bushy, with terminal tuft black on upper and 

 lower surfaces ; coat comparatively short, not woolly ; throat- 

 patch more or less yellow, at least on the margins ; black 

 stripe on front of fore-legs stopping short of knees, but 

 continued down outer side of shanks to fetlocks. General 

 colour very variable, ranging from ashy grey to yellowish 

 brown, with a distinct dark dorsal stripe; the feet bring 

 either white or rust-colour. 



The geographical range, if all the above-mentioned forms 

 are rightly included under one heading, extends from Sze- 

 chuan to Yun-nan and Burma on the one side, and to the 

 Ichang district of southern China on the other. 



8. 10. 9. 15. Skin, mounted. Sze-chuan. 



Presented ly J. W. Brooke, Esq., 1908. 



8. 10. 9. 14. Skin. Same locality. Same history. 



8. 10. 9. 16-17. Scalp-skin and skull, with horns. 

 Same locality. Same history. 



8. 10. 9. 18. Young skin. Same locality. Same history. 



6. 1. 25. 1. Head, mounted. Ichang, Central China. 



Presented by A. E. Leatham, Esq., 1906. 



96. 11. 4. 7-8. Two skins and skulls, with horns. 

 Loung-nyou-fou, Sze-chuan ; collected by Berezowski, 

 referred to by Pocock, op. cit., p. 199. Purchased, 1896. 



* All these three are from Sze-chuan, but arnouxianus is from 

 Chekiang ; vide Pocock, op. cit., 1898, p. 201. 



