MADOQUIN i: 177 



94. 4. 9. 4. Skin. Forty miles south of Berbera. 



Same history. 

 9. 6. 1. 43-46. Four skins. Webi Valley, Sonialiland. 



Presented ly Dr. E. E. Drake-Brockman, 1909. 

 9. 6. 1. 47. Skin. Hara Oda, Somaliland. Same history. 



III. MADOQUA PIACENTINII. 



Madoqua piacentinii, Drake-Brockman, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1911, 

 p. 981, pi. Ivi, fig. 1. 



Typical locality Ghagaburis, near Obbia, Italian Somali- 

 land. 



Similar in size to M. swaynei, but with the grey grizzling 

 of the back line and distinct, without a buff suffusion. " The 

 neck is fairly grizzled all round, the pale throat and buff 

 chin-patches being completely cut off from the pinkish buff 

 of the chest. Apart from the fine grey grizzling, the most 

 distinctive patches are about the head. There is a bright 

 rufous diamond-shaped nose-patch, which stands out con- 

 spicuously on the grizzled head, while the terminal part of 

 the long hairs of the crest is of dull creamy buff. The hairs 

 of the crest, however, vary so much [in colour] in dik-diks, 

 that little importance can be attached to this feature " 

 (Drake-Brockman). 



11. 8. 2. 51. Skull, with horns, and skin. Ghagaburis, 

 Italian Somaliland. Type. 



Presented ~by Dr. E. E. Drake-Brockman, 1911. 



11. 8. 2. 55. Skull, with horns, and skin. Same locality. 



Same history. 



IV. MADOQUA PHILLIPS!. 



Madoqua phillipsi, Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1894, p. 327 ; Hoyos, 

 Zu den Aulihan, p. 185, 1895 ; Swayne, Seventeen Trips through 

 Somaliland, p. 318, 1895 ; Sclater and Thomas, Booh of Ante- 

 lopes, vol. ii, p. 175, pi. xxxi, fig. 2, 1895 ; Elliot, Field Mus. Zool. 

 Pub. vol. i, p. 115, 1897 ; LydeJcker, Great and Small Game of 

 Africa, p. 262, 1899, Game Animals of Africa, p. 189 ; Beddard, 

 Proc. Zool. Soc. 1909, p. 188; Ward, Records of Big Game, 

 ed. 6, p. 172, 1910 ; PococTc, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1910, p. 876 ; 

 Drake-Brockman, Mamm. of Somali, p. 68, 1910, Proc. Zool. 

 Soc. 1911, p. 978, pi. Iv, fig. 3. 



Typical locality Dobwein, northern Somaliland. 



A variable species, somewhat larger in size than average 



n. N 



