KEDUNCIN.E 249 



94. 3. 8. 9. Frontlet and horns. Same locality and 



collector. Same history. 



0. 8. 17. 1. Skull, with horns, and female head-skin. 



Angola. Presented by G. W. Pen-rice, Esq., 1900. 



IV. KOBUS (ONOTEAGUS) EOBEKTSI. 



Cobus robertsi, Rothschild, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1907, p. 237 ; Lydekker, 

 Game Animals of Africa, Suppl. p. 12, 1911. 



Typical locality district between Lakes Mweru and 

 Bangweolo, Northern Ehodesia. 



Type in Tring Museum. 



Stated to differ from typical lechwe by the presence of 

 black patches on sides of lower part of neck and fore portion 

 of shoulders, as well as by admixture of black hairs on 

 cheeks and sides of throat and neck. The horns are smaller 

 and less massive, with broader and more approximated 

 ridges. 



As this lechwe occurs in company with the true lechwe, 

 it must be regarded if anything more than a melanistic 

 phase as a species rather than a race. 



13. 11. 26. 1. Body- skin. Luena Valley, tributary of 

 the Kalungwisi, N.E. Ehodesia. 



Presented by G. Elaine, Esq., 1913. 



13. 11. 27. 2. Skull, with horns, and skin. Loango 

 Valley, N.E. Ehodesia. 



Presented by 0. E. Wynne, Esq., 1913. 



V. KOBUS (ONOTEAGUS) SMITHEMANI. 



Cobus smithemani, LydeJcTcer, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1899, p. 982, pi. Ixxi, 

 Game Animals of Africa, p. 222, 1908 ; Rothschild, Powell- 

 Cotton's Sporting Trip through Abyssinia, p. 466, 1902 ; Letcher, 

 Big Game N.E. Rhodesia, p. 189, 1911. 



Cobus smithemanni, Rothschild, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1907, p. 237. 



Typical locality borders of Lake Mweru, Barotsiland, 

 Northern Ehodesia. 



Nearly related to K. leche, but with the hair of back 

 reversed, and head, upper-parts, and fronts of limbs more or 

 less completely blackish brown in adult bucks ; elsewhere 



