94 MAMMALIA. 



tf Fur not grisled. Hair grey, yellow tipped. Head broad. 

 Muffle small, scarcely extending beyond the nostril behind. 

 Tail only slightly bushy. N. and W. Africa. 



2. ELEOTRAGUS REDUNCUS. The WONTO or NAGOR. 



Head broad. Horns conical, thick at the base, diverging. 

 Fulvous brown, rather pale on the sides. Hair soft, grey, yellow 

 tipped, all in regular order. Chin, throat, spot under the ear and 

 over the eye, inside of limbs, under side of tail and lower side 

 of the body, white. Front of legs sometimes blackish. 



Antilope redunca, Pallas, Spic. i. 8 (horn Buffon, Nagor, xii. 13); 



Gmelin, S. N. i. 184. 

 A. vera redunca, Licht. Eerl. Mag. vi. 170; Schreb. Saugth. 



1200. t. 265. 

 A. Cervicapra redunca, Blainv. B. S. Phil. 1816, 75; Desm. 



Mam. 458 ; Fischer, Syn. 464. 631 ; Ruppell, Abyss, t. 7, good. 

 A. rufa, Afzelius, Act. Holm. 1815, 250, from Buffon. 

 Eleotragus reduncus, Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1849, 127 ; Knows- 



ley Menag. 13. t. 13. 

 Antilope reversa, Pallas, Misc. 5. 



Eleotragus reduncus, Gray, Ann. fy Mag. N. H. 1846, 232. 

 Eleotragus isabellinus, Gray, List Mam. B. M. 165. 

 Nagor, Buffon, H. N. xii. 326. t. 46? cop. E. M. t. 51. f. 2. 

 Redunca Nagor, Ruppell, Verz. Senck. Samml. 182, 1845. 

 Red Antelope, Penn. Syn. 30 ; Quad. i. 86 ; Shaw, Zool. ii. 360. 

 9 Oureby, F. Cuv. Mam. Lithog. t. 

 Hob. W.Africa; Senegal; Gambia; called Wonto. 



Var. 1. Larger, brighter coloured. 



Antilope Bohor, Ruppell, Faun. Abyss, t. 7 ; Sundevall, Pecora. 



Eleotragus reduncus var., Gray, Knowsley Menag. 13; Proc. 



Zool. Soc. 1849, 128. 



Redunca Bohor, Ruppell, Verz. Senck. Samml 182, 1845. 

 Hob. Abyssinia. Mus. Frankfort. 



A male. W. Africa. 



A male. W. Africa ; Gambia. 



A fawn. W. Africa ; Gambia. 



Pallas and Afzelius's account of this species is derived from 

 Buffon' s description ; both he and Adanson (Hist. Nat. xii. 326) 

 say that it is " all pale red," and Buffon further observes that it 

 has not the white on the belly of the Gazelles. This does not 

 agree with our animal, which is white in several parts, but cer- 

 tainly not so white as the Gazelle, and has black on the legs ; 

 but as yet no other animal has been brought from West Africa 

 which better agrees with their account or figure. 



