Al'PENDIX IJ/.'-MAMMALS 467 



Ccbus nigroscapulatus. — Bahr-cl-Gcbel. 

 Cobus leiicotis. — Upper Nile, B;ihr-el-G:iz;il, and C'.obat. 

 Cobiis thoiiiasi. — Kavirondo and Uganda. 

 Cobiia kob. — West Africa from the Gambia to the Nijjer. 

 Cobus vardoni. — Chobe and Zamljesi valleys and Rhodesia. 

 Cobus senganiis. — Barotzeland and Nyasaland. 



Cobus loderi. — Hah\la\^ Konndcd on skull and horns, possibly 

 C. smithemani. 



Cobus lec/iee. — Zambesia and Barotzeland. 

 Cobus, sp. — Nigeria. 



Total shot, 3. — (J. 



They were also seen near Burey, Shimerler Jowec, and along the uest 

 bank of Lake Tana ; several times among thorn trees or dricd-up hill-tops. 

 vcr>' dificrent to the dense riverside vegetation where they were fonnd in 

 Somaliland on a previous trip. 



Cenncapra redutua bohor (Riipp.). Abyssinian Reedbuck. 

 (Native name, "Bohor"; Galla name, " Borufa.") 

 This antelope was described by Riippell, but its identity seems after- 

 wards to have been lost, for the name bohor has been applied in later 

 times to several other species and races of reedbuck such as Cervicapra 

 arundiiicum, C. wurdi, and others. Dr. Giinther, in the P.Z.S. 1890, 

 identified the East African reedbuck as C. bohor, and it is due to Mr. 

 Oldfield Thomas, who pointed out Dr. Giinther's error in the Annals and 

 Magazine of Natural History, 1 900, pp. 303, 304, that the confusion was 

 cleared up ; though it still remained for Mr. Powell-Cotton's material to 

 prove that true C. r. bohor was confined to Abyssinia, and that the forms 

 from the White Nile and Lake Rudolf were yet again two further un- 

 described races. 



Mr. Powell-Cotton says : ■■ 1 have counted as many as thirty at a time 

 feeding in groups of about four, Isut herds usually number from four to 

 twelve. 



" They generally lie down among the long grass by a stream during 

 mid-day. I tried walking them up, but they always broke too far ahead for 



