TRAGELAPHIN.E 205 



into blackish on forehead and sides of face some distance 

 below eyes ; an incomplete suborbital chevron, two or three 

 spots (which may be confluent) on cheeks, chin, and lips, a 

 dorsal streak, from ten to fourteen or fifteen transverse 

 stripes on body, and a narrow gorget on chest white ; outer 

 side of fore-legs blackish to pasterns, inner side mainly 

 white, with a black chevron above white knees and a white 

 patch above hoofs in front ; hind-legs chestnut to hoofs on 

 outer sides, with front of hocks and shanks and a patch 

 above hoofs white, the remainder of the pasterns being 

 blackish or brownish, as in fore-legs. 



A. Boticereus eurycerus eurycerus. 



Typical locality West Africa. 



Stripes numerous, generally fourteen or fifteen. 



Eange restricted to the western side of the African 

 continent. 



58. 5. 4. 6 (852, a). Skull and horns. West Africa. 

 Co-type. 

 Presented by the Zoological Society (from their Museum), 1858. 



58. 5. 4. 7 (852, 1). Frontlet and horns. West Africa. 

 Co-type. Presented to the Zoological Society by Capt. 

 W. Allen, K.N. Same history. 



71. 5. 27. 5. Skin, immature, mounted. Ashkankolo 

 Mountains, Gabun. 



Presented "by Monsieur P. B. du Chaillu, 1871. 



78. 7. 16. 9. Head, mounted (fig. 31), and body-skin. 

 Fanti. Purchased (Gerrard), 1878. 



87. 10. 20. 1. Skeleton. Gabun. 



Purchased (Gerrard), 1887. 



7. 7. 1. 1. Skull, with horns, female. Near Mango 

 River, Sierra Leone. Presented by Capt. L. Murray, 1907. 



11. 8. 22. 1. Skull, with horns. Gold Coast. 



Presented by E. K. Gibbons, Esq., 1911. 



13. 6. 25. 1. Skin, foetal. Ashanti. 



Presented by Dr. Montagu Graves, 1913. 



13. 7. 13. 2. Skull, with horns. Kassandra, French 

 Ivory Coast. Presented by Guy Chetwynd, Esq., 1913. 



