CERVID/E 15 



9. 1. 5. 854. Skin. Pangandaran, Dirk de Vries Bay, 

 Java ; collected by G. C. Shortridge, Esq. 



Presented ly W. E. Balston, Esq., 1909. 



9. 1. 5. 855. Skull and skin, female. Same locality and 

 collector. Same history. 



9. 1. 5. 1124. Frontlet and antlers, the latter very large. 

 Same locality and collector. Same history. 



9. 1. 5. 1125. A similar specimen, but with smaller 

 antlers. Same locality and collector. Same history. 



10. 4. 6. 71. Frontlet and antlers. Kaugean Island, east 

 of Java ; same collector. Presented by 0. Thomas, Esq., 1910. 



10. 4. 6. 72. A similar specimen. Same locality and 



collector. Same history. 



10. 4. 6. 73. Another similar specimen. Same locality 



and collector. Same history. 



B. Muntiacus muntjak moschatus. 



Cervulus naoschatus, Blainville, Bull. Soc. Philom. 1816, p. 77. 

 Muntiacus moschatus, Lyon, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. vol. xxxi, p. 582, 

 1907. 



Typical locality Sumatra. 



Type in Museum of Eoyal College of Surgeons. 



A very large race, based on an immature skull, still 

 retaining the last two pairs of milk-molars (No. 1469, Mus. 

 E. Coll. Surg.). The external ridge of the jugal arcade is 

 stated to be thicker and more prominent than in M. m. 

 vaginalis ; colour apparently much the same as in next race. 



No specimen in collection. 



C. Muntiacus muntjak bancanus. 



Cervulus muntjac, Jentink, Notes Leyden Mus. vol. xiii, p. 209, 1891 ; 



Willink, Natuurk. Tijdschr. Nederlandsch-Indie, vol. xlv, p. 189, 



1905. 

 Muntiacus bancanus, Lyon, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. vol. xxxi, p. 582, 



1907, vol. xl, p. 72, 1911. 



Typical locality Banka Island ; also occurs on Billiton 

 Island. 



Type in U.S. National Museum, Washington. 



Closely allied to M. m. moschatus, but smaller ; skull 

 similar to that of M. m. rulidus (infra, p. 16), but the 



