32 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



The following specimens differ from the typical examples 

 of E. q. granti by the smaller amount of white on the ears, 

 the brownish muzzle, and the narrower stripes. 



0. 3. 18. 4. Skin, with the head and neck separate. 

 Athi Plains, B. E. Africa. 



Presented ~by 8. L. Hinde, Esq., 1900. 

 0. 3. 18. 5. Body-skin, scalp and skull. Same locality. 



Same history. 



0. 3. 18. 11. Body-skin. Same locality. Same history. 

 0. 3. 18. 12. Body-skin, young. Same locality. 



Same history. 

 0. 3. 18. 23. Body-skin, immature. Same locality. 



Same history. 



The following name has been applied to a hybrid bonte- 

 quagga, bred in Barnum and Bailey's menagerie (see Pocock, 

 Field, vol. cxiv, p. 389, 1909). 



" Ward's Zebra," Ewart, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1904, vol. ii, p. 181. 

 Equus wardi, Ridgeivay, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1909, p. 798, 1910. 



VII. EQUUS (HIPPOTIGPJS) FOAI (Fig. 14). 



Equus foai, Prazak and Trouessart, Bull. Mus. Paris, vol. v, p. 350, 

 1899; Ridgeway, Thoroughbred Horse, p. 64, 1905; Matschie, 

 Monatsheftenaturwiss. Unterricht Schulgatt. vol. ii, p. 309. 1909 ; 

 Brasil and Pennetier, Actes Mus. Rouen, vol. xii, p. 39, 1909 ; 

 LydeTcJcer, Game Animals of Africa, Suppl. p. 4, 1911 ; Horse 

 and its Relatives, p. 209, 1912; Griffini, Le Zebre, p. 251, (1912) 

 1913 ; Schwarz. Arch. Naturgesch. vol. Ixxviii, p. 34, 1912. 



Typical locality the mountainous district of Angoniland, 

 on the north bank of the Zambesi opposite Teti. 



Type in Paris Museum. 



Differs from the recognised races of E. (H.) quag g a by 

 the larger number of main stripes on the body and hind- 

 quarters, and the absence of any backward bending (except 

 in the last of the series) of the body-stripes as they approach 

 the dorsal stripe, to which they run approximately at right 

 angles. In this respect Foa's zebra approximates to the 

 true zebra and Grevy's zebra, from both of which it differs 

 by the stripes on the hind- quarters adjacent to the dorsal 

 stripe running parallel with the latter in the direction of 



