DOUBTFUL KECOED TROM SOMALILAND. 219 



disseminated by the insects, attenuate their virus, and 

 perhaps also find a new vaccine capable of saving the 

 animals necessary for the prompt colonisation of Central 

 Africa." 



130. 1895. E. Corti. 



Annali del Museo- Civtco di Sioria Naturale di Genova, 

 Serie 2.% Vol. XV. (XXXV.), pp. 138-139. 



Original description of Glossina longijpennis, from 

 Somaliland. 



131. 1895. Surgeon-Major David Bruce, A. M.S. (now Lt.-CoI. 



David Bruce, R.A.M.C). 



"Preliminary Report on the Tsetse-fly Disease, 

 OB Nagana, in Zululand" (Durban: Bennett k Davis, 

 Field Street), 28 pp. 



[I have not seen this Preliminary JReport : it was 

 rcAdewed by W. F. H. Blandford, in Nature, April 16, 

 1896. For the "Further Report," see below [142], and 

 also Chapter VII., Appendix A.] 



132. 1895. A. Whyte. 



"Report on the Botanical Aspects of British 

 Central Africa." Foreign Office, 1895. Miscellaneous 

 Series, No. 373. Reports on Subjects of General and 

 Commercial Interest. Africa (Central). — (London : 

 printed for Her Majesty's Stationery Office, by Harrison 

 k Sons, St. Martin's Lane, Printers in Ordinary to Her 

 Majesty.) 



Tsetse-fly (pp. 16-18). 



" This is a pest which will seriously interfere (for 

 some time at least) with the introduction and rearing of 

 domestic stock, and thus form a drawback to agricultural 

 enterprise" (pp. 16-17). 



Notes on specimens in the British Museum, with 

 information furnished by E. E. Austen. 



133. 1895. Major H. S. Mainwaring. 



"The Korayo Valley, Somaliland" {The Geo- 

 graphical Journal, Vol. VI., p. 474. London : The Geo- 

 graphical Society). 



Tsetse-fly (?) in the Korayo Valley, 1894. 



"The Korayo valley, placed by Major Main waring 

 north-west of the Tug Turfa or Turfo, would seem to be 



