434 



UNGULATES. 



hang about the shoulders and rump. It is coloured black, with white feet, and 

 breeds true. That it has long been domesticated, there can be little doubt ; and 

 this might have been inferred even from the circumstance that its young are not 

 lono-itudinally striped." From a study of its skull, Professor Nathusius regards the 

 masked pig as nearly allied to the Chinese breed ; but, as Darwin remarks, " if this 

 be really the case, it is a wonderful instance of the amount of modification which 

 can be effected under domestication." 



MASKED JAPANESE PIG (^ Hat. size). 



Bush-Pigs. 



The African bush-pigs — the Bosch-Varks of the Cape Boers — 

 differ from the typical members of the genus by always having 

 one pair less of cheek-teeth, owing to the absence of the first premolar on each 

 side of the lower jaw, while frequently the corresponding upper tooth is like- 

 wise wanting in the adult. The molar teeth are also distinguished by their 

 simpler structure, the last in the lower jaw having the third lobe much reduced 

 in size. The tusks are scarcely larger than those of domestic pigs, and the 

 snout is unusually elongated. On each side of the face immediately below the 

 eye there is a large swelling, due to the great development of a ridge of bone 

 on the sheath of the upper tusk. The grey bush-pig (S. africanus), ranging 

 from South to Central Africa, has the hair of a greyish brown colour, and no 

 pencils of hair on the ears. It generally frequents thick forest, although 

 occasionally found in thorny bush and among reeds in the river valleys. Mr. 

 E. H. Drummond says that "the ingulabi, as it is called by the natives, does 

 an immense amount of damage to their sweet potatoes and fields, and has in 



