82 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HIST. SOCIETY, Vol. XXVII. 



a. G-eneral colour grey or fawn-grey, 



more or less suffused with black ; 

 spinal stripe absent, or not passing 

 beyond withers ; no stripe down 

 middle of tail, and none on back 

 of thigh ... 1. goral, Hardw. 



b. General colour brown, suffused with 

 black ; spinal stripe reaching at least 

 to the croup ; a black stripe down 



tail ; blackish on back of thigh ... 2. hodgsoni, Poc. 



B. — Tail longer, about five inches without 

 hair ; black stripe on foreleg not 

 passing over knee, but turning down 

 outer side of cannon bone ... ... 3. griseus, M. Edw. 



Distribution : — 



1. N. goral^ Hardwicke. Type locality :■ — Western Himalaya. 



Other localities : — ^Kashmir ; Dhar- 

 amsala, Punjab ; Garwhal ; Kumaon 

 (B.M.). 



Type :■ — Not traced. (Type of Uro- 

 tragus bedfordi, Lyd. B. M. No, 97. 

 4.3.1). 



2. IV. hodgsoni, Pocock. Type locality : — Sikkim. (Blanford- 



Mandelli). 



Other localities : — Nepal (B. M.). 

 Type ;— B. M. No. 91. 10. 7. 169. 



3. N. griseus, Milne- Type locality : — Moupin, Sze Chuen. 



Edwards. Other localities : — Arakan, Upper 



Burma (B. M.). 



Type :■ — -In Paris Museum. 



Gen. X. — BuDORCAS. 



Blanford does not include this animal in his Fauna, though he 

 mentions it (Mamm. p. 515, 1891) as occurring in the Mishmi 

 Hills. More I'ecently it has been obtained in Bhutan. The Sze 

 Chuen form may still be found within our limits. The three forms 

 which interest us ma}'' be distinguished as follows : — 



Key to the forms of Budorcas. 



A. — Dorsal stripe extending from occiput 

 to tail ; ears, and entire face in front of 

 them, black. 



