1884.] 



MR. F. E. BEDDARD ON HAPALEMUR GRISEUS. 



3<J3 



foot are black as in Lemur ; and in both these genera the interspaces 

 between the pads are occupied by small isolated nodules of horny 

 integument. In Perodicticus and Nycticebus, on the other hand, the 

 palms of both the feet and the hands are flesh-coloured, and the 

 interspaces between the pads are traversed by irregular creases and not 

 separated into distinct and isolated nodules of horny matter. 



On the inner side of the arm close to the wrist is an oval patch 

 of spine-like processes, about one inch long and one third of an inch 

 broad in the middle, which is shown in the accompanying drawing 

 (fig. I, A). These spines are longest in the middle portion of the 



Fig. 1. 



Hand of Hapakmur griseus. 



patch, and decrease in length towards both extremities. Examined 

 with a hand lens they present the appearance of being'composed of 

 a number of finer threads closely bound together ; the extremity of 

 the spines is blunt, and the longer ones are somewhat curved and over- 

 lap each other. The patch of integument which bears these spines 

 is sharply marked off from the surrounding integument, and no 

 transitional forms between the hairs of the general body-surface and 

 these peculiar spines could be observed. The Natural-History 



