374 HI?. STANLEY S. FLOWED OX THE lM n ' ^ 



150. Gbbvus porcixus Zimm. The Para, or Hog-deer. 



Cervus porcinus, Blanf. Faun. Iud.. Mamm. p. 549, fig. 179 

 (p. 550). 



The Siamese Museum eontaius two stuffed males, obtained in 

 Siam, but the exact locality I was not able to discover. 



Distribution. Parts of India, Ceylon, Burma. Siam, and Laos 

 States of Cambodia (B, Ward, 'Records Big Graine,' 1899, p. 71). 



Family Thagplidje. 



151. Tragilus .iataxicus (Cimel.). The Smaller Malay Mouse- 

 deer. 



Tragulus JranchU, Cantor, p. GO; 0. Thomas, P. Z. S. 1886. 

 p. 17. 



Tragulus javanicus, Blanf. Faun. Ind., Mamm. p. 556. 



'• Kra-chong" of the Siamese. 



"Kanchil" or " PeMndok " (pronounced "Flando"') of the 

 Malays. 



Cantor says this " species is astonishingly numerous" and 

 occurs in the Malay Peninsula, Penang, Singapore, and the 

 Lancary Islands; he adds " In Prince of Wales' Island (i.e. Penang) 

 any number may be procured within short notice, at the rate of 

 one Spanish dollar per dozen.'" 



Oldfield Thomas (7. a-, c.) records specimens from Salanga, 

 Junkceylon, from Taroar, from Klang, Selangor, and from Singa- 

 pore Island. 



Eidley (J. S. B. B. A. S. no. 25, 1894, p. 60) records this species 

 from Pahang. 



There are specimens from Larut in the Museum at Taiping, 

 and from Selangor in the Museum at Kuala Lumpor. Hanitsch 

 records it from Changi, Singapore (Bep. Baffles Libr. & Mus. 1898, 

 p. 9). 



This species occurs in Siam ; there is a specimen from the Dong 

 Phya Fai in the Siamese Museum ; and A. Milne-Edwards 

 (• Recherches Famille Chevrotains,' Paris, 1864, p. 78) says "en 

 L862, M. Bocourt en a rapport e an Museum un individu du 

 royaume de Siam, et le Musee britannique en possede mi 

 exemplaire provenant du Camboge." 



Distribution. Tenasserim, Siam, Cambodia, Cocbinchina, Malay 

 Peninsula (Junkceylon, Lancary. Penang, Perak, Selangor, Pahang, 

 Singapore), Sumatra, Java, Borneo. 



152. Tragulus xapu (F. Cuv.). The Larger Malay Mouse- 

 deer. 



Tragulus Java nicus, Cantor, p. 61. 

 Tragulus napu, Blanf. Faun. Ind.. Mamm. p. 557. 

 "]\ T apu" of the Malays. 

 . Cantor records this species from the Malay Peninsula, where 

 he says it " appears to be far less numerous than the preceding." 



