128 ON DEATHS IN THE GARDENS IN 1922. 



8. A fishing-cat on post-mortem showed inflammation with 



exudation of clear fluid in all its serous cavities. It was 

 apparently chronic, as the peritoneum over the liver 

 showed ciliated epithelium. 



9. This was a chronic condition in a jungle-cat. The stomach 



showed extensive secondaiy ulceration. 



10. A sarcocystus infection in a Chinese quail. 



11. In a hamadryad. 



12. Two of these cases were in wolves and one in a jackal. All 



showed secondary deposits in the lung. 



13. In a hybrid pheasant and Wyandotte hen. 



14. In a wolf, apparently primary. 



15. In a Cayenne rail. It was spherical and 2 cm. in diameter. 



It caused death by compression of the thoracic viscera. 



16. In a Mandarin duck. 



17. In a blackbuck. This had been bred in the Gardens and 



had produced a young one, which had died a short time 

 previously and shown similar but much less extensive 

 signs of the disease. For a long period there had been 

 no change in the feeding, which seems to have been satis- 

 factory from the vitamine point of view. 



