Bull, Ent. Research. Vol. XI- Part 4 



,«>''r« 





low, bush-savattnah, " Urr 



IS, apparently chiefly . 



E>(planation. 



■' dominating; fly pallidipea and mors! 



I I Mainly granite-gneiss; rather poor but ± continuous Brachysjegja savannah forest with many vieia. 



I I Fly pallidipes and morsiians and, in places, a few brevi palpis. 



I A great sedimentary exposure -sandstone, shale quartziio and good Brachysle gia— Uajjaca savannah fcest, cor 



I j Mainly doleriie; wooding for the most part highly deciduous; permanent fly absent. 



Mainly doleriie; broken wooding chiefly of the various dense-secondary types, especially fern-entwined. In the m^ 



areas, Brach y ste ai 



1 Mainly doleriie and schists. Wooding contains an unusually large element of the primary (chiefly "ravine") and the finer secondary "monsoon" types . Khaya, Pi pladenia . 

 ^ ' ' ' Albizzia , Milletia . Pteleopsis - Much Landolphia kirkii in North. Brevipal pis apparently abundant throughout, pallidipes present. 



yfialpis everywhere in the thickets, paHjdipej 



edimenlary exposui 



Ma. = Mapond 



approximately, but distances [cyclometer 



f.p. = pri 

 frontier and numbered t 

 low Chipungambira forest. 



rking camps. s.f. = secondary 

 nglo Porlugu 



>in6) probably nearly correct. The no 

 ry forest-patch T, = G. austeni vieis. 

 '. = Ferry and 



Tiade in 1906-7 and the wooding r 



June 13th. 1918. "a" 

 westerly and southerly i 



s =.z--- •= Eastern boundary of cattle keeping under Umzila and Gungu 



= = = :: = ; Recent boundary of cattle-keeping now 



X X-..- Some definite Zulu failures. • •-. 



Note The contouring is diagrammatic and gi 



official Rhodesiai 



are probably fairly < 

 of the tributaries and the positions 



OO View from here (Nov, 1906]. showed low < 





s, staled by n 



r Puizise-Mtshanedzi 



! general way, the 

 lute '■ Maguasha," 



