496 



T)R. P. so>'si:n-o ox niSTo:s[ES. 



[May 16, 



Sciurus bicolor, Sparrm. 



ephippium, ^liiU. 



prevosti, Desm. 



hippurus, Geoffr. 



* pryeri, Thos. 



* brookei, Thos. 



tenuif, Horsf. 



# lowi, Thos. 



* jentinki, Thos. 



notatus, Bodd. 



insignis, Desm. 



* hosei, Thos. 



* everetti, Thos. 



** steerei, Giinth. 



laticaudatus, Mi/.U. 



soricinus, Midi. ^' Schl, 



exilis, Mi'iU. 



* whiteheadi, Thos. 



Os'GULATA. 



Fam. Elephant I D.E. 



Elephas indicus, Linn. 



Fam. Rhinoceeotid.e. 



Rhinoceros sumatrensis, Ciiv. 



Fam. Tapirid.e. 



Tapiriis indicus, Cuv. 



Fam. BoviD^. 



Bos sondaicus, Miill. 

 buffelus, Blumenh. 



Fam. CERViDiE. 



Cervus equinus. Cuv. 



hippelaphus, Ctcv. 



sp. inc. 



Cervulus muntjac. Linn. 



Fam. Tragulid-e. 



Tragulus napu, F. Cm: 



** nigricans, T%08. 



— — javauicus, Gmel. 



Fam. SciD^. 



Sus vittatus, Mi'.ll. 



verrucosus, Mi/.ll. 



* barbatus, MiiU. 



' longirostris, Xchring. 



** ahasnobarbus, Hvet ^ 



CETACEA. 



Fam. DELPiiiN'iDiE. 



Delphinus sp. inc. 

 Orcella brevirostris, Owen. 



Fam. Bal.exid-E. 



Balaenoptera sp. inc. 

 {Mcffapfera ?) 



SIRENIA. 



Fam. Halicorid.*;. 



Halicore dugong, Er.rl. 



EDENTATA. 



Fam. Maxid^. 



Manis javanica, Desm. 

 sp. inc. * 



4. Brief Notes on Flukes. By Prospero Soxsino, M.D., 

 Pisa. (Commuuicated by Prof. F. Jeffrey Bell.) 

 [Received May Ifi, 1893.] 

 DiSTOMUM TEIGOXOCEPHALrM, E. 



In the collection of Worms in the British Museum (Xatural 

 History), which, through the kindness of Dr. Giinther and Prof. 

 Jeffrey Bell, I was enabled to examine in 1 891 while attendrag the 

 Internatioual Hygienic Congi'ess, my attention was attracted to a 

 bottle containing a womi Mhich was labelled " Ophistomum mucro- 

 natum, K.,"' but ^^hich, some days previous to my visit, my friend 

 Prof. Blauchard, after a cursory examination, had decided to be 

 a Distomum. Prof. Blanchard had not sufficient time to examine 

 the anterior end of the single specimen, which was lying upon 

 the dorsal side of the body, and so he failed to perceive that this 



1 Huet, Le Naturaliste, 1888, p. 5. 



* Marche, Lu9on et Palaouan. 1887. p. 302. 



