Recent Botanical and Zoological Papers. 389 
ZOO OG Ne 
MAMMALIA. 
Brypen, H. A. (edited by). Great and Small Game of Africa. 
Pp. 1-612, pls. i.-xv. London, Rowland Ward. 4to. 
A large and important work on the Game Animals of Africa 
by various contributors, among whom are the Editor (Mr. 
Bryden), Messrs. F. Vaughan Kirby, R. Lydekker, A. H. 
Neumann, Percy Rendall, and F.C. Selous. All the Ungulata 
and the larger Carnivora are dealt with, and in addition to 
coloured illustrations of the heads of the various animals 
arranged on a series of 15 plates, there are various woodcuts 
and photogravure reproductions of photographs of great beauty 
>and value. 
JENTINK, I’. A. The species of the Antelope—Genus Pediotragus. 
Notes Leyd. Mus. xxii., p. 33. 1900. 
Dr. Jentink recognises four, or perhaps five, distinct species 
of the genus Pediotragus containing the Steenbok; these are 
P. kellem (sp. nov.) from Southern Angola, P. tragulus, and 
P. horstocku (f. campestris auct.), the common form from the 
Colony, P. rufescens (H. Smith.) from Natal, and P. newman, 
Matchie from German Hast Africa. 
Kursy, F. V. Field-notes on the Blue Duiker of the Cape Colony 
(Cephalophus monticola). Proc. Zool. Soc., 1899, pp. 830-833. 
An interesting account of the habits of the little Bluebuck of 
Knysna and the Eastern Province of the Colony. 
Marcuig, P.* Ueber die geographische Verbreitung der Tigerpferde 
und das Zebra des Kaoko-Feldes in Deutsch Siid-West Afrika. 
5. B. Gesell. Nat. Freunde. Berlin, 1898, p. 169. 
An account of the geographical distribution of the various 
races and species of Zebra, followed by the description of a new 
species—Hquus hartmanne—from Kaoko-land in the north- 
