IIEDUXCIN.E 217 



1. 8. 9. 75-76. Two skulls, with horns (fig. 25). Eavine 

 Station, British East Africa. Same history. 



63. 7. 7. 12. Skull, with horns, and imperfect skin. 

 Uganda. Presented hy Capt. J. H. Speke, 1863. 



89. 8. 3. 1. Skull, with horns, immature. J^ear Kiliman- 

 jaro, Masailand. Presented hy H. G. V. Hunter, Esq., 1889. 



82. 1. 27. 2. Skull, with horns. East Africa; collected 

 hy Sir John Kirk. Length of horns on front curve 13|, 

 hasal girth o\, tip-to-tip interval 8-|- inches ; this being the 

 maximum horn-length recorded hy Ward in 1910. 



Purehascd, 1882. 



D.— Redunca redunca tohi. 



Kedunoa redunca tohi, Heller, Smithson. Misc. Collect, vol. )xi, No. 7, 

 p. 10, 1913. 



Tohi. 



Typical locality Mariakani, British East Africa. 



Type in U. S. National Museum. 



Allied to ^vardi but smaller (basal length of skull 

 8y| inches = 223 mm.), and lighter and purer tawny in 

 colour, the black "lining" on back being less distinct, and 

 the dark leg-streaks narrower or wanting, 



No specimen in collection definitely referable to this 

 race. 



E. —Redunca redunca cottoni. 



Cervicapra redunca cottoni, Bothschild, Powell-Cotton's Sporting 



Trip through Ahyssinia, p. 470, 1902; Lydelclcer, Game Animals 

 of Africa, p. 231, 1908, Field, vol. cxx, p. 1175, 1912. 

 Cervicapra redunca donaldsoni, Bothschild, op. cit. p. 471, 1902 ; 



Lydeliker, loc. cit. 1908, identified with cottoni. Field, op. cit. 



1912. 

 Bedunoa redunca cottoni and donaldsoni, Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., 



Suppl. p. 722, 1905. 

 Cervicapra bohor cottoni, Blaine, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 8, \o\. xi, 



p. 289, 1913. 



Typical locality Kordofan, between the Bahr-el-Zerafe 

 and the Bahr-el-Jebel, 



Type not identified. 



General colour similar to that of r. bohor, but horns 

 longer, thinner, and more divergent, with more or less 



