KITNGL. SV. VET. AKADBMTBNS HANDLINGAR. BAND 58. N:0 2. 99 



for comparison, it is still more impossible to make such an identification with regard 

 to the shape of the horns. Blaine describes* the horns of R. redunca ugandce (or as he 

 terms it Cervicapra bohor ugandoe) as »short and stout, without a pronounced hook 

 forward at ends». The horns of both specimens collected by Capt. Arrhenitts must on 

 the contrary be said to be very strongly hooked forwards, and with the tips much turned 

 inwards. This is of interest because Blaine's race R. r. ugandce is typical from Nkole, 

 Uganda, and it could therefore from a geographical point of view have been expected 

 to find this Reedbuck at Rutshuru rather than the more eastern R. r. wardi. 



Two young Reedbuck calves in the collection from Rutshuru 7i2 1913 belong 

 without doubt to the same race. 



Tragelaphus dianae forma sassee Matschie. 



1914; 



A young ?, Rutshuru, '/^ 1913; ? ad., ibid., ^'/, 1914; 2 ^^ ad., ibid., ^7^ 

 a male skull without skin (cf. fig. 8). 



The colour of these specimens agree on the whole with Matschie' s description but 

 it is, of course, as always in Bushbucks somewhat variable. The smaller and somewhat 

 younger, but nevertheless adult buck (with permanent dentition in place) has less white 

 markings and no transverse stripes. In the larger 4 — 5 such may be traced. The same 

 has also a white mesial stripe along the blackish chest. 



Greatest length of skull 



Condylobasal length of skull . . 



Basal length of skull 



Distance from orbit to tip of premaxillary. 



Greatest breadth of skull 



Least interorbital width 



Greatest breadth of skull in front of orbit . 



Length of nasals 



Upper molar series 



Length of horns in a straight line .... 



The measurements of the male skull appear to be a little greater than those recorded 

 by Matschie,^ but with regard to the female the opposite is the case. 



Okapia johnstoni Sclateb. 



A young male and a young female both with milk-dentition from Beni 1914. 



The male specimen is somewhat older so that the first molars in both jaws are 

 developed, in the female they are just cutting the gum, but mi is a little more developed 

 than w} and its anterior lobe has already become somewhat blackened by the food. 



1 Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (8), Vol. XI, 1913. 

 ' Sitz.ber. Naturf. Fr. Berlin. 1912. 



