991 



Capea pyrenaica lusitanica Franca. 



1909. Copra lusitanica Franca, Bull. Soc. Portugaise Sci. Nat., n, p. 144. 

 Based on the " Cabra-Montez da Serra do Gerez " of Bocage, Mem. 

 Acad. Real das Seiencias de Lisboa (Sci. Math. Phys. Nat.), N.S., 

 n, pt. i, pp. 1-20, pis. 1-2. Articles separately paged. Bocage 

 wrongly cited as authority for the name lusitanica. Type in 

 Lisbon Museum. 



1911. Copra pyrenaica, peculiar subspecies, Cabrera, Proc. Zool. Soc, 

 London, p. 966, December, 1911. 



Type locality. — Serra do Gerez, Minho, Portugal. 



Geographical distribution. — Formerly the mountains of Galicia 

 and northern Portugal. Now confined to the Serra do Gerez or 

 extinct. 



Diagnosis. — Horn? apparently less spreading than in the other 



Capea pyrenaica victoeije Cabrera. 



1911. Capra pyrenaica victoria; Cabrera, Proc. Zool. Soc, London, p. 975, 

 December, 1911. Type in Madrid Museum. 



Type locality. — Madrigal de la Vera, southern slope of Sierra 

 de Gredos, Province of Caceres, Spain. 



Diagnosis. — "An intermediate form, in size and in the extent 

 of the black markings, between G. p. pyrenaica and C. p. hispanica, 

 rather browner than hispanica in summer coat, and with [widely 

 spreading] horns similar in size to that race, but comparatively 

 broader and flatter." 



Measurements. — Type, adult male, mounted (from Cabrera) : 

 head and body, 1355; tail, 130; hind foot with hoofs, 385; ear, 

 120; height at shoulder, 700. For cranial measurements see 

 Table, p. 997. 



Capra pyrenaica hispanica Schimper. 



1848. Capra hispanica Schimper, Comptes-Rend. Acad. Sci., Paris, xxvi, 

 p. 318, March, 1848. 



1910. Capra pyrenaica hispanica Trouessart, Faune Mamm. d'Europe, 



p. 237. 



1911. Capra pyrenaica hispanica Cabrera, Proc. Zool. Soc, London, p. 966, 



December, 1911. 



Type locality. — Sierra Nevada (" Picacho de Veleta et Mula- 

 hacen "), Spain. 



Geographical distribution. — Mountains of southern and eastern 

 Spain (Sierra de Ronda, Sierra Nevada, Sierra Morena, Sierra 

 Martes and Sierra de Cardo). 



Diagnosis. — Dark markings minimum for the species, the 

 lateral stripe very narrow, the black of withers strictly confined 

 to median line ; nasal bones more abruptly narrowed than in true 



