XII THE FAUNA OF SOMALILAND 327 
never again brought myself to shoot a monkey. I have seen 
baboons scores of times since, and have never molested them, 
and as they soon get over their shyness and fear of man, I have 
been able to watch their habits closely. 
Besides these maned baboons, we found in the belt of forest 
on the Webbe banks a maneless baboon and a small tree- 
monkey. In parts of this forest the monkeys and baboons 
simply swarm. They spring about everywhere above and 
around the traveller, and the stench is nearly unbearable. 
Among game-birds the most noticeable are three kinds of 
the bustard tribe (Salalmadli), three species of guinea-fowl 
(Digirin), partridges, sand-grouse, and a wild goose in Ogddén. 
Birds of prey are very conspicuous, there being at least two 
kinds of vultures (Gur-Gur) and a small black and white eagle, 
kites, ravens, and the great black and white carrion-storks, 
which stand about four feet high and have very large orangc- 
coloured beaks. ; 
Jackals (Dowdo), with black and silver backs, are very 
common ; also foxes, a small variety of hare (Bokheila), a badger 
very like the English kind, two kinds of squirrel, gray and brown 
(Dabergdlt), and the little rock-rabbits (Bauna). There is a 
mouse-coloured animal of the weasel kind (SA¢h-SAdk), which 
lives under the roots of trees and hunts in packs. Snakes are 
numerous, three kinds most often met with being an adder 
(Abeso), a variegated rock-snake (Adgurt), and a black snake 
called muss, all of which are said to be very deadly. There is 
also a lizard nearly four feet long. Among the insects may be 
mentioned mosquitoes (Kan-déd)—they are only troublesome, 
however, on the Webbe and in the Esa and Gadabursi countries ; 
two kinds of gadfly; a large spider (Hangeyu), which produces 
a web almost exactly like golden silk, to be found in any old 
zeriba in the Haud; scorpions, and two kinds of centipede 
(Hunyagdri). 
