256 



The Living Animals of the World 



/>;.oto by York i Son] [iXottinff Mill. 



FE3IALE KILGAI. 



The largest of the antelniies of India, ami a distant cousin of the Kudu. 



horns, wliich are only present in tlie male, 

 attain a length of about 'J feet in a straight 

 line, and 30 inches along their spiral curve. 

 The standing height at the shoulder of males 

 of this species is about 42 inches. 



This most beautiful antelope has a very 

 restricted range, being only found in a narrow 

 belt of coastland extending from St. Lucia Bav 

 to the 8abi Kiver, in South-east Africa, and in 

 a still smaller area in the neighbourhood of the 

 Upper Sliiri Kiver, in British Central yVfrica. 



Before the acquisition of firearms by the 

 natives in South-east Africa, the inyala was very 

 plentiful in Northern Zululand and Atnatonga- 

 land, and was then to be met with in herds of 

 from ton to twenty individuals ; whilst the males, 

 which at certain seasons of the year separated 

 from the females, were in the habit of consorting 

 together in bands of from five to eight. Constant 

 persecution l^y the natives in Amatongaland and 

 the countries farther nortli ^'ery much reduced 

 the numbers of inyalas in tliose districts a long 

 time ago ; lout in Zululand, where this animal 

 has been strictly protected by the British 

 authorities for the last twenty years, it was still 

 plentiful up to 1896, when the rinderpest swept 

 over the country, and committed such sad 



three large white spots on the cheeks, and a 

 broad white arrow-shaped mark across the nose 

 below the eyes. The female is similar in 

 coloration to the male, but smaller and hornless. 



Little or nothing is known as to the 

 habits of this very beautiful antelope. Du 

 Chaillu, who met with it in the interior of 

 Gaboon between 1856 and 1859, says that it 

 is " very shy, swift of foot, and exceedingly 

 graceful in its motions " ; but he does not 

 tell us whether it lives in pairs like the 

 bushbucks, or in small herds like some of its 

 other near allies. 



The Inyala is another bush-loving ante- 

 lope closely allied to the bushbucks. In this 

 species the general colour of the adult male 

 is a deep dark grey, that of the female and 

 young male bright yellow-red, and both sexes 

 are loeautifully striped with narrow white 

 bands on the body and haunches. In the 

 male long dark hair hangs from the throat, 

 chest, and each side of the belly, aird fringes 

 the front of the thigh almost to the hock, 

 and the back of it up to the root of the 

 tail. The ears are laro;e and rounded ; and the 



J'/,ut:j ha Xvrk d' ,sv.,.J 



[iVc((;ii.; UUl. 



Uufurtuuately, the specimen from wliich this pljotograph was taken 

 had lost its .splendid spiral borns. 



