70 GAL AGO 



I have not seen this race as it was received at the British Museum 

 and described after my departure from England. 



Galago dunni Dollman. 



Galago dunni Dollman, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 8th Ser., V, 1910, 

 p. 92. 



Type locality. Fafan, 35 miles east of Harrar, Somaliland, East 

 Africa. 



Genl. Char. Similar to G. braccatus albipes, but larger and paler. 

 Skull: nasals broad anteriorly, then narrowing and widening pos- 

 teriorly. 



Color. Upper part of body pale grayish brown, darker on dorsal 

 line, hairs being slaty gray with grayish white tips ; flanks paler ; outer 

 side of arms buff ; outer side of legs like G. b. albipes, but more buffy 

 and the gray parts paler; under parts and inner side of arms white 

 washed with cream ; inner side of legs grayish white tinged with yellow ; 

 hands and feet yellowish ; tail above basal half like back, apical half 

 browner ; beneath paler, more gray. 



Measurements. Total length, 475 ; tail, 275 ; foot, 72 ; ear, 38. 

 Skull : total length, 48 ; zygomatic width, 34.5 ; nasals greatest length, 

 14 ; greatest width, 4.9 ; least width, 2.4 ; palatal length, 14.7 ; length of 

 upper molar series, 13.3. 



This species I have not seen. 



Galago nyass^: Elliot. 



Galago nyassce Elliot, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., XX, 7th Ser., 1907, 

 p. 188. 



Galago moholi Thos., (nee Smith), Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1894, 

 p. 137. 



Type locality. Mountains south of Lake Nyassa, Portuguese East 

 Africa. Type in British Museum. 



Genl. Char. Fur woolly; tail bushy; skull, much broken, exhibits 

 great differences from that of the species I call G. sennaariensis 

 from the White Nile southward to Ankole, west of the Victoria 

 Nyanza. The rostrum is long and more slender, and the nasals are 

 long and narrow ; the palate is long and narrow and does not widen 

 out posteriorly to anything like the extent as seen in skulls of G. sen- 

 naariensis ; the anterior line of the orbit is in front of the first molar, 

 instead of in front of the third premolar as in the other species ; there 

 is only a slight rise of the frontal above the rostrum, thus making 



