74 GAL AGO 



upper parts, and with a brown head and pale sooty brown tail. The 

 ears are very large, and yellow in their dried state. The orbits are the 

 same in color as the rest of the face, but other examples have black 

 orbital rings. This style was named conspicillatus by Geoffroy. G. 

 moholi Smith, is the same as the present species and the name must 

 become a synonym. The type is in the British Museum Collection and 

 is in a faded condition. My description taken from it reads as 

 follows. Head and upper parts of body, ecru drab; outer side of 

 limbs cream buff ; under parts yellowish white ; hands and feet yellow- 

 ish gray; tail above fawn color on basal half, Prout's brown on the 

 remaining portion, growing darker at tip. 



Measurements. Total length, 400 ; tail, 230. Skull, not the type : 

 occipital region gone; intertemporal width, 18; palatal length, 12; 

 width of braincase, 23; median length of nasals, 11; length of upper 

 molar series, 12; length of mandible, 22; length of lower molar 

 series, 12. 



The skull of the type is in the skin. 



Galago sennaariensis Lesson. 



Galago acaciarum var. G. sennaariensis Less., Spec. Mamm., 1840, 



p. 248. 

 Otolicnus teng Sundev., Konegl. Sven. Vatenk. Akad. Handl., 



1842, p. 201. 

 Otolicnus galago a. sennaariensis Wagn., Schreb., Saugth. Suppl., 



1855, p. 158. 

 Galago sennaariensis Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1863, p. 147; 



Mivart, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1864, pp. 137-630; Huxley, 



Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1864, p. 324. 

 Galago (Otolicnus) sennaariensis Mivart, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 



1864, p. 647. 

 Otolicnus sennaariensis Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1872, p. 859. 

 Galago moholi (nee Smith), Kirk, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1864, 



p. 650; Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1894, p. 137; 1896, 



p. 790. (Nyassaland). 

 Type locality. Sennaar, Africa. 



Geogr. Distr. Sennaar along the White Nile south of Khartoum, 

 to Mashonaland, and into Ankole west of the Victoria Nyanza, up to 

 5,000 feet. Nyassaland at Kebrabassa, Batoka (Kirk), and the 

 Chiradzula Mts. (Thomas). 



Genl. Char. General hue dark bluish gray ; tail very long, half as 



