145 
Dee EY S DUIKER. 
CEPHALOPHUS HARVEYL, Tuos. 
[PLATE XVIL] 
Cephalolophus natalensis, Noack, Humboldt, v. pt. 9, p. 6, fig. 5 (animal) (1886) ; 
Thos. P. Z. S. 1892, p. 419 (in part, nec A. Smith). 
Cephalophus nigrifrons, True, Pr. U.S. Nat. Mus. xv. p. 476 (1892) (Taveta) (nec 
Gray). 
Cephalolophus harveyi, Thos. Ann. Mag. N. H. (6) xi. p. 48 (1898) ; Lyd. Horns and 
Hoofs, p. 210 (1893) ; Jackson, Badm. Libr. Big Game Shooting, i. pp. 167, 285, 
308 (1894) ; Thos. Ann. Mus. Genoy. (2) xv. p. 6 (1895) (Somali). 
Size and general coloration almost exactly as in C. natalensis, but with a 
brown or blackish blaze on the face as in C. nigrifrons, extending from the 
nasals to the occiput, and expanding on the forehead. Feet slender; hoofs 
not specially elongated. 
Skull much roughened and swollen in the frontal region; muzzle rather 
short and conical; median notch of palate but little deeper than the lateral 
ones. 
Horns (¢) conical, very thick at the base, their greatest basal diameter 
going barely two and a half times in their length, which in an old individual 
is 3°1 inches. 
Dimensions :—Skull, basal length 5:9 inches, greatest breadth 3, muzzle to 
orbit 3°3. 
Hab. British East Africa (Kilimanjaro district) and Southern Somaliland. 
In Harvey’s Duiker we have a third species of the smaller-sized section of 
this group of Duikers which, although, like the two preceding, of nearly 
K2 
