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British East Africa is truly referable to Cervicapra bchor, we will proceed to 
recount what has been said about it by the leading authorities on the 
antelopes of this country. Mr. Hunter, from whom, it will be recollected, 
Fig. 39. 
Skull of Cervicapra bohor.—jl, jugo-lacrymal suture; 0, lower edge of infra-orbital rim. 
(P. Z. 8. 1890, p. 605.) 
Dr. Giinther obtained the specimen upon which he made his observations, 
tells us that the Reedbuck met with in the district of Kilimanjaro is usually 
found in the early morning and evening feeding near the edges of the reedy 
swamps, and when disturbed immediately runs into the rushes. Mr. Hunter 
and his companions found it very common in a large swamp near Mikundune, 
to the south-west of the mountain. Mr. Jackson, who calls the same 
antelope the “Lesser Reedbuck,” and gives its Swahili name as “Toi” or 
“Tohi,” tells us that this species is very local in British East Africa, and, as a 
