12 
Cephalophus punctuhtus, Gray, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 1846. 
Inhabits Sierra Leone. Brit. Mus. 
We have a young specimen of this species in the British Museum, presented by Colonel Sabine, R.E. 
It is at once known from the other Gueveis by the fulvous colour which is produced by the yellow sub- 
terminal rings of the hairs. 
Colonel H, Smith indicates a species under the name of C. Philantomba, but so indistinctly, that it is 
impossible to know for what it is intended. 
The White-footed Guevei. Cephalophus WMtJieldu. Tab. XI. fig. 2. 
Yellowish ash ; shoulders, outside of limbs and hinder parts of back rather darker ; ears and crown 
pale yellowish brown ; streak over the eyes, cheeks, throat, belly, inside of the liuibs and ring 
round the feet above the hoof ashy white ; hair ashy grey ; of the back brown at the end, with a 
yellow tip. 
Inhabits Gambia {Mr. Whitfield^. Mus. Brit. Young. 
Smaller than the Grisled Guevei, and much paler and yellower. 
***** iVo tear -hag nor glandular streak on the face, and the muffie large and moist ; crown smooth. 
13. NANOTRAGUS {Sundemll), Neotragus (part H. SmitK), 
with very short, conical horns ; slender legs ; subpectinate tail ; small, triangular hoofs, false hoofs none ; 
crown not crested ; ears small, rounded. 
The Royal Antelope. Nanotragus regius. 
Fulvous ; throat, belly and edge of thighs and tip of tail white. 
Antilope regia, Erxleben, 278. — Capra pygmea, Linn. S. N. 101. 69. — Pallas? — Cuv. D. S. N. ii. 241. — 
— H. Smith. — C. perpusilla, Linn. Mus. Ad. Fred. i. 12. — A. spiniger, Temm. — Tragulus indicus, and 
T. guinensis, Brisson. 
Inhabits W. Africa ; Guinea. Brit. Mus. 
The smallest-hoofed animal. The feet were formerly often used as tobacco-stoppers, and are figured 
mounted by Seba, t. 43. f. a, BufFon, H. N. xii. t. 42, 43. 
14. ELEOTRAGUS {Gray), Redunca {H. Smitli), Cervicapra {Blainv., Smidev.'), Nagor {Laur.), 
Sylvicapra {Ogilby), 
with conical horns, bent back and then forward at the top ; hoofs and false hoofs rather large ; tear-bag 
none ; teats four ; inguinal pores distinct. 
* The South-African species are grisled, and have the muffie large and extended behind the nostrils. 
f Horns erect, slender, and face narrow ; fur woolly hair. 
The Rehbock or Peele. Eleotragus Caprealus. 
Temple-spot none ; head slender, compressed ; horns erect, scarcely diverging, very slender ; fur 
short, woolly, grey brown; back redder; throat and beneath white; end of nose and chin black- 
ish ; feet darker. 
Antilope Capreolus, Thunb. — Afzelius, N. Act. Upsal. vii. 251. 1818. — Licht. S. t. 8. — Harris, W. A. A. t. 25. 
f. 1. — A. villosa, Burchell, 1822. — H. Smith. — A. lanata, Desmoul. 
Inhabits S. Africa. Brit. Mus. 
The Earl of Derby has recently received one of these animals alive from the Cape, and it appears to be 
reconciled to its new locality. 
W Horns diverging, thick, conical ; head broad; fur harsh, straight, with a subterminal pale band, and often whorled ; 
and a naked spot on the temple. 
The Inghalla or Reit Bock. Eleotragus arundinaceus. 
Head broad ; temple-spot naked ; horns diverging, conical, tapering. Brown, yellow grisled ; hair 
pale brown, with a subterminal yellow band ; cheeks and neck yellower ; base of ears, chest, belly 
and insides of the legs and underside of bushy tail white ; front of legs black. 
