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LEMURS. 
southern form is the Maholi galago (G. maholi), which is a distinctly inland species 
found as far south as Natal, and also met with in Nyasaland and the adjacent 
districts. A galago from the neighbourhood of Titi some distance up the Zambesi, 
has been identified with the Sennaar variety of the Senegal galago, but it would 
appear more probable that it is one of these. r lhe prevailing colour is brownish, or 
yellowish-grey, becoming darker on the back, and still more so on the tail, while a 
broad streak on the nose, the cheeks, and the throat are white, and the inner 
surfaces of the limbs and the under-parts are whitish with a faint tinge of yellow. 
THE SENEGAL GALAGO (| HAt. size). 
In the male specimen in the British Museum brought home by the late Sir Andrew 
Smith—the original describer of this animal—the fur surrounding the eyes is of 
the same colour as that on the other parts of the head. In other examples in 
the national collection there are, however, dark rings round the eyes. This 
variability shows that we must not regard the presence or absence of such rings as 
indicating a specific distinction between the Senegal and Sennaar galagos. 
Demidoff’s Galago (Galago demidoffi). 
The smallest and the last of these lemurs that we shall mention is 
Demidoffs galago, from the West Coast of Africa. This animal differs from the 
