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UNGULATES. 
The other three species are Chinese. In Eastern Tibet and the neighbourhood 
of Hangchow there occurs Sclater’s muntjac (G. lacrymans), characterised by the 
bright yellowish-coloured hair of the head and neck, while that clothing the body and 
limbs is of a much more sombre hue. The smallest member of the group is Reeves’s 
muntjac (C. reevesi), from Southern China and Formosa, in which the colour of the 
whole fur is brighter than in any other species, while the pedicles of the antlers 
diverge less from one another, and the hollow in the skull for the gland below the 
eye is of unusually large size. 
Finally, the hairy-fronted muntjac (C. crinifrons), which is perhaps the hand¬ 
somest of all and comes from the neighbourhood of Ningpo, is distinguished at a 
glance by the long tuft of hair on the forehead and top of the head, in which the 
minute antlers are almost entirely hidden. This species stands about 24 inches in 
height at the shoulder; and the general colour of its fur is brown. The upper part 
of the head is, however, of a bright chestnut, which, with the white of the under-parts 
and lower surface of the tail, forms a striking contrast to the sombre coloration of 
the body. 
The Tufted Deer. 
Genus Elaphodus. 
Nearly related to the muntjacs are two small deer from Chinese territory, of 
which the one known as Michie’s deer {Elaphodus michianus ) inhabits Eastern 
michie’s deer. (From Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc., 1876.) 
China, while the other, which may be called the Tibetan tufted deer (E. cephalophus ), 
is from Moupin, in Eastern Tibet. In the males of these deer, as represented in the 
