PAPIO ANUBIS. 
45 
passing into brownish, but all the rest of the side of the head is covered with more 
or less yellowish and black annulated hairs. All the hairs of the chest and belly and 
inner sides of the limbs are annulated yellow and black, the black tips being well 
developed on the abdominal hairs. The bases of the hairs immediately behind the 
ears are greyish, instead of being dark blackish brown. The face and the nates are 
blackish, and the hairs below the latter are rather long and dense. The upper surfaces 
of the hands, and to a less degree of the hind feet, from a short way above the wrist and 
ankle, are blackish. 
[This is not the type of the species, which I have since seen in Paris, see above, p. 41.] 
This adult male measures:—Snout to vent 790 mm.; vent to tip of tail 480 ; height 
at shoulder 510. 
Museum des Pays-Bas. 
Papio doguera. 
The specimens referred by Schlegel to this species are distinguished by the characters 
indicated by himself and resemble essentially the type of P. doguera, the form to which 
they are unquestionably referable. 
Clot Bey’s specimen, which is young, is rather brilliantly yellow. 
Senckenberger Museum, Frankfort. 
In this Museum there are an adult male and female of P. doguera, Pucheran and 
Schimper, collected in Abyssinia by Dr. Ruppell in 1834. 
The collector’s label on the under surface of the stand gives Cynoceyhalus anubis. 
The general colour of the female is a richer yellow than that of the more immature 
female in the Stuttgart Museum, and in this respect it resembles the male. This female 
is 695 mm. from snout to vent; the tail is 452 mm., and the height at the shoulder 
510 mm. The hair on the shoulder is distinctly longer than that on the hind¬ 
quarters. The hands and feet are more or less concolorous with the rest of the limbs, 
but the black tips to the hairs are so pronounced as to confer, especially on the hands, 
a blackish appearance, but to no great degree. 
For comparative measurements of the skulls of these two specimens, see p. 40, 
nos. 1 & 8. 
The skull of the type of P. heuglini measures in extreme length 218 mm. and the 
Munich example of P. doguera 209 mm., whereas Ruppell’s Abyssinian male has a 
skull 228 mm. long. In the former, the length from the anterior border of the 
foramen magnum to the tip of the premaxillaries is 162 mm., and in the latter 147 mm. 
In P. heuglini and P. doguera the zygomatic breadth of the skulls is practically the 
same, the former being only 2 mm. broader than the latter. The facial portion of the 
skull between the eyes and the end of the nasals is seemingly variable. In the type of 
