"Considerable Interest Attaches To The Head Of
An Eland, Killed By Colonel J.H. Patterson In
Portuguese[1] East Africa,
And set up by Mr.
Rowland Ward, on account of certain peculiarities
in colouring and markings, which indicate a
transition
From the ordinary South African
animal in the direction of the giant eland
(Taurotragus derbianus) of the Bahr-el-Ghazal
district and West Africa. In the striped variety
(Taurotragus oryx livingstonianus) of the ordinary
South African eland, the whole middle line of
the face of the adult bull is uniformly dark, or
even blackish-brown, with a tuft of long bushy
hair on the forehead, and no white stripe from
the lower angle of the eye. On the other hand,
in the Sudani form of the giant eland (T.
derbianus gigas), as represented by a bull figured by
Mr. Rothschild in Novitates Zoologicae for 1905,
the upper part of the face has the hair rufous
and shorter than in the ordinary eland, while
from the lower angle of each eye a white stripe
runs inwards and downwards, recalling the white
chevron of the kudu, although the two stripes do
not meet in the middle line.
"In Colonel Patterson's eland (which may well
be designated T. oryx pattersonianus) there is an
incomplete white chevron similar to, although
rather smaller than, the one found in the giant
eland, while only a narrow stripe in the middle
line of the face, above and between the eyes, is
dark-brown, the sides of the forehead being
rufous. On the lower part of the face there is
a larger dark-brown area than in the ordinary
eland, although there is a rufous fawn-coloured
patch on each side above the nostril. In both
the latter respects Colonel Patterson's specimen
recalls the giant eland, although it apparently
lacks the dark white-bordered band on the side
of the neck, characteristic of the latter. If all
the elands from that part of Portuguese East
Africa where Colonel Patterson's specimen was
obtained turn out to be of the same type, there
will be a strong presumption that the true and
the giant eland, like the various local forms of
giraffe and bonte-quagga, are only races of one
and the same species. While, even if the present
specimen be only a 'sport' (which I consider
unlikely), it will serve to show that the southern
and northern elands are more nearly related than
has hitherto been supposed."
1 In error for "British."
As my eland thus proved to be of some
considerable scientific value, and as the authorities
of the British Museum expressed a desire to
possess its head, I gladly presented it to the
Trustees, so that all sportsmen and naturalists
might have an opportunity of seeing it at the
Natural History Museum at South Kensington,
where it now is.
APPENDIX
I.
SPORTSMEN who think of visiting British East Africa
on a shooting trip may be glad of a few general hints
on points of interest and importance.
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