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Show 1889.] MAMMALS OF KINA BALU. 231 prominently white-rimmed ears, the dark patches behind the latter, and in its less bushy tail. It is also worthy of note that although 8. tenuis, throughout its range, is singularly uniform in coloration, yet, if anything, the Bornean specimens of it are darker in colour, and are therefore still less like 8. jentinki than are those from the Malay Peninsula, a fact which shows that the two species have no tendency to grade into one another. I have named this species in honour of m y friend Dr. F. A. Jentink, Director of the Leyden Museum, to whose labours we are indebted for much of our knowledge of the mammals inhabiting the East-Indian Archipelago. Mr. Whitehead informs me that 8. jentinki ranges on Mount Kina Balu from about 3000 to 8000 feet altitude. 11. SCIURUS NOTATUS, Bodd. Elench. Anim. p. 119 (1785). S. badjing, Kerr, Linn. An. K. p. 262 (1792). S. plantani, Ljung. K. Vet.-Ak. Handl. xxii. p. 99 (1801). a, b. ad. $ and imm. 3000 feet. 28/3/88. This common species, the Plantain Squirrel of Pennant, is represented by two specimens of the blue-bellied type, without any trace of red or yellow on their undersides. At the cost of another change of name, I am glad to be able now to supersede the barbarous term " S. badjing," which I was guilty of resuscitating on account of its priority over the commonly used " S. plantani." An examination of Boddaert's rare work proves, however, that the Plantain Squirrel had already received a Latin name there, and one also that is fortunately both classical and appropriate. 12. SCIURUS WHITEHEADI, Thos. Ann. Mag. N. H. (5) xx. p. 127 (1887). (Plate XXIV.) a. 3000 feet. 24/2/87. Type. b. 3000 feet. 28/2/87. c. c$, in spirit. Native name " Mantok." Size very small, only slightly larger than that of S. exilis, Miill. Ears narrow, pointed, their tips provided with beautiful black and white pencils of hair, so long as to reach, when laid backwards, almost to the withers; the ears themselves edged with black, and with a marked white spot on the head behind them. Colour otherwise uniformly finely grizzled olive-grey all over, exactly as in S. exilis and S. concinnus. Claws both before and behind long, very sharp and much curved, so as to enable the animal to hang on to almost, or quite, vertical surfaces. Palms with five large pads. Soles with four subequal digital pads, and a small circular posterior pad; back of sole hairy for about 9 or 10 millim. Skull very peculiarly shaped, with a short and broad cranial, and a disproportionally long and powerful facial portion, the distance from the tip of the nasals to a point between the anterior edges of the orbits 12*8 millim., as compared to 11*3 in S. exilis, and 11 16* |