Autor podrobně popisuje taxonomii a historii objevů divokých oslů afrických (Equus africanus), hlavně forem osla danikilského (E. africanus taeniopus), nubijského (E. a. africanus) a somálského (E. a. somaliensis). Přibližuje též dostupné znalosti o jejich biologii a početních stavech populace těchto kriticky ohrožených (osel somálský) až pravděpodobně vyhubených (danikilský, nubijský) forem. and The author describes the taxonomy and history of the discovery of the African Wild Ass, particularly of the Danikil/Red Sea Wild Ass (Equus africanus taeniopus), the Nubian Wild Ass (E. a. africanus) and Somali Wild Ass (E. a. somaliensis). He also presents current knowledge of their bionomics and numbers: while the Somali Wild Ass has been considered critically endangered, the Danikil/Red Sea and Nubian ones have probably become extinct.
Based on the study of type material, two new genera of cestodes (Cyclophyllidea: Anoplocephalidae) are proposed for Paranoplocephala Lühe, 1910 sensu lato species from African rodents. Afrojoyeuxia gen. n., proposed for A. gundii (Joyeux, 1923) comb. n. from Ctenodactylus gundi (Rothmann) (Hystricomorpha: Ctenodactylidae), is characterized by a high length/width ratio of mature proglottids, longitudinally extensive testicular field positioned anterior to the female glands, an ovoid or subspherical cirrus-sac and a thick, conical cirrus. Hunkeleriella gen. n., proposed for H. dasymidis (Hunkeler, 1972) comb. n. from Dasymys incomtus (Sundevall) (Myomorpha: Muridae), differs from related genera mainly by its short (10-20 mm) and wide strobila and neck, unilateral genital pores (exceptionally with a few changes per strobila), the position of the genital pores (slightly anterior to the middle of proglottid margin) and initially tube-like early uterus (later reticulated). Parandrya Gulyaev et Chechulin, 1996, earlier suggested to be a junior synonym of Paranoplocephala, is considered to be a valid, independent genus. Evidence of non-monophyly and need for a taxonomic revision of Paranoplocephala sensu lato, as well as the phylogenetic position of A. gundii and H. dasymidis are discussed.