260 The Philippine Journal of Science 1922 
The specimens vary considerably among themselves in color ; 
one specimen (No. 718) is uniform reddish to red-brown above, 
posterior part of belly yellow to yellow-green, anterior part of 
throat and chin cream white. 
Two other specimens were somewhat yellow-brown to olive 
above, with subarticular tubercles cream yellow. In one speci- 
men (No. 664) the black spots are wanting on the side of the 
head. 
The adult specimens were taken in various localities. One 
specimen. was on the trunk of a growing tree concealed in 
moss, at a distance of about 2 meters from the ground. Three 
specimens were found in a rotten log lying across a small 
mountain brook, 14 kilometers north of Baguio near the trail. 
Young specimens were taken under stones near small brooks 
and rivers. 
Rana igorota sp. nov. Plate 3, fig. 1. 
Type.—No. F786, E. H. Taylor collection; collected April 28, 
1920, at Balbalan, Kalinga Subprovince, northern Luzon, by 
E. H. Taylor. 
Description of type—Choanze moderate, rather hidden. by 
overhanging jaw; vomerine teeth in two series lying between 
and behind choanz, separated from latter by a distance equal 
to length of one series, separated from one another by a distance 
_ somewhat less; tongue large with two elongate horns widely 
separated at base; snout elongate; head much longer than wide; 
eye a little shorter than snout; nostril nearer end of snout than 
eye; loreal region nearly perpendicular, strongly concave; tym- 
panum large, separated from eye by a distance less than half 
the diameter of tympanum; distance between nostrils slightly 
greater than their distance from eye; interorbital distance equal 
to or a little less than upper eyelid; skin on head smooth; no 
tubercles on eyelids; back smooth save in posterior part where 
there are small scattered tubercles; a very narrow, distinct, 
tubercular, dorsolateral, glandular fold present; a glandular 
fold below tympanum turning down at its posterior end and 
terminating in a tubercle; upper surface of tibia with strong, 
scattered tubercles; belly granular in posterior part; chin and 
throat smooth; posterior and inferior aspects of femur largely 
granular; fingers with very broad disks, equal to two-thirds 
the diameter of tympanum, on the two outer fingers; disks 
smaller on the two inner fingers; first finger greatly thickened 
at base, distinctly shorter than second; subarticular tubercles 
distinct; palmar and carpal tubercles rather dim; toes with well- 
