288 Philippine Journal of Sctence 1920 
“From snout to vent 32 millim.” 
Remarks.—This rare species is known from two specimens 
collected by A. Everett in Palawan, 
Polypedates leucomystax (Gravenhorst). Plate 2, fig. 4. 
Hyla leucomystax GRAVENHORST, Delic. Mus. Vratislav. (1829) 26. 
Hyla sexvirgata GRAVENHORST, Delic. Mus. Vratislav. (1829) 28. 
Hyla quadrilineata W1IEGMANN, Nova Acta Acad. Leop.-Carol. 17 
(1835) 260, pl. 22, fig. 1. 
Polypedates leucomystax TscHupt, Class. Batr. (1838) 75; DUMERIL 
and Bipron, Erp. Gén. 8 (1841) 520; KELAART, Prodr. Faun. Zeyl. 
(1852), 198; SresNecER, Bull. U. 8. Nat. Mus. 58 (1907) 157. 
Polypedates rugosus DUMERIL and BIBRON, Erp. Gén. 8 (1841) 520. 
Polypedates quadrilineatus GUNTHER, Cat. Batr. Sal. Brit. Mus. 
(1858) 79. 
Polypedates megacephalus HALLOWELL, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila- 
delphia (1860) 507. 
Rhacophorus maculatus BoULENGER, Cat. Batr. Sal. Brit. Mus. ed. 2 
(1882) 83; var. quadrilineata, 84; Proc. Zool. Soc. London (1889) 
30. 
Polypedates maculatus GUNTHER, Cat. Batr. Sal. Brit. Mus. (1858) 
78; Rept. Brit. India (1864) 428; BLANFoRD, Journ. As. Soc. Bengal 
(1870) 876; ANDERSON, Proc. Zool. Soc. London (1871) 307; 
SToLiczKA, Proc. As. Soc. Bengal (1872) 106. 
Polypedates biscutiger PETERS, Mon. Berl. Ak. (1871) 644. 
Hylorana longipes FiscHer, Archiv. Naturg. 51 (1885) 47. 
Rhacophorus leucomystax var. sexvirgata BOULENGER, Proc. Zool. Soc. 
London (1889) 30. 
Description of species—(From No. 686, E. H. Taylor col- 
lection; collected at Bunawan, Agusan, Mindanao, P. I., June 
24, 1913, by E. H. Taylor.) Vomerine teeth in two slender 
diagonal series, beginning at some distance from anterior inner 
edge of choanz, and separated from each other by a distance 
equal to their distance from choanz; distance between HEusta- 
chian tubes equals their distance from nostrils; distance between 
choanze much greater than distance between nostrils, equaling 
distance from eye to nostril; head a little longer than broad; 
interorbital area and a large area on snout depressed; canthus 
rostralis roundly angular, nostrils lateral, below level of choane; 
diameter of eye equal to its distance from nostril; nostril two 
and one-half times as far from eye as from tip of snout; tympa- 
num large, its greatest diameter slightly less than diameter of 
eye, separated from the latter by a distance less than one-third 
its diameter ; interorbital distance one and one-half times upper 
eyelid; latter equal to distance between nostrils; skin of body 
above minutely granular and apparently smooth in patches; skin 
of head, save a small area in frontal region, involved in cranial 
ossification; sides wrinkled and granular; throat and breast 
