30 ANURA CHAP. 



much reduced, for iustauce in Felohafes, Bonibinator, Liopehini. 

 In Batrachophriiniin not only the cavity, but also the Eustacliian 

 tubes arc suppressed. Iri the Aglossa only the two tubes are 

 united into one short but wide median canal, opening at the level 

 of the pterygoids on the roof of the mouth. 



The lower jaw is remarkable for the possession of mento- 

 Meckelian cartilages, absent only in the Aglossa and Disco- 

 iflossidae. At first thev are much longer than the rest of the 

 jaw ; during the l;ir\al life they indeed form the functional 

 jaw, and they are now covered with horny sheaths instead of 

 teeth. Owing to the absence of teeth on them, these mento- 

 Meckelian cartilages are later not invested l)y bone, although in 

 many Anura they ultimately ossify, either retaining their sepa- 

 rate nature or fusing partly with the dentary bones. The bulk 

 of the lower jaw, the Meckelian cartilage, becomes invested by 

 the dentary, a small articulare, and an inner angulare, while a 

 splenial element is absent. The dentary itself is mostly reduced 

 to a small dentigerous splint, while the angulare forms by far 

 the greater part of the bony jaw. 



Teetli are more restricted in their occurrence than in the 

 Urodela. On the jaws they always stand in one row. With 

 the exception of the Hemiphractinae, Amphignathodontinae, 

 'Ceratobati'achinae, and Genyophryninae, no recent Anura carry 

 teeth on the lower jaw, and even in these genera they are mostly 

 much reduced in si/e and firmness, having all the appearance of 

 vanishing structures. The premaxillae and maxillae are frequently 

 furnished with teeth, except in the Dendrobatinae, Genyophry- 

 ninae, Engystomatinae, J )endrophryniscinae, Bufonidae, Fi-pa, and 

 Hynienochirti^i. The vomers mostly carry a series of teeth on 

 their posterior border; when these teeth are absent, as in many 

 species of Bufo, a kind of substitute sometimes occurs on the 

 palatines in the shape of a row of tuberosities. The palatines 

 carry teeth in Hemiphractinae. The paras])henoids are toothed 

 in Triprion and Dkif/Iena, and occasionally in Pelohates cidtripes. 



A few Anura possess peculiar substitutes for teeth in the 

 anterior portion of the lower jaw, namely, a pair of conical bony 

 l>rocesses, sometimes rather long, but always covered by the 

 dense gums, <»r investment of the jaws ; f.g. Lepidohatrachiis, 

 .several Rami, c.<j. li. adi^per^ii, 7?. I'liasinmi, B. l-vjili, and Cryptotis 

 hrcvis. 



