Hurler and Strecker — Amphibians and Reptiles of Arkansas. 17 



Dr. 0. P. Hay in "The Reptiles and Batracliians of 

 Indiana" (p. 452) records Desmognathus fusca Hald. 

 from southwestern Arkansas. His record was doubtless 

 based on examples of D. hrimleyorum, which was not 

 described until some three or four years later. 



Family Plethodontidae. 



3. Speleepes multiplicatus Cope. Many-ribbed Triton. 

 The types of this species (No. 4938 U. S. Nat. Mus. 



Coll. 4 examples, ''Red River, Arkansas," Dr. L. A. Ed- 

 wards, U. S. A.) were doubtless from some locality near 

 the Red River in what is now eastern Oklahoma and not 

 from within the limits of the present State of Arkansas. 

 It is tolerably common at Little Rock (Hurter) and Meek 

 obtained examples at Fayetteville. 



4. Hemidactylium scutatum Schlegel. Scaly Sala- 



mander. 

 Hurter obtained two specimens of this species at Hot 

 Springs. This makes the second record from west of 

 the Mississippi River, the other locality being Bourbon, 

 Crawford County, Missouri. 



5. PLETH0D0]sr GLUTiNosus Green. Slimy Salamander. 

 Hot Springs (Combs), Little Rock (Hurter). 



Family Ambystomidae. 



6. Ambystoma annulatum Cope. 



Four specimens of this rare salamander were collected 

 at Hot Springs (Combs). See Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 

 1894: 599; and Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., 21: 85-88. 



7. Ambystoma punctatum Linn. Spotted Salamander. 

 Greenway (Meek). 



8. Ambystoma opacum Gravenhorst. Marbled Sala- 



mander. 

 Paragould (Hurter), Greenway (Meek). 



9. Ambystoma mickostomum Cope. Small-mouthed 



Salamander. 

 Fort Smith (Shumard. U. S. Nat. Mus. Coll.) 



