248 Fi'ogs of the Okefinokee Swamp 



1922 . Journ. N. Y. Ento. Soc. Mar. 1922, Vol. XXX, No. i, p. 74. 



1906 Dickerson, M. C. The Frog Book, pp. 131-133. 



1908 Fowler, H. W. Annual Rept. N. J. S. Mus. 1906, Part I, 1907, pp. 108-112. 



1908 '. Annual Rept. N. J. S. Mus. 1907, Part III, p. 193. 



1930 Klots, A. B. Copeia Oct. -Dec. 1929, Jan. 16, 1930, No. 173, pp. 108-111. 



1916 Miller, W. DeW. Copeia, Aug. 24, 1916, No. 34, p. 68. 



1894 Moore, J. Percy. American Naturalist Dec. 1894, XXVIII, No. 336, pp. 1045, 1046. 



1923 Noble, G. K. and R. C. Noble, The Anderson Tree Frog. Zoologica, Aug. 20, 1923. 

 1889 Peters, John E. American Naturalist Jan. 1889, Vol. XXIII. No. 265, pp. 58, 59. 



Smith, W. H. 

 1923 Stejneger, L. and Barbour, T. A Check List of North American Amphibians and 



Reptiles. Second Edition, Cambridge 1923, p. 29. 

 1901 Stone, W. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., June 1901, Vol. 53, p. 342. 

 1906 . American Naturalist Mar. 1906, Vol. XL, No. 471, p. 163. 



Hyla cinerea (Schneider) 



(PL II, Fig. 5; V, Fig. I ; VII, Figs, i, 4; X, Fig. 2; XII, Fig. 4; XV, Fig. 2; XVII; XXVI; 



Text Fig. I, 12) 



COMMON NAMES 



Green Tree Frog. Carolina Tree Frog. Cinereous Frog. Bell Frog. Fried 

 Bacon Frog. Cow-bell Frog. Bull Frog. Tree Frog (Holbrook). Green Tree 

 Toad. Carolina Hyla. Banded Hyla {semifasciata). Hallowell's Tree Frog. 



RANGE 



Check list. Type Locality: "Inhabits Carolina." Range: Virginia to 

 Florida, west to Texas, and northward up the Mississippi Valley to southern 

 Illinois." Stejneger & Barbour Check List 1923, p. 30. 



Supplementary records. In 1926 (Wright '26, pp. 82, 83) held Hyla 

 cinerea to be a Lower Austral species from southern New Jersey to Texas. 

 In 191 7 our route from Washington southward to Texas was through Upper 

 Austral or Piedmont country. We did not see or hear this species until 

 Flat wood (Wilco Co.) Alabama, was reached. We next took them at Pass 

 Christian, Miss., June 14, at Devers and Berwick, Louisiana, June 18 and 

 19, between Beaumont and Neches River, Texas, June 21, or from Alabama 

 to Texas. In Texas in 1925 we found them south of Beeville and almost to 

 Corpus Christi. Pope (1919, pp. 95, 96) recorded it at Houston, Tex. In 

 North Carolina Brmley records it in Dare and Lenoir Counties. In 1922 

 we found it as far west as Richmond County south of Rockingham, N. C. 

 In 1924 George S. Myers (1924, p. 60) reports it from Wilmington, N. C. 

 The following month, 1924, Schmidt reports it from Charleston, S. C. In 

 1922 from near Columbia, S. C, June 9, through Millen, Ga., June 10, and 

 Screven, Ga., June 11, and Waycross, June 12, to Okefinokee, June 13, we 

 recorded this species. All in all, the records distinctly make it a Lower 

 Austral form. 



Local Okefinokee records. We recorded it from the following Okefinokee 

 localities: Billy's, Black Jack, Chesser, Floyd's, Honey Islands, the Pocket, 

 Craven's and Mixon Hammocks, Billy's and Minne Lakes, Chase and Grand 

 Prairies, Suwannee Canal, Suwannee and St. Mary's River, Starling Branch 

 and numerous localities around the swamp. It was widespread in this region 

 and a very common frog. 



