172 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [April, 



each jaw small. A small gular appendage, though no tramsverse 

 fold across throat. Interorbital space very narrow and concave. 

 Ear much smaller than eye, rounded. 



Upper head scales large, smooth, and in three or four series on 

 bony interorbital. Occipital scale rounded, much larger than ear. 

 Scales on back small or minute, subhexagonal, juxtaposed, smooth, 

 and about four vertebral series distinctly more or less uniformly 

 larger. Ventral scales rhomboidal, much larger than dorsal, and 

 each one with a distinct lengthwise keel. Upper scales on limbs all 

 rhomboid and more or less keeled, lower scales minute and like those 

 on back. Scales on tail all rather larger than those on Ijack, similar 

 to those comprising vertebral series. 



. Limbs slender, and long toe slender, with distal joints raised above 

 penultimate and mostly slightly swollen. Adpressed hind limb not 

 quite reaching forward to snout tip. 



Color in alcohol mostly pale or dull greenish-gray, with metallic 

 lustre, and lower surface of head and trunk more or less whitish. 

 Latter regions, besides lower surface of tail, with scattered dusky 

 dots, rather inconspicuously distributed. 



Total length 95 mm. 



Type, No. 18,277, A. N. S. P. Cariquito, Venezuela. March, 1911. 

 Francis E. Bond and Stewardson Brown. 



Only known from the above example. It is possibly only a form 

 of Anolis nitens (Wagler), though, according to Boulenger's account, 

 that species^^ would differ in having the head shorter than the tibia 

 the upper head scales keeled, the enlarged dorsal vertebral scales 

 in only two series, the adpressed hind limb reaching beyond the 

 snout tip, the digits ver}^ feebly dilated, the rounded tail more than 

 twice length of head and body, and the coloration. 



(Named for Mr. Francis E. Bond, who organized the Venezuela 

 Expedition of 1911.) 



Polychrus marmoratus (Linn^us). 



Four from Cariquito. 

 Tropidurus torquatus (Wied). 



Two from Cariquito. 



Plica plica (Linnaus). 



Four from Cariquito. 

 Iguana tuberculata Laurenti. 



Three examples from Corical. 



16 Cat. Lizards Brit. Mus., Ed. 2, II, 1885, p. 91. 



