L. G. ANDERSSON; A NEW LEPTODACTYLUS, A NEW NOTOTREMA. 3 



The specimen is collected by Dr P. Dusen, at Ponta 

 Grosso, Paranä, Brazil, and belongs to the collections of the 

 R. Museum of Natural History in Stockholm. 



Nototrema fiilvorufa n. sp. 



Plate 2. 



Tongue large, circular, nicked behind; vomerine teeth in 

 two short, sh*ghtly curved series close to each other and on 

 a level with the hind margin of the rather large choanse. 

 Head moderate; derm of head free from cranial ossification; 

 snout rounded, longer than the diameter of eye; loreal region 

 feebly concave; canthus rostralis distinct; interorbital space 

 twice as broad as the upper eye-lid; nostril near the tip of 

 the snout, its distance from the eye being as large as the 

 orbital diameter. Tympanum half the diameter of eye; the 

 anterior and lower part very distinct, the upper merging into 

 the skin. A fold above the tympanum; the postocular region 

 rather swollen. 



Outer fingers with a very slight rudiment of web; first 

 finger slightly longer than second ; the disks on the 3:tli and 

 4:th fingers as large as the tympanum, those on the l:st and 

 2:nd fingers considerably smaller. Toes halfwebbed; on the 

 4:th toe the web is attached to the third distal joint, on the 

 inner side at its base, on the outer side at its middle. The 

 disks of toes as large as those of fingers; the three outer 

 disks are considerably larger than the two inner. An inner 

 oval metatarsal tubercle, no outer. The measurement of the 

 length of tibia marked off along the body forwards from the 

 knee, reaches the tip of the snout. ^ 



Skin granular, but the inner sides of the före limb and 

 of the hand and the concealed parts of the hind limb smooth. 

 The upper parts of the head, the back, and the sides minu- 

 tely granular; on the back and on the sides there are numer- 

 ous larger round granules between the small ones. On the 

 extremities the granules are much less prominent, but also 

 on these there are two kinds: numerous small and scattered 

 larger ones. The chin, belly, and under parts of thighs 

 coarsely granular. 



^ See above, the footnote on p. 2, 



