80 BARBOUR: ZOOGEOGRAPHY. 



Gunung Bunder, Mt. Salak; four in the Megamendung Mountains, west Java; 

 two at Depok; one at Buitenzorg; and one at Tjibodas. 



Gymnodactylus lateralis Werner. 

 Werner, Verh. zool. bot. ges. Wien, 1896, 46, p. 11, pi. 1, fig. 4. 



Type locality: — Sumatra. 



One specimen of this rare gekkoid was obtained by exchange from the Ameri- 

 can museum of natural history. It is from Sumatra, the only region whence the 

 species comes. 



Hemidactylus frenatus Dumeril et Bibron. 



DuMERiL ET Bibron, Erpet. gen., 1836, 3, p. 366. Boulenger, Cat. lizards Brit, mus., 1885, 1, p. 

 120-121. 



Type locality: — "Cette espece habite I'Afrique australe, et parait etre 

 repandue dans touts I'archipel des grandes Indes." Mention of specimens is 

 made from the Cape of Good Hope, Madagascar, Mauritius, Ceylon, Ambon, 

 Timor, Java, Marianne Island, Bengal. 



This wide-ranging form is represented in the collection by specimens col- 

 lected by the writer at Jeypore, Delhi, and Calcutta, India; Rangoon and Tig- 

 yaing, Burma; Saigon, Cochin China; Buitenzorg, Java; various localities on 

 Halmaheraand Obi Islands in the Moluccas; at Saonek, Wiagiu; and at Sorong, 

 Manokwari, Djamna, and Humboldt's Bay in New Guinea. 



Ranges through China, southeastern Asia generally. East Indies and Papu- 

 asia, Queensland, St. Helena, and Korea. 



Hemidactylus gleadovii Murray. 

 Murray, Zool. Sind. 1884, p. 300, pi. — , fig. 3. Boulenger, Cat. lizards Brit, mus., 1885, 1, p. 129. 



Type locality: — Sind, India? Murray, loc. cit. (not seen). 

 Three specimens taken in Lucknow, one in Calcutta, and one from Manda- 

 lay. The Museum has six (No. 3,242) from Bengal. 



Hemidactylus bowringii (Gray). 

 Gray, Cat. lizards Brit, mus., 1845, p. 156. Stejneger, Bull. 58, U. S. nat. mus., 1907, p. 176-178. 



Type locality: — unknown. 



A number of examples from the thatched roofs of Butiya's houses in the 

 valley of the Teesta River in the border of Bhutan and one example from 

 Schwegu, Upper Burma. 



Occurs in parts of India and Burma; Formosa and Riu Kiu Islands. 



