FROGS OF COLOMBIA — COCHRAN AND GOIN 63 



with lateral ridges, free, first finger a little shorter than second, which 

 reaches to base of penultimate phalanx of third, the tip of which 

 covers about one-eighth the tympanum; a small, weak thumb pad 

 present; a round palmar callus; metacarpal tubercles well developed. 

 Toes webbed at the base, long, ridged, third toe much longer than 

 fifth, its disk reaching midway on antepenultimate phalanx of fourth; 

 disk of fourth toe covering nearly one-fourth the tympanum, and 

 larger than that of third finger; a distinct oval inner metatarsal 

 tubercle and a smaller round outer one; a heavy tarsal ridge, ending 

 diagonally midway across the tarsus in a heavy tubercular ridge; a 

 skinfold on heel and knee. Body moderately slender, in postaxillary 

 region narrower than greatest width of head. When hind leg is ad- 

 pressed, heel reaches posterior border of tympanum; when limbs are 

 laid along the sides, knee and elbow slightly overlap; when hind legs 

 are bent at right angles to body, heels fail to touch. Skin of upper 

 parts resistant to abrasion, nearly smooth anteriorly (pustular under 

 the lens), minutely granular on sacrum; venter coarsely granular on 

 belly and lower femur, becoming smoother on chest, chin, and sides; 

 no glandular ridge from posterior corner of eye; a low swelling in 

 parotoid region; no skinfold across the chest; a slight ventral disk; 

 apparently no external vocal sacs. 



Dimensions. — Head and body, 22 mm.; head length, 7.5 mm.; 

 head width, 7.5 mm.; femur, 8.5 mm.; tibia, 9.5 mm.; foot, 10.5 mm.; 

 hand, 6 mm. 



Color in alcohol. — Dorsum cinnamon, with four indistinct sepia 

 stripes along the back, the inner pair broken up into elongate spots; 

 a large, square sepia spot between and behind eyes, the snout pale 

 wood brown in front of this spot; upper lip wood brown, immaculate; 

 upper surfaces of limbs wood brown, with wide diagonal sepia cross- 

 bands; a wide light dorsolateral stripe from posterior corner of eye 

 diagonally to groin, bordered below by a slightly narrower sepia 

 stripe whose anterior part commences on the loreal region; venter 

 pinkish-buff to vinaceous-buff, with small scattered sepia spots be- 

 ginning on anterior belly and ending at level of groin; lower limb 

 surfaces vinaceous pink, with some large seal brown spots on outer 

 parts of femur, tibia, and foot; posterior femur with the suggestion 

 of a light longitudinal stripe bounded below by a broken and irregular 

 sepia stripe and above by the ends of the diagonal sepia crossbands; 

 palms of hands and soles of feet vinaecous-buff, with darker areas on 

 outer phalanges of foot, the tubercles and disks lighter; the minute 

 webs between the toes nearly white. 



Remarks. — Although Dunn (1944c) wrote that subpunctatus was 

 limited to the general vicinity of BogotA in southeastern Cundinamarca, 

 he nevertheless identified as this species two examples that he col- 



