384 U.S. NATIONAL MUSEUM BULLETIN 2 88 



Specimens Examined 

 COLOMBIA 



Antioquia: Puerto Berrio, CNHM 30809. 



Caldas: La Selva, Pueblo Rico, 1,700 m., CNHM 54608-11. 



Choc6: Andagoya, CNHM 81846-7, USNM 144791-800, 150449-57, 124235- 

 6, BM 1916.4.25.26; El Valle, USNM 151290; Boca de la Raspadura, AMNH 

 13685-6; Istmina, upper San Juan River, CNHM 15644-5; Las Animas 

 Creek, Quito River, tributary of the Atrato, AMNH 13606; Mutis, USNM 

 151291; Novita, Rio San Juan, MCZ 15422; Pefia Lisa, Condoto, DZSP 

 10561 (formerly BM 1914.5.21.63); Pizarro, CNHM 44073-4; Quibd6, 

 AMNH 13687; Sierra de Baud6, AMNH 25673-4; Sierra de Darien, AMNH 

 25676. 



Cundinamarca: Finca El Cuchero, near Tocaima, USNM 144801-2. 



Meta: El Centro, CNHM 81737, 81763. 



NariS-o, La Guayacana, ANSP 25678. 



Santander: El Centro, USNM 147135-7, 150458-80, MLS 189, CNHM 81737, 

 81763. 



Tolima: Mariquita, USNM 144803-8, CNHM 81830-2. 



Valle: Buenaventura, USNM 124175, 144810-7, 150481-7; Rio Anchicaya, 

 USNM 144809; Rio Calima near C6rdoba, USNM 145756-70; Virology 

 Field Station, Rio Raposo, USNM 151439-41, 151443, 151446, 15144S. 



Eleutherodactylus longirostris (Boulenger) 



Plate 47d-f 



1898. Hylodes longirostris Boulenger, 1898a, p. 120, pi. 15, figs. 1, la (type 

 locality, Cachabd, Ecuador). — Despax, 1911, p. 40. — Nieden, 1923, 

 p. 446, fig. 332. 



1959. Eleutherodactylus longirostris. — Goin, 1959, p. 130. — Gorham, 1963, p. 17. 



Description. — USNM 124265, an adult from near Quebrada Santa 

 Ana, a tributary of Kio Opogod6, Choc6, Colombia. Vomerine teeth in 

 small, heavy, well-separated patches behind the choanae; tongue 

 two-thirds the width of mouth opening, oval, with a notch in its free 

 posterior border; snout long, rounded when seen from above, tip 

 almost truncate in profile, the upper jaw projecting considerably 

 beyond lower; nostrils lateral, their distance from end of snout about 

 one-third their distance from eye, separated from each other by an 

 interval slightly less than their distance from eye. Canthus rostralis 

 very sharply projecting, with a slight furrow below it where the flat 

 loreal region juts out to the flaring upper lip. Eye large, prominent, 

 its diameter about two-thirds the length of snout; interorbital diam- 

 eter equal to width of upper eyelid, equal to interval between the 

 nostrils. Tympanum distinct, two-thirds the diameter of eye, sep- 

 arated from eye by one-half its own diameter. Fingers long, free, not 

 ridged, first, second, and fourth fingers subequal, their tips enlarged 

 into truncate disks, disk of third finger equal to about one-third the 

 diameter of tympanum; a heavy pad on base of first finger, and a 

 larger, semidivided palmar callus; metacarpal tubercles large and 



