180 



BULLETIN 17 7, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



and six loreal rows. Furthermore, the smaller one has seven scales 

 between the occipital and supraorbital semicircles, where three or four 

 ordinarily occur. The white line under the eye is not present at all in 

 the larger example; the smaller has a faint light mark there as the 

 only remaining trace of it. Whether these characters may prove to 

 be fixed enough to separate this as a subspecies distinct from the form 

 found on Haiti itself is a point that only additional material can settle. 



Table 31.— Specimens of Anolis coelestinus examined 



Museum No. 



Locality 



Collection 



U.S.N.M. 



25784-25796, 65796 



59180_ 



69153-69157 



69158 



72626-72627, 72634 



77077-77079 



80761 



80809-80811 



80917.... 



95123-95126 



M.C.Z. 



3347 (formerly 1500) (cotype 



of A . coelestinus) 



6169 (2 specimens) 



8745... 



13778 



13793, 13796 



25472-25481. 



25482.... 



25483 



25484-25486 



37421-37430 



F.M.N, ti. 



13230... 



13276-13279. 



Univ. Puerto Rico 



Port-au-Prince, Haiti (within 25 



miles of) 



Port-au-Prince, Haiti 



1866. 

 Apr. 



6, 1917 



Mon Repos, Haiti 



Riviere Froide, Haiti... 



Fonds-des-Negres, Haiti 



Miragoane, Haiti 



10 miles east of Baraderes, Haiti 



Petit Trou de Nippes, Ha. \ 



Morne Coquilles, Aux Cayes, Haiti. 

 IleaVache 



Jeremie, Haiti 



Tiburon, Haiti 



Diquini, Haiti. 



Gonave Island 



Port-au-Prince, Haiti 



Miragoane, Haiti 



6 miles southwest of Miragoane 



Haiti 



Grande C ayemite Island 



Citadelle, Cap-HaItien,Hait i 



fie a Vache 



Mar. 5, 1925 

 Mar. 4,1925 

 Apr. 6, 1927 



1927 



Apr. 6,1930 



Apr. 8. 1930 

 May 13, 1929 

 Apr. 12,1934 



1865. 



Above retionville, Haiti (3,500 feet 



alt.) 



Diquini, Haiti 



Kenskoff, Haiti. 



1913 



1919 



1919.. 



July 1927 



July 16,1927 

 Sept. 3,1927 

 Oct. 4, 1927 

 Apr. 12,1934 



Dec. 1, 1928 

 Dec. 7, 1928 



June 20, 1938 



A. C. Younglove. 

 J. B. Henderson 



and P. Bartsch. 

 G. S. Miller, Jr. 



Do. 

 A. Wetmore. 

 W. J. Eyerdam. 

 L. H. Parish and W. 

 Perrygo. 

 Do. 

 C. R. Orcutt. 

 Utowana Expedition. 



D. F.Weinland. 

 S. Garman. 

 W. M. Mann. 

 G. M. Allen. 



Do. 

 W. J. Eyerdam. 



Do. 

 Do. 

 Do. 

 Do. 



K. P. Schmidt. 

 Do. 



Jos6 A. Ramos. 



Relationships. — A. coelestinus resembles A. brunneus of the Bahamas 

 in having very minute gular scales. In the head scalation, brunneus, 

 porcatus, and carolinensis all have the distinctly coarser plates of 

 chloro-cyanus, rather than tho smaller scales of coelestinus. But 

 neither coelestinus nor chloro-cyanus has the enlarged plates going for- 



