THE HERPETOLOGY OF HISPANIOLA 167 



ANOLIS CYBOTES DORIS Barbour 



Figure 55 



1925. Anolis doris Barbour, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 38, p. 101; Zo- 



ologica, vol. 11, No. 4, p. 93, 1930. — Barbour and Loveridge, Bull. Mns. 



Cornp. Zool., vol. 69, No. 10, p. 219, 1929. 

 1934. Anolis cybotes doris Cochran, Occ. Pap. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 8, 



p. 168.— Barbour, Zoologica, vol. 19, No. 3, p. 114, 1935; Bull. Mus. Comp. 



Zool., vol. 82, No. 2, p. 128, 1937. 



Description of a paratype. — A nearly grown male, iormerly M.C.Z. 

 No. 13741, now U.S.N.M. No. 69384. from Gonave Island, collected 

 by Dr. G. M. Allen in August 1919. Top of head with two ( )-shaped 

 frontal ridges, disappearing just before the level of the nostrils is 

 reached and inclosing a frontal hollow; head scales smooth or slightly 

 rugose, the supraocular patch with fairly heavy keels; the distance 

 becween the anterior portions of the orbits considerably less than 

 that from the orbit to the end of the snout; rostral low, slightly nar- 

 rower than the mentals; four scales in a row between the narrow 

 scales bordering each nostril above; supraorbital semicircles com- 

 posed of six or seven enlarged scales, the second the largest, the third 

 in close contact with its fellow for nearly its entire length, the next 

 ones separated by one scale; occipital over one-half the size of the 

 ear opening, separated from the supraorbital semicircles by two or 

 three scales; a single larger scale at the anterior border of the occipi- 

 tal and a similar scale posterior to the occipital, which is followed by 

 other irregularly larger and smaller scales ; supraorbital disk composed 

 of about nine polygonal keeled scales, incompletely separated from 

 the semicircle by a single row of granules, which in front of the disk 

 form a patch of gradually enlarging granules with a few somewhat 

 larger ones lying near the superciliaries ; can thus rostralis sharp, con- 

 sisting of three elongated subequal shields; superciliary ridge consist- 

 ing of one very elongate scale, followed by one shorter and four or 

 five rather small ones; loreal rows six; scales of subocular semicircles 

 keeled, rather small and relatively undifferentiated, separated from 

 the upper labials by one row of scales; supralabials 10, the seventh 

 under the center of the eye, the last rather small; temporal granules 

 about the size of the dorsolaterals; a well-marked double series of 

 scales forming the supratemporal line; dorsal and lateral granules 

 minute, keeled, a median enlarged series of scales down the center of 

 the back, beginning on the nuchal region, diminishing slightly on the 

 sacrum and continuing on the tail as a low, serrate ridge; ventral 

 scales relatively large, imbricate, rounded behind, smooth, those on 

 the throat small and swollen into round knobs; anterior face of fore 

 limbs and hincilimbs covered with large keeled scales somewhat larger 

 than the ventrals; scales covering hands and feet above unicarinate 

 to multicarinate; digital expansion wide, with about 18 lamellae under 



