THE HERPETOLOGY OF HISPANIOLA 



169 



a blunt and squarish snout generally. Not every specimen conforms 

 to these proportions, however. A female from Gonave Island 

 (U.S.N.M. No. 77072) has a snout almost as broad as long, while the 

 described specimen of cybotes (U.S.N.M. No. 75894) has a snout 

 slightty longer than broad. The scales of the tail verticils are larger 

 in the Gonave Island lizard, there being four to six vertical rows to 

 every verticil in the Gonave Island form, while true cybotes has 

 usually finer scales in six to nine rows to a verticil. These differences 

 are not great, it is true, but they seem sufficient to allot subspecific 

 rank to the Gonave Island lizard, which is evidently on its way to 

 becoming a full species through the effects of isolation. 

 Specimens examined. — As listed in table 29. 



Table 29. — Specimens of Anohs cybotes doris examined 



Museum No. 



Locality 



Date 



Collector 



U.S.f.M. 



69384 (paratype of A. doris 



Barbour) 

 77072.... 



Gonave Island. 



80381-80384. 



Point-a-Raquettes, Gonave Is- 

 land. 

 West Point, Gonave Island 



80385 



80391, 80392. 



Gonave Island 



Petite Gonave Island. 



M.C.Z. 



13734-13736 (paratype of 

 A. doris Barbour) 



13737 (type of A. doris 

 Barbour) 



13738-13740, 13742 (para- 

 type of A. doris Barbour) 



25525-25527 



25528 



37470-37479. 



Gonave Island. 



.do. 



.do. 



Point-a-Raquettes, Gonave Is- 

 land. 

 Anse a Galets, Gonave Island... 

 do... 



August 1919. . 



1927.. 



Mar. 21, 1930. 



Mar. 23, 1930. 

 Mar. 19, 1930. 



1919 



1919 



1919 



1927 



August 1927.. 

 April 1934.... 



G. M. Allen. 



W. J. Eyerdam. 



L. H. Parish and W. 

 Perrygo. 

 Do. 

 Do. 



G. M. Allen. 



Do. 



Do. 



W. J. Eyerdam. 



Do. 

 Utowana Expedition. 



ANOLIS MONTICOLA Shreve 



Plate 11, B 

 1936. Anolis monticola Shreve, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 15, p. 93. 



Original description. — "Type. — Museum of Comparative Zoology, 

 no. 38,296, a male, apparently adult, from northern and eastern foot- 

 hills, Massif de la Hotte, 1000-4000 ft., Haiti, collected by P. J. 

 Darlington in October, 1934. 



"Diagnosis. — Possibly most similar to Anolis sagrei of Cuba, from 

 which it differs in possessing much smaller head scales, in having three 

 rows of scales separating the supraorbitals, instead of one or two, in 

 having decidedly smaller dorsals and ventrals, a slighter general build, 



226849 — 11 12 



