THE HERPETOLOGY OF HISPANIOLA 283 



Table 52. — Specimens of Ameiva chrysolaema chrysolaema examined — Continued 



Museum No. 



Locality 



Date 



Collector 



F.M.N.H. 



104-106, 113, 122, 126, 162. 



10908-10912 



10913 



10915 



10914 - 



13257 - 



13273- -.-- 



Univ. Puerto Rico 



Hamburg Mus. 



1798a_„ 

 1797a—. 

 2246a-e. 



Mus. Basel 

 (1 specimen)— 



Santo Domingo City, D. R. 



Gonave Island 



Haina, D. R... 



Gonave Island.. 



Monte Cristi, D. R 



Gonave Island 



Diquini 



Port-au-Prince, Haiti. 



"Haiti" 



do 



Port-au-Prince, Haiti. 



Port-au-Prince, Haiti. 



1895...- 



July 16, 1927.. 

 June 16, 1927. 

 July 16, 1927.. 

 June 22, 1927. 



1928.... 



1928 



June 22, 1938. 



1898. 



G. K. Cherrie. 

 S. T. Danforth. 



Do. 



Do. 



Do. 

 J. S. C. Boswell. 

 K. P. Schmidt. 



Jos£ A. Ramos. 



Linnaea. 

 Do. 

 Keitel. 



F. Muller. 



AMEIVA CHRYSOLAEMA WOODI Cochran 



Figures 72, 78 



1934. Ameiva chrysolaema woodi Cochran, Occ. Pap. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., 



vol. 8, p. 181. 

 1937. Ameiva chrysolaema juliae Cochran, in Barbour, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool, 



vol. 82, No. 2, p. 144 (in synonymy). 



Diagnosis. — Scalation similar to that of Ameiva chrysolaema chry- 

 solaema, but with usually 10 subequal longitudinal ventral rows and 

 with a row of small scales as the only traces of the two additional 

 rows, which are well developed in the typical form; a wide black 

 dorsolateral band invaded by spots of the ground color, these spots 

 tending to form vertical bars by running together, making a rather 

 prominent series of irregular vertical bands when this pattern is 

 fully carried out. 



Type.— An adult male, M.C.Z. No. 37583, from He Tortue, Haiti, 

 collected on April 3, 1934, by the Utowana Expedition. 



Description of the type. — Profile of head flat on top, curved at the 

 end of the snout; nostril anterior to the nasal suture; rostral forming 

 a right angle behind; anterior nasals broadly in contact behind the 

 rostral ; frontonasal as wide as long, narrowly in contact with the large 

 loreal, very broadly angulate in front; prefrontals broadly in contact; 

 frontal in contact with the two anterior preoculars; three large 

 preoculars, the anterior one not touching the loreal, the third partly 

 separated from the frontoparietal by granules; seven superciliaries, 

 the first two in contact with the first supraocular, the remaining 



