REPTILIA. 283 



of Reinhardt & Liitken. I have compared specimens from the Bahaman Islands 

 with Cope's type (M. C. Z. No. 3,346), from Jeremie, Haiti, and find that they 

 differ very slightly. In Bahaman specimens the canthus is not so steep and 

 sharply angled, nor is the internasal region quite so prominent. They are, 

 except for these trifling differences, which are only evident in the average, and 

 which are subject to individual variation, absolutely alike. If we knew the 

 color in life of the dewlap of Haitian specimens, we might, — I may almost say 

 we should, — find it different from Bahaman. Rosen has separated the Andros 

 Island individuals largely on this excellent character. 



Anolis distichoides Ros£n. 

 Ros6n, Lundsuniv. arsskrift, 1911, 7, no. 5, p. 29, fig. 12, a-d. 



A species very closely allied to A. distichus Cope, and confined to Andros 



Island. In life it has a gular appendage, yellowish red in color instead of hght 



yellow. There are other small and apparently variable differences in squama- 



tion. 



Anolis cybotes Cope. 



Cope, Proc. Acad. nat. sci. Phila., 1802, p. 177. Boulenger, Cat. lizards Brit, mus., 1885, 2, p. 34, pi. 1, 

 fig. 5. 



This species was among the many from Haiti which the indefatigable Wein- 

 land collected at Jeremie, and of which the types are in the Museum (M. C. Z., 

 No. 3,619). Other specimens have come to hand from Samand, San Domingo, 

 so that the species evidently has a wide range over the island. Mr. Mann also 

 collected many at Diquini, Haiti. 



Anolis haetianus Gahman. 

 Garman, Bull. Essex inst., 1888, 20, p. 42. 



The types of this species (M. C. Z., No. 6,191), which are three in number, 

 certainly differ from specimens of A. cybotes Cope in having keeled ventral 

 scales. The other differences of which Garman speaks are well marked. There 

 is another important character, however, which he overlooked, and that is 

 that the size of the plate-like scales on the frontal region are much larger in 

 this species than in A. cybotes. 



Known from Haiti only. 



Anolis citrinellus Cope. 



Cope, Free. Acad. nat. sci. Phila., 1864, p. 170, pi. 1, fig. 3. Boulenger, Cat. lizards Brit, mus., 1885, 

 2, p. 35. 



A beautiful httle species, confined to Haiti. The specimens in the Museum 

 are from the vicinity of Port au Prince (M. C. Z., No. 1,326). 



