64 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



Type. — Alfredo Duges Aluseum, Guanajuato, Guanajuato (skele- 

 ton). 



Tyjpe locality. — Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Mexico. 



Range. — The western edge and southern part of the central Mexican 

 plateau, and the Sierra Madre del Sur in Guerrero. Specimens are 

 loiown or have been reported from Nayarit: Cerro San Juan; Durango: 

 Ventanas ("from a mine 1,000 feet deep!"); Guanajuato: Guanajuato, 

 4 miles west of Ac^mbaro, Tupdtaro; Zacatecas: Zacatecas; Jalisco: 

 La Laguna (6,900 feet), near Magdalena; Morelos: 10 miles northeast 

 of Cuernavaca; Guerrero: Agua del Ohis^o; Michoacdn: Lake Patzcuaro 

 (near Quiroga), Uruapan; Oaxaca: Mixtequilla Mountains, Cerro 

 Guengola. 



ELEUTHERODACTYLUS BGUVARI Taylor 



Eleutherodactylus bolivari Taylor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp.29&- 

 299, p. 26, figs. 1-4. 



Type.— EUT-HMS No. 29564. 



Type locality. — Ixtapan del Oro, Mexico, Mexico. 



Range. — Known from only the type locality. 



ELEUTHERODACTYLUS TARAHUMARAENSIS Taylor 



Eleutherodactylus tarahumaraensis Taylor, Copeia, Dec. 27, 1940, pp. 250-253, 



fig. 1. 

 ? Eleutherodactylus augusti Bogert and Oliver {nee Dug^s), Bull. Amer. Mus. 



Nat. Hist., vol. 83, 1945, pp. 405-406 (part) .29 



TVpe.— EHT-HMS No. 23008. 



Type locality. — Mojdrachic, Chihuahua, Mexico; elevation 6,900 

 feet. 



Range. — Known definitely only from the type locaUty and (?) 2 miles 

 east of Guirocoba, Sonora; sight records for Nayarit (Ixtldn) and 

 adjacent Jalisco (Magdalena) may possibly belong here. 



ELEUTHERODACTYLUS MATUDAI Taylor 



Eleutherodactylus maludai Taylor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 

 154-157, pi. 11. 



T?/2)e.— U.S.N.M. No. 110626. 



Type locality. — Mount Ovando, Chiapas, Mexico. 



Range. — Known only from the type locality. 



ELEUTHERODACTYLUS VOCALIS Taylor 



Eleutherodactylus vocalis Taylor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), 

 pp. 401-405, pi. 44, and text fig. 8. 



*» It is impossible to accept the Idea expressed by Bogert and Oliver that tarahumaraensis and augusti are 

 synonymous. These two species are the most widely different of the entire group of Eleutherodactylus to 

 which they belong. 



