652 



REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1902. 



rows of scales which are flat and as hirge as the ventrals; supraocular 

 disk consisting of about ten pol3'g"onal Iceeled scales, separated from 

 the semicircle by one row of smaller scales or granules; one large 

 shield in front of the supraocular granules between the superciliaries 

 and the supraocular semicircle; canthus rostralis consisting of live 

 elongated scales gradually increasing in size posteriorly, the last two 

 subequal; superciliary ridge consisting of one very long anterior shield 

 followed by a very small one, the granules of the supraocular disk 

 continuing behind the superciliaries into the granules surrounding the 

 eye uninterrupted by any row of difl^erentiated scales; loreal rows 

 five; subocular semicircle strongly keeled, broadly in contact with 

 supralabials ; supralabials eight, suture between sixth and seventh 

 being under the center of the eye; temporals granular in the center, 

 bordered above by the curved supratemporal line of two rows of 

 enlarged scales, being the posterior continuation of the subocuhir 



Figs. 105-107.— Anolis stratulus. 105, top of head; lOfi, side of head. 2| x natural size. 107, side 

 of tail at level of lifth verticil. 5} ■; natural size. No. 268(')5, IT. S.N. M. 



semicircle; dorsals miiuitely granular, of same size as the laterals and 

 with no median line of larger granules; ventral scales small, slightly 

 imbricate, rounded behind, flat; those on th(> throat nearly granular, 

 elongated, flat; fore legs abo\'ewith small nearly smooth scales; scales 

 on anterior aspect of femur enlarged, smooth, abruptly set ofl" from the 

 granules of the upper side; large scales covering the upper side of 

 hand and feet feebly unicarinate; digital expansions large, about 19 

 lamelhe under phalanges ii and iii of fourth toe; tail moderateh" 

 compressed with distinct verticils, with eight to nine vertical rows of 

 feebly keeled scales between; upper edge strongly serrated, five spines 

 to each verticil gradually increasing posteriorly, the last one sur- 

 mounting the enlarged vertical row of the verticil being greatly 

 enlarged; dewlap naked with series of distant scales, edge thickened; 

 postanal plates well developed. 



