iguanid.l. 29 



chin and limbs; lips with or without brown spots. A 

 young one lnis ;i large, rounded white-edged spot of brown 

 above each shoulder; on another these spots are obsolete. 



Readily distinguished from A. cristatellus, which it 

 closely resembles, by the greater size of the two verte- 

 bral rows. 



From Professor L. Agassiz ; Silver and Lena Keys, 

 Fla. 



Anolis striatulus Cope, 1861. 



From Professor Aekerman, Port au Prince, Hayti ; 

 Dr. Aug. Stahl, Porto l\ico ; Hassler Expedition, St. 

 Thomas. 



Anolis gingivinus Cope, 1864. 

 Dr. W. J. Branch, Anguilla Island. 



Anolis bimaculata, Sparrman sp. 



These notes are taken from forty-six specimens secured 

 on St. Kitts. The species is usually confounded with sev- 

 eral others to which it is somewhat closely allied. It is 

 distinguished by the size of its granules, the four to five 

 loreal series, the broad smooth plates in front of the thigh, 

 the meeting of the opposite supraorbital series on the 

 forehead, in seven specimens of each eight, and by the 

 coloration. 



The color is blue or green, grayish to brownish ; white 

 beneath. Posteriorly, on the Hanks and on the tail, usually 

 there are present a number of small spots <>( black, irregu- 

 larly scattered bul often forming a rounded bunch in front 

 of the thigh on the side ot the abdomen. Above the 

 axilla there is most often a rounded black spot. Rarely 

 it is continued forward as a band to the angle of the mouth. 

 From the upper labials there is a light band crossing the 

 upper half of the ear to end on the flank above the shoulder. 



