4. HYLA. 387 



toes two-thirds webbed ; disks of fingers larger than the tympanum. 

 The hind limb being carried forwards aloDg the body, the tibio- 

 tarsal articulation reaches the tip of the snout. Head and upper 

 eyelids with small tubercles ; beneath granulate. Eeddish chocolate- 

 colour above ; a dark triangular spot between the eyes ; small spots 

 and dots on the head ; two large irregular dark spots on each side 

 of the back ; latter with small dots ; axilla and loin surrounded by 

 a black band ; between these, along the side, two or three large 

 irregular spots on reddish-white ground ; limbs cross-barred ; hinder 

 side of thighs colourless or yellow, separated from the coloured upper 

 surface by a black line ; lower surfaces yellow, sides of belly and 

 throat scantily dark-punctate. From snout to vent 30 millim. 

 Neufrciburg, Brazil. 



72. Hyla leucophyllata. 



Hyla leucophyllata, Giinth. Cat. p. 112. 

 Hyla leucophyllata, Beiris, Schrift. Berl. naturf. Frcunde, iv. p. 178, 



pi. 41. f. 4 ; Shaw, Zool. iii. p. 127 ; Gravenh. Belie, p. 31 ; Bum. 



%• Bibr. p. 007 ; Steindachn. Terh.zool.-hot. Ges. IVien, 1864, p. 243 ; 



Cope, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc. 1869, p. 156. 

 Calamita leucophjllatus, Schneid. Hist. Amph. p. 168; Merr. Tent. 



p. 172. 

 Hyla frontalis, Baud. Bain. p. 24, pi. 7, and Sept. viii. p. 45. 



— elegans, Wied, Abhild., and Beitr. i. p. 529. 



Hvpsihoas leucophyllatus, Tschudi, Batr. p. 72. 



Hyla triangulum, Giinth. Proc. Zool. Son. 1868, p. 489, pi. 38. f. 4. 



? llyla ebraccata, Cope, Proc. Ac. Philad. 1874, p. 68. 



Tongue circular, slightly nicked and free behind. Vomerine 

 teeth in two small groups between the choante. Head rather small, 

 broader than long ; snout rounded, as long as the diameter of the 

 orbit ; canthus rostralis distinct ; loreal region nearly vertical, not 

 concave ; interorbital space broader than the upper eyelid ; tym- 

 panum more or less distinct, half the diameter of the eye. Fingers 

 nearly two-thirds webbed ; no projecting rudiment of pollex ; toes 

 nearly entirely webbed ; disks nearly as large as the tympanum ; 

 subarticular tubercles moderate. The hind limb being carried for- 

 wards along the body, the tibio-tarsal articulation reaches between 

 the eye and the tip of the snout. Skin smooth, granulate on the 

 belly and under the thighs. Upper part of head and back yellowish 

 or whitish ; sides of head and body, and a large marking on upper 

 surface, brown, the two colours sharply defined ; this brown mark- 

 ing represents generally a hourglass-shaped figure, which may be 

 prolonged posteriorly into two branches confluent with the brown 

 of the sides, thus enclosing an oval light space on the pelvic region. 

 In one specimen («) the brown mark is spotted with white ; in 

 another (h) it is reduced to a triangular isoscelous spot on the head 

 and nape ; another specimen (h) lacks entirely the brown marking, 

 and the upper surfaces are uniform whitish ; specimens i and k show 

 the reverse, the brown covering the upper surfaces, the white being 

 reduced to a triangular spot on the forehead, a spot on scapidar 



2c2 



