1920.] G. A. BouLENGER : Frogs of the Genus Rana. 107 



equal length. Hind limb longer than the head and body ; laid 

 beside the body, the metatarsal tubercle reaches the end of the 

 snout. Metatarsus with a sharp-edged spur on the inner side and 

 a tubercle on the outer. Toes half-webbed, the tips slightly 

 swollen, and each of the joints on the under surface with a 

 tubercle. Third toe slightly longer than the fifth, fourth the 

 longest. Colour greyish, with a rufescent tinge. A dark brown 

 subtriangular spot on the occiput, extending from across and 

 behind the eyelids, immediately following which is a filiform 

 white vertebral streak, extending to the vent ; back with six 

 irregular-shaped dark brown spots. Plait behind the tympanum 

 reddish brown. Fore and hind limbs externally with transverse 

 bars of the same colour. Upper and lower jaws with vertical 

 bars of reddish brown. Chin, throat, and rest of under surface 

 white." 



Habitat. Malir, near Kurrachi (Karachi), Sind. 



Subgenus Nanorana, 

 Giinth., Ann. Mus. Zool. St. Petersb. I, 1896, p. 207. 



Vomerine teeth, if present, much reduced. No tympanum, 

 no stapes. Fingers and toes not dilated at the tips ; outer meta- 

 tarsals separated by web in their distal third or fourth only. 

 Zygomatic branch of the squamosal short. Omosternal style not 

 forked at the base. Terminal phalanges obtuse. 



I regard the single species of this subgenus as a dwarfed, 

 degraded form derived from the R. Uehigii group, with which it is 

 connected to a certain extent by R. blanfordii. 



52. Rana pleskei, 



Nanorana pleskei, Giinth., Ann. Mus. Zool. St. Petersb. I, i8q6, p. 207; 



Bedriaga, Wiss. Res. Przevoalski Reis.. Zool. Ill, i, p. 32, pi. i, fig. 5. 



(1898). 

 Ranapleskei, Bouleng., Am. and Mag.N.H. (7) XV, 1905, p. 378; Annand., 



Rec. hid. Mus. II, 1908, p. 345, and XIII, 1917, p. 417, fig. 



Vomerine teeth absent or reduced to small oblique groups be- 

 hind the level of the choanae. 



Head a little broader than long, rather strongly depressed ; 

 snout rounded, scarcely projecting beyond the mouth, as long as 

 or a little shorter than the eye ; canthus rostralis very obtuse ; 

 loreal region very oblique, concave ; nostril a little nearer the 

 eye than the end of the snout ; the distance between the nostrils 

 greater than the interorbital width, which is much less than that 

 of the upper eyelid ; no tympanum. 



Fingers obtuse, first as long as or slightly shorter than the 

 second, third as long as or longer than the snout ; a single, feebly 

 prominent subarticular tubercle at the base of each finger. 



Hind limb rather short, the tibio-tarsal articulation reaching 

 the shoulder or the temple, the heels just meeting when the limbs 

 are folded at right angles to the body ; tibia 3 times as long as 



