HERPETOIiOGY OF PORTO RICO. 627 



d l Supraocular semicircles separated by at least two scale rows; occipital 

 shield separated from supraocular semicircles by at least five scale rows 



(fig. 89) A. gundlachi, p. 633. 



cP Supraocular semicircles in contact or with at most a single series of scales 

 between; occipital shield separated from supraocular semicircles by at 

 most four scale rows. 

 e l Occipital shield separated from supraocular semicircles by two or three 



scale rows (rarely four) (figs. 92, 95) A. cristatellus, p. 638. 



e 2 Occipital shield separated from supraocular semicircles by one scale row 



(rarely two) (fig. 98) A. monensis, p. 646. 



c 2 One shield between the superciliaries and the supraocular semicircle border- 

 ing the supraocular granules anteriorly. 

 d 1 Width of head as great, or greater than distance from tip of snout to cen- 

 ter of eye; anterior femoral scales keeled, gradually diminishing; color 



greenish ^1. everrnanni, p. 647. 



d 2 Width of head less than distance from tip of snout to center of eye; anterior 

 femoral scales smooth, abruptly larger than the others; color brownish or 



grayish A. stratulus, p. 651. 



6 s Dorsal scales large, flat, keeled, imbricate, very much like the ventrals, which 

 are very strongly keeled, the keels forming continuous ridges. 

 c 1 Lateral scales granular (fig. 108). 



d l Width of head much more than half the distance from tip of snout to ear- 

 opening; four to six median dorsal scale rows more or less abruptly larger 

 than the others (fig. 108) ; skin of dewlap in male, orange. .A. krugi, p. 655. 

 d 2 Width of head about one-half the distance from tip of snout to ear-opening; 

 dorsal scales gradually increasing in size from the laterals toward the 

 median rows (fig. 112); skin of dewlap in male, crimson. 



A. pulchellus, p. 660. 

 c 2 Lateral scales imbricated, keeled (fig. 117) A. poncensis, p. 665. 



ANOLIS CUVIERI« Merrem. 



1820. Anolis cuvieri Merrem, Sysl. Arnph., p. 45 (type locality, erroneously, 

 Jamaica).— Boulenger, Cat. Liz. Brit. Mus., II, 1885, p. 23. — Garman, 

 Bull. Essex Inst., XIX, 1887, p. 27 (Porto Rico). 



1829. Anolms velifer Cuvier, Regne Anim., 2 ed., II, p. 29, pi. v, fig. 1. — Guerin, 

 Icon. Regne Anim., Rept., 1830, pi. xn, fig. 1.— Anolis v. Dumeril and 

 Bibron, Erpet. Gen., IV, 1837, p. 164.— Dumeril, Cat. M6th. Rept. Mus. 

 Paris, I, 1851, p. 59.— Reinhardt and Luetken, Vid. Meddel. Naturh. 

 Foren., (Copenhagen) 1862 (1863), p. 260; author's separate, p. 108 

 (Vieques, Tortola, St. John??).— Cope, Proc. Phila. Acad., 1868, p. 312 

 (Porto Rico).— Peters, Mon. Ber. Berlin Akad. Wiss., 1876, p. 705 

 (Anebradillas, Porto Rico). — Gundlach, Anal. Soc. Espan. Hist. Nat., 

 X, 1881, p. 308 (Porto Rico) .— Stahl, Fauna Puerto-Rico, 1882, pp. 69, 

 159 (Porto Rico).— Xiphosurus v. Cope, Proc. Phila. Acad., 1861, p. 208 

 (Vieques). 



The early technical history of this species is somewhat obscure. 

 Cuvier briefly mentioned it under a French name in the first edition 

 of his Regne Animal (1817), saying- that it is from "Jamaica, and prob- 

 ably the other Antilles." A somewhat crude figure is added, and from 

 the statement that he had "found berries in its stomach" it is plain 



"To the great French zoologist G. Cuvier, because of his having indicated the 

 species in the first edition of Regne Animal, 1817. 



