142 THE HERPETOLOGY OF CUBA. 
with A. lucius. It is not improbable that the remarks which he makes regard- 
ing the difference between males and females in that species really indicate 
that he had both forms. He rarely gives more than ‘‘Cuba”’ for the locality 
of any of his Cuban specimens, and the specimen of Anolis cyanopleurus which 
he so kindly loaned bore this information only. Very probably lack of data, 
poor preservation, and the very small number of specimens available in the 
British Museum from Cuba, account for his confusion of these and other local 
species. 
29. ANOoLIS SAGREI Duméril & Bibron. 
Plate 14, fig. 7. 
Lagartija comun; Chino (Havana). 
Diagnosis: — A stout bodied Anolis, with an uncrested tail, with heavily 
keeled ventrals and with the dewlap skin orange-red, the scales black, and the 
edge lemon-yellow. 
Description: — Adult & M. C. Z. 8,559. Cuba: Havana, El Jardin 
Botanico del Instittito de Segunda Ensefianza, March, 1913. Thomas Barbour. 
Top of head with two well-bowed ridges, not closely converging anteriorly, 
at a point about halfway between eye and nostril the ridges separated by four 
scales; head-seales either keeled or strongly rugose; about six scales in a row 
between the nostrils; supraocular semicircles separated by one row of. keeled 
scales; occipital rather small, in a depressed area, about half the size of ear 
opening; separated from the semicircles by three or four small but strongly 
keeled scales; supraocular discs well defined composed of five or six large and 
a number of lesser scales, some almost flat, some weakly keeled, dises separated 
from the semicircles by a row of small scales; canthus rostralis distinet, com- 
posed of about three very elongate scales, two long scales overlapping form a 
superciliary ridge reaching to about the middle of the eye; loreal rows, four; 
the lower loreal row is enlarged and passes backward below the eye in contact 
with the supralabials, so that there is no true subocular semicircle; about five 
large smooth supralabials, the fourth under the eye; temporals keeled, those of 
the central temporal area very small, almost granular; a faintly indicated supra- 
temporal line; scales of back and sides keeled, about eight middorsal rows 
enlarged, more strongly keeled and more imbricating; ventrals larger than the 
largest dorsals, imbricating and strongly keeled, the keels continuous; scales 
of anterior aspects of fore and hind limbs slightly larger than the ventrals, 
strongly keeled and imbricating; body stout, rather compressed; a very faint 
— so 
