144 THE HERPETOLOGY OF CUBA. 
30.. ANOLIS GREYI Barbour. 
Plate 7, fig. 3. 
Lagartija. 
Diagnosis: — A heavy, stockily built Anolis very like A. sagrei but with 
larger head-scales and without the enlarged keeled imbricating middorsals. 
Description: —Typn. Adult o M.C. Z. 7,890. Cuba: Camagiiey, April, 
1909. Thomas Barbour. 
Very similar to A. sagrez, distinguished by the almost perfectly homogeneous 
dorsal squamation; the larger and flatter scales about the occipital and the 
fewer scales, only one or two, between the frontal ridges, which are more parallel, 
much less bowed than in A. sagret. In A. greyi the head is flatter, more de- 
pressed, so that the profile is not so declivous as in A. sagrev. 
Colour (in life): — Similar to sagrei but lighter. Dewlap colour unnoted. 
Dimensions: — Total length 152 mm. 
Vent to tip of snout 57 mm. 
Vent to tip of tail 95 mm. 
Width of head ° 9 mm. 
Fore leg 25 mm. 
Hind leg 39.5 mm. 
While collecting about the city of Camagitiey in 1909 a few of these Anoles 
were secured in the garden near the Camagitiey Hotel, among a large series of 
A. sagrei (Barbour). Dr. Carlos de la Torre in 1914 captured a small series, 
none adult, in the Sierra de Cubitas, north of the city, which we believe are 
referable to the same species. Except for these few data, merely the facts 
that the species occurred with sagrei and frequented cultivated gardens, nothing 
is known regarding its habits nor distribution. We have both searched for it 
in vain on subsequent visits in the exact type-locality. 
31. ANOLIS BREMERI Barbour. 
Plate’ 6, fig. 5. 
Lagartija. 
Diagnosis: — A mottled grayish or brownish Anolis, distinguished by 
an enormously developed dewlap of rich maroon-brown. 
Description: —Tyrr. Adult # M.C. Z. 7,889. Cuba: Pinar del Rio; 
Herradura, February, 1912. Thomas Barbour. 
