24 ox WEST INDIAN REPTILES. 



larger scales on the loreal region and on the flanks. The 

 snout is twice the length of the space between the orbit and 

 the car; the frontal ridges are vcr}' prominent, sharp and 

 comparatively straight, forward from the interorbital 

 space ; adpressed, the leg reaches to the middle of the 

 space between the orbit and the ear ; the lamelhv^ under 

 phalanges ii and iii of the fourth toe number about twen- 

 ty-eiglit ; the tail is more than twice as loug as both head 

 and body ; and the loreal rows are commonly three, some- 

 times four. 



On A. principalis the snout is but about one and two- 

 thirds times the length of the space between the orbit and 

 the ear ; the frontal ridges are less sharp and prominent, 

 and spread farther apart or are more crooked in the pre- 

 frontal region ; the leg reaches the anterior border of the 

 ear ; there are about twenty-five lamellae under phalanges 

 ii and iii of the fourth toe ; the tail is about one and 

 three-fourths times as long as head and body ; and the lo- 

 real rows are live, rarely six or four. 



Forty specimens, from Caibarien, by N. H. Bishop, and 

 from Matanzas, Havana, and Bahia Honda, by the writer. 



Anolis chlorocyanus Dum, Bibr., 1837. 



Ilab. Samaua, San Domingo. Collected by M. A. 

 Frazar. 



Anolis C(elestinus Cope^ 1862. 



From Hayti by Doctor Weinland; from Tiburon, 

 Hayti, by S. Garman. 



Anolis pulchellus Dum. Bihr., 1837. 



From Port au Priuce, Hayti, by Professor Ackermann; 

 from Bayamon, Porto Rico, and from St. Thomas by the 

 writer. Thirty-three specimens. 



