SYSTEMATIC ACCOUNT OF THE SPECIES. 229 
entire body covered with granules, the dorsals small rounded and tubercular, 
not keeled; the granules of the flanks slightly enlarged. 
. Description:— Typr. M. C. Z. 13,4386. Snout short and broad, not de- 
pressed but sharply declivous; eye slightly nearer tip of snout than ear; rostral 
moderate with a median groove; nostril between rostral, first supralabial, a large 
supranasal and one other scale; the supranasal of each side being separated from 
its fellow by a single median scale which fits in part into a reéntrant in the poste- 
rior border of the rostral; third large supranasal extending well under eye; super- 
ciliary spine well developed; head above and on sides covered with small round 
granules but slightly enlarged on the snout; considerably enlarged and flattened 
on loreal region; dorsal granules similar, somewhat larger but less in size than 
those of flanks; about sixteen middorsal granules equal the distance from tip of 
snout to centre of eye; mental large, much larger than rostral; two large post- 
mentals followed by a few enlarged chin-shields; three large infralabials, suture 
between third and fourth (a small one) about beneath the centre of the eye; 
granules of throat very small, changing abruptly on posterior gular region to the 
roundish, flat, imbricate, smooth, ventrals; tail with fine small scales, not in 
conspicuous whorls, scales of under surface enlarged but apparently not to form 
the large transverse plates so often seen. 
Colour:— Light reddish brown with large coarse dots of darker brown. 
Belly pale ashy gray. In some cases the spots are wholly wanting. 
Dimensions:— Tip of snout to vent 32 mm. 
Vent to tip of tail 27 +mm. 
Greatest width of head 6.2 mm. 
Tip of snout to ear 9 mm. 
Fore leg 8.5 mm. 
Hind leg 10 mm. 
Remarks:— This species is known only from the three specimens before me 
from the Exuma Cays. In habit and general appearance it is most like pacificus 
but the granules are very different in character and size. 
Since writing the above Mr. C. T. Ramsden has shown me two spotted 
sphaerodactyls from Cuba (1 from Santiago, the other from Guantanamo) which 
in habit and squamation decidedly recall torrei. They differ, however, so widely 
in colouration that I have decided to let gibbus stand as a full species until torret 
is shown to vary sufficiently to include it. 
