5, LEPTOBRACHIUM.—6. XENOPHRYs. 44] 
2. Leptobrachium hasseltii. 
Leptobrachium hasseltii, Giinth. Cat. p. 36. 
Leptobrachium hasseltii, Tschudz, /. c. 
Head rather large ; snont rounded, as long as the greatest orbital 
diameter, with distinct canthus rostralis ; nostril a little nearer the 
tip of the snout than the eye; interorbital space a little broader 
than the upper eyelid; tympanum very indistinct, half the width of 
the eye. Fingers moderate, first and second equal ; toes very short, 
webbed at the base; tips of fingers and toes blunt; subarticular 
tubercles indistinct; a small, subcircular, inner metatarsal tubercle. 
The hind limb being carried forwards along the body, the tibio-tarsal 
articulation reaches the angle of the mouth. Skin of back distinctly, 
of belly indistinctly granular. Brownish or olive above, spotted 
with black; hind limbs cross-barred with black. Male with a sub- 
gular vocal sac. 
K. Indies. 
a-c. Yo. Pegu. W. Theobald, Esq. [C.]. 
d. Her. (very bad state). Birmah. W. Theobald, Esq. | C. }. 
e Q. East Indies. 
Gs aya. Dr. Bleeker. 
6. XENOPHRYS. 
Xenophrys, Giinth. Rept. Brit. Ind. p. 414; Cope, Nat. Hist. Rev. 
1865, p. 107, and Journ. Ac. Philad. (2) vi. 1866, p. 80. 
Pupil erect. Tongue subcireular, slightly nicked and free behind. 
Vomerine teeth in two small groups. Tympanum scarcely distinct. 
Fingers free ; toes nearly free, the tips not dilated into regular disks. | 
Outer metatarsals united. Omosternum cartilaginous; sternum 
with a bony style. Vertebre proceelian; sacral vertebra with 
strongly dilated diapophyses, and one condyle for articulation with 
coccyx. 
Mountains of India. 
1. Xenophrys monticola. 
Xenophrys monticola, Giinth. Rept. Brit. Ind. p. 414, pl. 26. f. H; 
Anderson, Proc. Zool. Soc, 1871, p. 200. 
gigas, Jerdon, Proc, As. Soc. 1870, p. 85. 
Vomerine teeth in two small groups a little behind the choane. 
Head much depressed; snout very short, truncated, with angular 
canthus rostralis and deeply concave loreal region ; interorbital space 
broad, slightly concave ; tympanum slightly distinct, vertically oval, 
about two thirds the width of the eye. First finger not extending 
beyond second ; toes with a rudiment of web; tips of fingers and 
toes slightly swollen ; subarticular and metatarsal tubercles indistinct. 
The hind limb being carried forwards along the body, the tibio- 
