172 MR. G. A. BOULENGER ON THE 
Us 2. 3. 4... 305 6. IG 
Dalmaiis eee. 0 ty OO DO aero | 9 28 22-23 28 
W. Ragusa, Dalmatia oD. ada, 29 9 20 19-18 2 
Soltaeids | | ., ay oe ol 29° “Tl 24" 21-2 eo 
iBrazza Jd,,) Dalmatia s,m eel emso le mean ed 7974s 22 25 
W. Bol, Brazzald., ,, c) 55 49 28 9 25 19-21 26 
W. Meleda Id., oh on (6678 Aee7 8 24 21-22 29 
W. Scoglio Supetar, ,, Gun NGL Se 350s e26 9 A 21-22 26 
Wi op 55 op 9 54 50 30 8 2 2422 26 
IBOsnia se ene rf 61 48 25 9 21. 22-23 5 25 
% some oe 9 54 51 30 10 25 23-22 26 
Capljina, Herzegovina. 6 55 53 25 10 24 21-20 23 
3 3 ith GY 2) 9 24 21-22 26 
Bukovici, _,, 3g 55 56 27 10 24 23-22 25 
Bs Fe CE a 50) 2S) 7 21 2221 24 
Brestica, 35 i. od DAD Aas 9 23 22 27 
Trebinje, a se) en POO OO ee eO. 9 26 22-21 2 
. op seeks). Sea) OO 26 9 24 21-19 22 
W. Cettinje, Montenegro . ,, 59 53 26 Oieee 22 25 
W. Niegus, = Jt YG 64 48 | 30 9 22 19 24 
A. Klaptocz has recorded the abundance of this lizard in North Albania, in the 
plain in the neighbourhood of Shkodra, whilst the typical Z. muralis alone occurs in 
the town itself and in the mountains up to 1000 metres altitude. The scales across 
the body are stated to vary between 40 and 63, the femoral pores between 15 and 25, 
a range of variation which exceeds that mentioned by me, and fills up the gap between 
vars. flumana and melisellensis, so far as these characters are concerned. 
Var. LISSANA. 
(Lissa and Lagosta.) 
Lacerta muralis fusca, var. lissana Werner, Verh. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien, xli. 1891, p. 752, and Rept. 
Amph. Oesterr.-Ung. p. 51 (1897). 
Lacerta litoralis, var. lissana Werner, Verh. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien, li. 1902, pp. 383 & 384; 
Scherer, Bl. f. Aq.- u. Terr.-K. xv. 1904, p. 193. 
Lacerta fiumana, var. lissana Werner, Mitth. Naturw. Ver. Univ. Wien, vi. 1908, pp. 45 & 46. 
The lizard of Lissa, which, as recognised by Dr. Werner, is hardly separable from 
that of Lagosta, was first regarded as belonging to the group of the L. muralis typica 
(fusca Bedriaga), but as establishing a connection between it and the L. fiwmana, 
referred at the time to Bedriaga’s neapolitana group. 
I agree that it is nearer to the var. fiwmnana than to any other, yet as it differs by 
an average higher number of lamelle under the fourth toe, viz., 25 to 31, usually 28, 

