20 BARBOUR AND NOBLE — NEW FROGS AND A NEW LIZARD |? ye4j- 
has become a really well-known area zodlogically, we do not offer 
a list of all Smith’s booty, but confine ourselves to description of 
the new forms. The discovery of another new genus of Dysco- 
phiid frogs is in a way perhaps not surprising, but it is a striking 
suggestion of the fact that there are possibly a host of these beauti- 
ful but retiring creatures still to be found in the East Indies. It 
is worth while drawing attention to the rarity in museums of 
specimens of the Dyscophiid genera already known. ‘The little 
Calliglutus described here is one of the most lovely and delicately 
colored amphibians which has yet been found. 
Calliglutus! gen. nov. Dyscophiidarum. 
Pupil round (but possibly only dilated from the horizontal); tongue 
large, oval, entire and free behind, slightly 
recurved on its posterior margin, but not 
forming a definite pocket as in the genus 
Calpoglossus (Boulenger, Ann. Mag. Nat. 
Hist., 7, 13, 1904, p. 42, pl. 11); palatine 
teeth forming a long transverse series, 
very narrowly interrupted in the middle; 
tympanum hidden; fingers free; toes 
slightly webbed at the base, the tips not 
dilated; coracoids strong; precoracoids 
and clavicles absent, no omosternum, 
metasternum bilobate (see figure 1); sa- 
cral diapophyses moderately dilated. 
This genus is closely related to Colpoglossus, Boul. (loc. cit.), from which 
it differs in the form of its pupil, tongue and pectoral girdle. 
Figure 1. 
Calliglutus smithi sp. nov. 
Type, no. 3797, Museum of Comparative Zodélogy, from the Limbang 
River district, northern central Sarawak, Borneo, between January and 
March, 1915, H. W. Smith. Paratype, M. C. Z., no. 3798. 
Description of the type-— Habit very stout; snout rounded, depressed; 
no definite canthus rostralis; nostrils almost on the end of the snout; 
eyes converging anteriorly, the interorbital space anteriorly about three 
1 xaos beautiful, yAourds rump. 
