if, 3.^3 



June 4. 1921 Vol. VII, pp. 87-89 



PROCEEDINGS 



OF THE 



NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 



A NEW BORNEAN LIZARD 



BY THOMAS BARBOUR 



Professor Harrison W. Smith, who has so often enriched 

 the collections of the Museum of Comparative Zoology with 

 the booty of his many journeys, has forwarded to me recently 

 a fine suite of reptiles and amphibians from the Mt. Lundu and 

 the Tinjar River districts of Sarawak, Borneo. Among the 

 lizards appears a curious Tropidophorus. The East Indian 

 species of this genus have been summarized, as recently as 1915, 

 by Miss Nelly De Rooij (Reptiles Indo- Australian Archipelago, I, 

 1915, p. 275). Her descriptions unfortunately take httle or no 

 account of variation within the species, and no one specimen 

 appears to be the basis of each description, and while the diag- 

 noses are apparently drawn from series of individuals, we are 

 not informed as to the number actually examined. Miss De 

 Rooij 's book is invaluable, yet one notes for instance (p. 277) 

 under the description of Tropidophorus hrookei that the prae- 

 frontals are said to be in contact. Boulenger, who had but two 

 specimens when he wrote his diagnosis in the Catalogue of 

 Lizards in the British Museum (III, 1887, p. 361) says "prae- 

 frontals forming a median suture (separated, probably abnor- 

 mally, in the type specimen) ." Nowthe fact is that the opposite. 



