28 CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. 



Class REPTILIA. 



The reptiles of the Pacific Coast and Great Basin be- 

 long to two great groups, to which they may be referred 

 by the following 



SYNOPSIS OF ORDEKS. 



<i. — Body protected by a bony carapace or shell, covered with horny 

 plates or leathery skin, jaws horny, without teeth. (Turtles.) 



Testudines. — p. 28. 



a'. — Bod}' not protected by a bony carapace; jaws provided with teeth.* 

 (Lizards and saakes) Squamata. — -p. 28. 



Order I. TESTUDINES. 



The Testudinidce is, as yet, the only family of turtles 

 known to be represented on the Pacific Coast and in the 

 Great Basin. Kinosternon of the Kinosternidce, how- 

 ever, lives in the Gila River of Arizona, and probably 

 will be found in the Colorado as well. A species of 

 TrionyckidcM has been describedf as having been taken 

 in the Sacramento River, California, The skull of the 

 type is missing, but in other respects the specimen ap- 

 pears to agree with the descriptions of a Chinese spe- 

 cies (sinensis). In view of this, and the additional fact 

 that its describer afterward obtained several specimens 

 of his supposed new species from Chinamen in San 

 Francisco,!' I cannot admit "Pelodiscus calif ornianus " 

 to be of Californian origin. 



*The lower jaw only bears teeth in the Leptolyp hlopidce. 



t See Rivers, Proc. Cal. Ac. Set. (2), II. 1889. p. 233; Baur, Proc. Am. Philos. Soc, XXXI, 

 1893, pp. 218, 220. 



J Dr. G. Baur has compared the skeleton of one of these specimens with that of P. 

 sinensis and writes me that the two do not belong to the same species. Even admitting 

 that the specimen which Rivers sent Dr. Baur is specifically identical with the type, I 

 cannot admit that this turtle is indigenous to California until leas questionable evidence 

 of its occurrence here has been obtained. 



