2o8 Records of the Indian Museum. [Vol. XX, 



Dull greenish yellow beneath, with large round or oval brown spots 

 on the throat and breast. 



The adult female which I refer to this species and of which 

 measurements are here given, is greyish brown above, unspotted, 

 with a blackish streak from the tip of the snout, through the eye 

 and above the tj^mpanum, to the hip, bordering the dorso-lateral 

 fold; a whitish streak on the upper lip; limbs with dark cross- 

 bands. Lower parts unspotted. 



Male unknown. 



Measurements. 



Millim. 

 From snout to vent . . . . . . . . 60 



Head 



Width of head 



Snout 

 Eye .. 



Interorbital width . . . . . . . 4-5 



Tympanum . . . . . . . . . . 3 



Fore limb . . . . . . . . • • 39 



First finger . . . . . . . . . . 7 



Second finger 



Third finger 



Fourth finger 



Hind hmb 



Tibia 



Foot .. .. .. .. ..31 



Third toe . . . . . . . . . . 19 



Fourth toe . . . . . . . . . . 27 



Fifth toe . . . . . . . . . • 19 



Habitat. The type, a 3'oung specimen 33 millim. long from 

 snout to vent, preserved in the Indian Museum, is from Yembung, 

 Abor foot-hills (1,100 feet), Assam. I refer to the same species 

 two specimens from Pashok (3,500 feet), Darjiling district (L. C. 

 Hartless), also preserved in the Indian Museum. 



1x4. Rana luzonensis. 



Raim luzonensis, Bouleng'. Ann. and Mag. N.H. (6) XVII, 1896, p. 401. 



Vomerine teeth in oblique groups on a level with the posterior, 

 borders of the choanae and extending beyond them, nearer to 

 each other than to the choanae. 



Head as long as broad or slightly longer than broad, much 

 depressed ; snout acutely pointed, strongly projecting beyond the 

 mouth, longer than the eye ; canthus rostralis strong ; loreal region 

 nearly vertical, concave ; nostril nearer the end of the snout than 

 the eye ; distance between the nostrils equal to or a little greater 

 than the interorbital width, which equals that of the upper eyelid ; 

 tympanum very distinct, | to f the diameter of the eye, 2 to 4 

 times as long as its distance from the latter. 



Fingers long and slender, the tips dilated into large round 

 discs, with a groove separating the upper from the lower surface, 

 the largest measuring f to | the diameter of the tympanum ; first 

 finger a little shorter than the second ; subarticular tubercles 

 rather large, very prominent. 



