Lacerta. 209 



CJollar with eveu edge ; gular fold distinct. 



Dorsal scales very small, roundish, convex, faintly keeled granules ; 



3 or 4 correspond to a ventral plat(% 42 or 43 to the length of the head. 

 Preaual plate rather small, with 2 or 3 semicircles of small plates ; in 

 the specimen from Platia it is followed by a series of granular scales, 

 as sometimes occurs in the var. albiventris. Scales on upper surface 

 of tibia feebly keeled, a little smaller than dorsals. 



Upper caudal scales moderately keeled, truncate, very diagonal to 

 the keel, 3U or 31 in the fourth whorl behind the postanal granules. 



G-reyish olive above, uniform or with very faint darker luetic ulation, 

 white beneath, outer ventral shields bluish grey ; a blue, black-edged 

 spot may be present above the axil. 



Werner mentions having seen quite similar lizards at Pera, near 



Constantinople, and he was perfectly right in regarding them as an 



^'oZ/t'aceo-form" of the lizard described by Berthold as L. h'leroylijpldca, 



from Constantinople. I was able to examine Berthold's specimens 



preserved in the Gottingen Museum, a half-grown male and a very 



young. Impart from the reticulate markings and the proportions, due 



to the different sex, the agreement with the Marmora Islands specimens 



is verv close. 



1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 



S . . . 48 68 25 11 34 26-24 35 



The hind limb reaches a little beyond the collar. The male has 



4 anterior upper labials on the right side and 5 on the left, the young 

 has 4 on both sides. 4 or 5 dorsal scales correapo'.,d to a ventral plate, 

 55 to the length of the head ; 34 caudal scales in the fourth whorl. 



Berthold described his L. hieroglyjyhica as " supra nigra, figuris 

 hieroglyphicis albis notata." Now somewhat bleached, the larger 

 specimen appears olive with a wide- meshed black network, as is 

 frequently the case in the var. tihguerta ; the young is also reticulate, 

 but the markings have a tendency to dispose themselves in five 

 longitudinal series, as in some young of var. albiventris. 



On a visit to the Florence Museum I found several specimens 

 labelled as from Cattaro, Dalmatia, which I refer to the same form. 

 No importance can be attached to the locality, and the fact that the 

 bottle in which they are preserved contains also two specimens of 

 Lacerta Ixvis, Gray, makes it probable that they came from Asia. 



s ■ 



9 • 



Hind limb reaching the collar in the male. Frontal shorter than 

 its distance from the end of the snout ; occipital considerably shorter 



14 



