3. Eublepharis dovii. 



Habit rather slender, as in Coleonyx elegans. Snout as long as 

 the distance between the orbit and the ear-opening ; latter rather 

 large, oval, vertical. Head covered with granules intermixed with 

 round subconical tubercles ; rostral pentagonal, not quite twice as 

 broad as high ; a pair of large internasals forming a suture behind 

 the rostral ; seven upper and as many lower labials ; mental large, 

 squarish, as broad as high ; no chin-shields. Body covered above 

 with small granules intermixed with round,mostly trihedral, tubercles, 

 which are not larger than the interspaces between them. Abdominal 

 scales strongly imbricate. Seven praeanal pores. Tail cylindrical, 

 tapering gradually, covered with flat, squarish scales arranged regu- 

 larly, those on the lower surface larger, above with rows of enlarged 

 tubercles. Brownish white above, marbled with chocolate-brown, 

 which colour forms irregular transverse bands on the tail ; a rather 

 indistinct horseshoe-shaped mark from eye to eye, over the nape ; 

 lower surfaces whitish. 



Total length 148 millim. 



Head 20 „ 



Width of head 13 „ 



Body 50 „ 



Fore limb 24 „ 



Hind limb 30 „ 



Tail 78 „ 



Panama. 

 a. cJ . Panama. Capt. T. C. Dow [P.]. 



4. Eublepharis variegatus *. 



Stenodactylus variegatus, Baird, Proc. Ac. Philad. 1858, p. 254, and 

 TJ. S. Mex. Bound. Surv., Rept. pi. xxiii. figs. 9-27, & xxiv. figs. 

 11-19. 



Coleonyx variegatus, Cope, Froc. Ac. Philad. 1866, p. 125. 



Habit of Coleonyx elegans. Snout as long as the distance between 

 the orbit and the ear-opening ; latter small, oval, very oblique, 

 almost horizontal. Head and body covered with uniform granules, 

 which are largest on the snout ; rostral pentagonal, broader than 

 high ; anterior nasal largest, separated from its feUow by a granule 



* Described from a female specimen, from Texas, in M. F. Lataste's collection 



