INDISTINCT TOAD. 171 



Amoenitates Academicce, where it is said to be of 

 a subglobose form, extremely convex, of a wrinkled 

 but not tuberculated surface, clouded, and marked 

 by a palish longitudinal dorsal band, which is 

 sinuated on each side : the head very small, ob- 

 tuse, and immersed in the thorax : the toes of the 

 fore feet unwebbed, without claws, and somewhat 

 tuberous or knotted beneath the joints : the toes 

 of the hind feet six ; the thumb broader than the 

 others. In the Systema Naturae he describes it as 

 having an ovate convex body, unwebbed feet, and 

 a longitudinal, cinereous, dentated band or stripe. 

 He does not, however, quote Seba, in whose work 

 it appears to have been first figured. It is one of 

 the smaller species, scarcely exceeding half the 

 size of the common toad. The hind feet are 

 slightly pahnated, though this circumstance is not 

 particularized in the Linnaean description above 

 quoted. It is a native of Senegal and other parts 

 of Africa, 



INDISTINCT TOAD. 



Rana Systoma. JR. corpore subgloboso, capite indistincto, rictu 



angusto. 



Toad with subglobose body, indistinct head, and small mouth. 

 Rana Systoma. Schneid. Amph. p. 144. 



THIS, from Mr. Schneider's account, who seems 

 to have been its first describer, is much allied to 

 the former ; having a thick roundish body, with 

 the head so blended in the general outline that 



