1875. DR. A. GUNTHER ON INDIAN REPTILES. 571 
bled with black, the black spots enclosing a number of small whitish 
dots. Legs and toes with black white-dotted cross bars. Lower 
parts light greenish, irregularly marbled with brown. 
millim 
Beneth of bodys... «1/46 gases en ack, 64 
8 cithird tamgen co. 2. eens he siete aL 
5 AA Lina .s2 9 se a nage ener Wee 115 
8 TALSUS easiaicie'eokcs Sha ee 19 
“3 Poamkiidibe’ tot ia! se ta: ee 37 
One specimen from Khassya in Mr. Jerdon’s collection. 
POLYPEDATES JERDONII, Sp. n. 
Snout broad, depressed, extremely short and obtuse, with indi- 
stinct canthus rostralis, and flat, slanting loreal region. Eye of 
moderate size ; tympanum very small, much smaller than one of the 
digital disks. Limbs of moderate length; disks large, nearly equally 
large on the fingers and toes. Fingers conspicuously webbed at the 
base: second and fourth equal in length, a little longer than the 
first, and shorter than the third. ‘Toes two thirds webbed ; one 
ovate metatarsal tubercle. Skin nearly smooth above, granular 
below. Choanze and Eustachian tubes narrow; vomerine teeth in 
two oblique series between the choane. No free papilla on the 
tongue. Upper parts brownish grey; forehead and an irregular 
broad band on each side whitish. Whitish below, throat with some 
brownish spots ; anterior and posterior sides of the femur nearly 
colourless. Dark bars across the legs irregular and sometimes con- 
fluent. 
millim. 
Reveth Gt bday Over i208 2: erie? st 48 
Ke Trigg deg a Ee | FR 68 
ry EALSUS, a Seresertioen eee ee ee 11 
a fourth! tae sis. er: Mitte Gerke 22 
Two specimens from Darjeeling, in Mr. Jerdon’s collection. 
PoLYPEDATES BEDDOMII, sp. n. (Plate LXIII. fig. B.) 
Habit similar to that of P. maculatus. 
Snout flat, moderately long, rather obtuse, with distinct canthus 
rostralis. Loreal region flat, slanting. Eye rather large; tympa- 
num at least half as large as the eye. Limbs strong and rather 
long; second finger rather shorter than first, which nearly equals 
the fourth; third longest of all. Fingers without any web, but 
with the disks well developed. ‘Toes two thirds webbed, the 
cutaneous fold reaching to the disks, exeept in the fourth toe, in 
which it extends to the antepenultimate joint only. Metatarsus 
with an indistinct, elongate tubercle. Skin of the back with short 
longitudinal folds; a glandular curved fold from behind the orbit 
above the tympanum, to the armpit. Choanze and Eustachian tubes 
rather small; vomerine teeth in two short, scarcely oblique series, 
between the choane. A long, free, pointed, conical papilla on the 
