4 BULLETIN: MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 
Gehyra variegata Bout. 
Hemidactylus variegatus D. B. 
In one case the six pores of the right side are the only ones present, a possi- 
ble indication of bisexual internal conditions. 
W oodworthia, gen. nov. 
Gecconiform, with rounded tapering tail. Digits strongly dilated, median 
slightly webbed at their bases, inner and outer free ; distal phalanx of inner 
digit raised, supporting two plates with the claw between as in (Edura, basal 
phalanges with broad undivided transverse lamelle ; distal phalanges of the 
other four digits compressed, raised, and clawed as in Hoplodactylus. Body 
covered above with uniform granular scales, inferiorly with larger slightly 
imbricated scales. Pupil vertical. 
On the types four digits of each foot resemble those of Naultinus or Hoplo- 
dactylus, while the fifth digit has a distal portion more like that of Cidura, 
being provided with a large pad at each side of the claw below the extremity. 
Generic name in honor of Dr. W. McM. Woodworth. 
W oodworthia digatata, sp. nov. 
Plate 1, Fig. 2-2f. 
Outlines resembling those of Hemidactylus ; with tail moderately long and 
slender. Head oval, snout narrowed, blunt, little longer than the distance 
between the eye and the ear; ear opening large, narrow, oblique ; eye large, 
prominent. Body and limbs moderate, feet large. Digits broad, outer and 
inner on each foot free, others united by a rudimentary web ; basal dilatations 
large, inferiorly with a single series of transverse lamelle ; distal phalanges 
strong, compressed, raised and clawed on four of the digits ; distal phalanx 
on the fifth digit differing from that of the others in being broad and bearing 
inferiorly a pair of large plates between which the claw rests, Plate 1, Fig. f. 
Twelve or thirteen lamelle under the fourth toe. Snout covered with gran- 
ules, larger between the rostral and each orbit, becoming largest and plate-like 
toward the rostral and the labials. Twelve labials; thirteen lower labials. 
Rostral more than twice as broad as high, cleft at the upper edge. Nostril 
pierced between the rostral, first labial, and four nasals. Three scales across 
the snout behind the rostral between the nostrils, median smallest. Two scales 
behind the mental between the lower labials of the first pair. Two small 
scales behind each of the first pair of lower Jabials, and one or two behind each 
of the second pair. Behind those mentioned the scales gradually decrease in 
size to the granules. On the back and the limbs the granules are uniform and 
