No. 8. — Some Amphibians from Northwestern Peru, with a Revision 

 of the Genera Phyllobates and Telmatobius. 



By Thomas Barbour and G. K. Noble. 



During the summer and autumn of 1916 the junior author served 

 as zoologist of an expedition to northwestern Peru undertaken in 

 the interests of the School of Tropical ^Medicine (Harvard University) 

 and the ^Museum. 



This paper is the first of a series dealing with the herpetological 

 collections secured. It is our intention to make these papers more 

 than faunal lists and though it was expected that the deserts of 

 northern Peru would yield few amphibians and that the number of 

 species would be small, the percentage of new forms proves extra- 

 ordinarily large. Notes on the habits of the species observed, especi- 

 ally of the new marsupial frogs will be included in a later paper. 



The expedition crossed the provinces of Piura, Cajamarca, and 

 Lambayeque. The toA\'ns of Huancabamba and Palambla are on 

 the western range of the Andes, on the border of Piura. This north- 

 ern Huancabamba should not be confused with the town of the same 

 name of central Peru near Oxapampa. From the latter several reptiles 

 and amphibians were collected by Enrique Boettger in 1910 and 

 described by Bouienger. Not one of these species was found in the 

 Huancabamba visited. This caused some confusion and after cor- 

 respondence with Dr. Bouienger and Mr. W. F. H. Rosenberg, it is 

 apparent that Boettger's material should be labeled Oxapampa, his 

 Huancabamba being far less widely known than the much larger 

 town of the same name. The species affected are : — Anolis boettgeri, 

 Stenocercus boettgeri, Prionodactylns spinalis (Ann. mag. nat. liist., 

 1911, ser. 8, 7, p. 19-24); HyJa inclanopleura, Edalorhina nasiita 

 (Loe. cit., 1912, ser. 8, 12, p. 185-190); Leptognathus polylepis, Laehesis 

 ehloromelas {Loe. cit., 1912, ser. 8, 10, p. 422-424); and Hylella oeellata 

 {Loe. cit., 1918, ser. 9, 2, p. 433). Tabaconas lies in a little valley 

 between the ranges of the cordillera in the northern part of Cajamarca 

 and is inihe only strip of rain forest met with diu"ing the expedition. 

 Perico, Bellavista, and Chumayo are in the same province in the low, 

 broad and arid valleys of the Chinchipe and jMaranon Rivers. Quero- 



