416 



BULLETIN 34, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



larly marked with spots of the same form and color ; from the orbits to 

 beyond the middle of the body runs a broad raised line or cutaneous 

 fold, and another from the corner of the mouth to the insertion of the 

 arm. Beneath smooth, yellowish-white, speckled, spotted, and varied 

 with dusky ; top of the head coarsely punctured, back and sides i uber- 

 culous. Head very large, broad, and blunt; a deep concavity between 

 the nostrils and the eyes. Iris golden, mixed with black. Tympanum 

 of the color of the body. Lower jaw with a small protuberance or point 

 resembling a tooth. Arms and legs above gray, speckled, and barred 

 with black ; beneath yellowish-spotted and varied with dusky, the yel- 

 lowish color more decided at the axillae and groins. Hind part of the 

 thighs granulate. Fingers slightly palmate at the base; the first longer 

 than the second. The second toe twice as long as the first. 



Sana areolata capito Le Conte. 

 RESERVE SERIES. 



Catalogue 

 number. 



No. of 

 spec. 



Locality. 



When 

 collected. 



From whom received. 



Nature of 

 specimen. 



5903 



1 



Riceborough, Ga 





Maj. J. Le Conte , . . . 



Alcoholic. 











EANA SEPTENTRIONALIS Baird. 

 (Plate 86.) 

 Proceed. Ac. Phila., 1855, p. 51. 

 Gamier, American Naturalist, 1883, p. 945. 

 Bana sinuaia Baird, /. c. 



Body rather broad, stout, and depressed. Head rather narrow ; nos- 

 trils large, midway between tip of snout and eye. Tym j)anum variable, 

 at least half the diameter of the eye. Vomerine teeth minute ; the 

 patches are on a level with the posterior margin of the inner nostrils 

 (which are rather large), and are separated by considerable intervals. 

 Tongue moderate, the cornua well developed. 



Skin rough and irregular above and on sides ; not pustular nor 

 tuberculated ; beneath entirely smooth. Buttocks but slightly granu- 

 lated. A well-defined, rather broad ridge commences behind the eye 

 and, bifurcating, the short branch curves round the tympanum, passes 

 obliquely down to the insertion of the arm, thickening in its descent, 

 and meets a similar thickening from the rictus. These two ridges are 

 separated by a groove, which commences at the eye and runs above and 

 behind the tympanum. The main branch proceeds along the sides to 

 about opposite the sacrum, where it is lost. No other ridges are to be 

 seen. 



The fore-arm is short, considerably less than the hand. The femur 

 and tibia are about equal, less than half the length of body and less 



