66 Trans. Acad. Sct. of St. Lows 
Distribution in Kansas.—Eumeces septentrionalis is 
apparently an eastern Kansas form, and has not yet 
been found west of the distribution of E. fasciatus, with 
the range of which its known distribution in Kansas co- 
incides. The distribution indicates that it may be con- 
fined to moist grass land and woods. 
General Discussion. 
Of the species of lizards discussed in the preceding 
pages the following are regarded as established members 
of the Kansas faunal list. Except in the case of Humeces 
multivirgatus, specimens of each have been examined and 
identified by the writer: 1. Crotaphytus collaris (Say) ; 
2. Holbrookia maculata maculata (Girard) ; 3. Sceloporus 
undulatus thayerti (Baird and Girard); 4. S. widulatus 
undulatus (Latrielle); 5. Phrynosoma cornutum (Har- 
lan); 6. P. douglassti ornatissimum (Girard); 7. Ophi- 
saurus ventralis (Linné); 8. Cnemidophorus sexlineatus 
(Linné); 9. Letolopisma laterale (Say); 10. Eumeces 
anthracmus (Baird); 11. FE. fasciatus (Linné); 12. E. 
multivirgatus (Hallowell); 13. EZ. obsoletus (Baird and 
Girard); and 14, E. septentrionalis (Baird). 
The existence of data which might be made into Kan- 
sas reports for two species which are generically unre- 
lated to all lizards definitely reported from Kansas in 
the above pages, makes their consideration here a neces- 
sity. , 
Although Ellis and Henderson (1913) in their work on 
the ‘‘ Amphibia and Reptilia of Colorado’’ (p. 119), gave 
a table in which Dipso-saurus dorsalis was included 
among species recorded from Kansas, the writer’s ex- 
amination of over 1700 Kansas lizards has failed to re- 
veal any of these specimens. This is significant when 
one considers that so conspicuous a form as the keel- 
backed lizard could scarcely be long overlooked. In order 
