12 REPTILE GALLERY. 



and variety of colour, and forming a striking contrast to the species 

 of Phrynusoma (Case 11) of North America and Mexico, which, 

 on account of their shape and sluggish habits, have earned the name 

 of Horned or Californian Toads (fig. 6). 

 [Case 10. j The AyamidcB repre*!«nt the Iguanas in the Old World. They 

 are distinguished by the acrodont dentition, the teeth being anky- 

 losed to the upper edge of the jaws, an arrangement which occurs 



Fi-.7. 



Lower jaws, showing the acrodont (a) and pleurodont (5) dentition. 



also in the Rhynchocephalians^ some Amphisbsenians, and the 

 Chanifeleons. Lizards of this family are most abundant in the 

 Indian and Australian regions, showing a great variation of form 

 analogous to that of the preceding family. The perhaps most 

 highly specialized Agamoid is the genus Draco, small winged Lizards 

 from the East Indies (fig. 8). The Dragons are tree-lizards, and 

 possess a peculiar additional apparatus for locomotion : the much- 

 prolonged five or six hind ribs are connected by a broad expansive 

 fold of the skin, the whole forming a subsemicircular wing on each a 

 side of the body, by which they are enabled to take long fiying j 

 leaps from branch to branch, and which are laid backwards at the I 

 sides of the animal while it is sitting or merely running. 1 



The Frilled Lizard {Chlamydosaurus hingii, fig. 9) is an Australian 

 Agamoid, growing to a length of two feet. It is provided with a 

 friU-like fold of the skin round the neck, which, when erected, 



