N. A. REPTILES AND BATRACHIANS. 45 



H. andersoni Bd., 1854, Pr. Phil. Ac, 61. 



Maryland ; South Carolina. 

 H. eximia Bd., 1. c, 61. 



New Mexico ; Mexico. 

 H. regilla B. & G., 1852, Pr. Phil. Ac, 174. 



Mexico; Oregon; Nevada. 

 H. baudinÜD. & B., 1841, Erp., VIII, 564. 



Texas ; Central America. 

 H. nigropunctata Blgr., 1882, Cat. Batr. Sal., 366. 



Cordova; Jalapa; Vera Cruz. 

 H. crassa Broc, 1876, Bull. Soc. Philom. (7), I, 130. 



Mexico. 

 H. plicata Broc, 1. c. 



Mexico. 

 H. cadaverina Cope, 1866, P-r. Phil. Ac, 84 ? 



California. 

 H. arenicolor Cope, 1. c. 



Utah; Sonora. 

 H. curta Cope, 1. c, 313. 



Lowe r California. 

 H. miotympanum Cope, 1863, Pr. Phil. Ac, 47 ? 



Jalapa, Mexico. 

 H. gracilipes Cope, 1865, 1. c, 195 ? 



Northeastern Mexico tableland. 

 H. bistincta Cope, 1877, Pr. Am. Phil. Soc, 87 ? 



Vera Cruz. 

 Hylodes piekeringii Holbr., 1842, Herp., IV, 135, pl. 34. 



Maine; Illinois; South Carolina. 



PHYLLOMEDUSAWagl., 1830, Syst. Amph., 201. 

 P. dacnicolor Cope, 1864, Pr. Phil. Ac, 181. 

 Colima. 



PELOBATIDAE. 



SCAPHIOPUS Holbr., 1838, Herp., I, 85. 

 S. solitarius Holbr., I. c, 85, pl. 12. 



Massachusetts; Florida; Mississippi. 

 (B) var. albus Garman, 1877, Pr. A. A. A. S., Buffalo meet- 



ing, 194. 

 Average size less than that of preceding. Brown of the back 

 lacks thie red or chocolate tinge. Readily distinguished by the 

 great amount of white on back, flanks and upper surface 

 of limbs. The white forms spots or vermiculations which 

 coalesce into bands of irregulär shape and extent. 

 Key West, Florida. 



