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The adult (if the ' Chhim' of Buch. Ham.) is rich olive brown 

 uniformly spotted with small equal and equidistant lenticular 

 spots, with their long axes arranged more or less longitudinally. 

 Two yellow ragged blotches on the temples, but no band before 

 the eyes. 



Inhabits the Ganges. 



T. stellatus, var Javanicus, Geoffrey, S. H. Siebold, Fauna 

 Japonica, Chel., Tab. 5, f. 6. Theobald, Proc. As. Soc, 

 Bengal, March 1874, p. 79, pi. 3. 

 T. Javanicus (Sc/iw.,apud Giinther in part not of Gray. 

 T. hurum, Gray. An. Mag., N. H., 1872, p. 366 as T. 



Phayrei. 

 ' Leikkway' of the Birmese. 

 Head taper, mandible, inside furnished with a median ridge. 

 Head and neck grey, profusely yellow mottled. Shell brown 

 with vermiculate markings in the young. 



The specimen figured by me, 1. c, was taken at Moulmein. 

 Inhabits Pegu, Tenasserim, and Java. 



T. Phayrei, Th., Jour., Lin. Soc, ZooL, Vol. X, 1868. 



T. carniferus, Gray. Cat. S. R., p. 67, pi. 32 not Aspilus 



cariniferus, Gray. Sup. Cat., S. E,., p. 102, f. 33. 

 T. cariniferus, Th. Pro. As. Soc, Bengal, March 1874, 



p. 80, pi. 4. 



T. Jeudi, Gray. P. Z. S., 1869, p. 217. 



T.formosus, Gray. P. Z. S., 1869, p. 217. (?) 



T. Phayrei, Th. apud Anderson. P. Z. S., 1871, p. 154. 



' Leik-beywoon' of the Birmese. 



SkuU of the general form of Gangeticus. Sternum excessively 

 cartilaginous, the odd osseous plate being only well developed in 

 aged individuals, vide Anderson, f. 1. c. The T. formosus of 

 Gray is not improbably the ocellated livery of this species. 

 Adults brown handsomely vermiculately marked, very much in 

 the style of Ghitra. 



Grows to over 24 inches in a straight line. 



Inhabits the Irawadi, Tenasserim, and the Malayan Peninsula. 



