( 77 ) 



h. Back granular; with or tvithout larger conical scattered 



tubercles. 



H. Cocteaui, D. et B.» 

 H. Goctcei auctorum. 

 H. Bengaliensis, Anderson. J. A. S., B,, 1871, p. 14. 



Back uniformly granular. A few small tubercles on each side 

 of the sacral region. Tail slightly depressed at the base, verti- 

 cillate, finely granular above, with an enlarged tubercle on each 

 side of each segment. Thumb well developed, but claw on it 

 very small. Colour greenish grey, with five transverse dark 

 bands, posteriorly edged with white, from neck to loins. Tail 

 similarly banded above. A pale band, dark margined above, 

 through the eye. Femoral pores 6 to 8 on each thigh, widely 

 separated in the pubic region. In old females the tail is often 

 bulged at the base. Length up to 9 inches, but 6 or 7 in the 

 more common size. 



Inhabits Orissa, Bengal, North-Western Provinces, The 

 Panjab, Sikkim, Khasi hill, Kachar, Birmah, Bombay (Dum. et 

 Bib), Pinang (Cantor), but not hitherto recorded from Southern 

 India or Ceylon. 



H. Lesehenaultii, D. et B. 



E. Goctcei, D. et B., apud Kelaart, Prod. Fam., Cey. 

 H. KelaartU, Theobald. Cat. Kep., As. Soc, Mus. 

 JET. rrmrmoratus, Blanford. J. A. S., B., 1870, p. 363. 

 Back uniformly granular, with numerous flat scattered tubercles. 

 Thumb well developed. Colour silvery grey, with usually some 

 transverse zig-zag dark marbliags. A dark band through the eye. 

 Femoral pores 10 to 16 on each thigh widely separated in the 

 pubic region. Upper labials 1013. Lower 7"10. Size 5'5 inches. 

 Inhabits Ceylon, Southern and Central India, Western Bengal, 

 and the North- Western Provinces. 



This species can be at once discriminated from frcenatus by its 

 larger thumb, and from Goctcei by its more numerous femoral 

 pores ; and from giganteus by its lesser number of labials. 

 (Doubtless Cocteaui not Coctsei as suggested by Stoliozka.) 



