18 THE BAYLOR BULLETIN 



37. HOLBROOKIA MACULATA LACEEATA Cope. BoU's Spotted 

 Lizard. 

 This sub-species, which is probably merely a color 

 variety of the last, inhabits the middle district east 

 of the plains and west of the timbered region, from 

 the northern boundary south to the Rio Grande 

 River. My records from near Waco and China 

 Springs, McLennan County, carry its range, locally, 

 into East-Central Texas. The following are pub- 

 lished localities for this lizard: CotuUa, La Salle 

 County (Bailey) ; Guadalupe River, Kendall County, 

 and Comanche and Erath Counties (Cope) ; Japonica, 

 Kerr County, 15 miles west (Bailey), and 25 miles 

 southwest of Sherwood [probably Crockett County] 

 (Bailey). 



38. HOLBROOKIA PROPINQUA Baird and Girard. Long-tailed 



Spotted Lizard. 

 Lower Rio Grande Valley, north to San Antonio 

 and Refugio, westward to the Pecos River and prob- 

 ably beyond. Mr. Mitchell sent me a pair of these 

 lizards from Padre Island, together with the follow- 

 ing notes: "These lizards come down to the Gulf 

 beach from the sand-hills and forage among the drift 

 and sea-weed. They make this trip after sun-down 

 and return to the sand-hills at daylight." 



39. Uta stansbukiana Baird and Girard. Brown-shoul- 



dered Lizard. 



The trans-Pecos region, the panhandle district and 

 probably the breaks and canyons in the southern 

 plains district. Messrs. Townsend and Barber sent 

 me a large series from El Paso with the statement 

 that it was common in that vicinity. Bailey records 

 it from Pecos City and Fort Stockton. A single ex- 

 ample was collected near Elephant Mesa, Brewster 

 County, by a Baylor University expedition. On my 

 Northwestern Texas trip in 1910, 1 found it in abun- 

 dance in Rush Creek Arroyo, Armstrong County, and 

 this leads me to believe that it must inhabit all of 



