30 GECKOirrDiB. 



labials. Ear-opening narrow, vertical. Sandy-coloured above, 

 with rather indistinct darker spots on body and limbs and annnli on 

 tbe tail. 



Total length 80 miUim. 



Head 12 „ 



Width of head 8-5 „ 



Body 28 „ 



Fore limb 18 „ 



Hind Umb 25 „ 



TaU (injured) ........ 40 „ 



Cutch; Sind. 



a-c. c??&hgr. Outch. F. Stoliczka [0.]. (Typical 



specimens.) 

 d-e,f-4. (J?. Sind. J. A. Murray, Esq. [P.]. 



(As typical of O. petrensis.) 



6. Gyranodactylus heterooercus. 



Gymnodactylus heterocercus, Blanford, Ann. ^ Mag. Nat. Hist, (4; 

 liii. 1874, p. 453, and Zool. E. Persia, p. 345, pi. xxii. fig. 3. 



Distinguished from all the preceding species, to which it is allied, 

 in having the scales on the lower portion of the tail small, strongly 

 keeled, sharply pointed behind, imbricate, and not arranged in 

 regular verticils. Dorsal tubercles about equal to the small ear- 

 opening in size, very h'ttle, if at aU, longer than broad, and arranged 

 in twelve longitudinal rows. Ventral scales in twenty-five to thirty 

 longitudinal rows. The fore limb reaches the tip of the snout 

 and the hind limb the shoulder. Eight to ten upper and seven 

 or eight lower labials. Uniform grey. From snout to vent about 

 40 millim. 



Eastern Persia. 



7. Gymnodactylus elongatus. 



Gymnodactylus elongatus, Blanford, Journ. As. Soc. Beng. xliv. 

 1876, p. 193, and 2nd Yarh. Miss., Bept. p. 14, pi. ii. fig. 2. 



Allied to the preceding species. Body rather elongate. Limbs 

 long, the fore limb extending to the end of the snout, the hind Umb 

 extending some distance in front of the shoulder. Surface of the 

 head granular, granules nearly uniform ; nostril between the 

 rostral, the first labial, and two nasals, which are rather swoUeUo 

 Dorsal tubercles triangular, nearly as large as the smaU ear-opening ; 

 they are not arranged in regular rows, but about twelve may be 

 counted across the back. About twenty-five larger scales across 

 the belly. Prseanal pores about six, in a V-shaped line. Tail thin, 

 very regularly attenuate, verticUlate, covered with trapezoidal or 

 subtrapezoidal keeled scales, the posterior row of each ring larger, 



