232 EUBLEPHAEIDa:. 



Total length 199 miffim. 



Head 35 „ 



Width of head 23 „ 



Body 77 „ 



Fore limb 39 „ 



Hind limb 47 „ 



Tail 87 „ 



Eastern and Southern India. 

 a. S ■ Penang, CHttagong. Gen. Hardwicke [P.]. (Type.) 



h-o.S- Russelconda. Dr. Traill [P.]. 



d. $. Anamallaya. Ool. Beddome [0.]. 



2. Eublepharis macularius. 



Cyrtodactylus macularius, Blyth, Journ. As, Soc. Beng. xxiii. 1864, 



p. 738. 

 EuWepharis fasoiolatus, Qilnth. Ann. Mag. N. H. (3) xiv. 1864, p. 429. 

 macularius, Theoh. Cat. Sept. As. Soc. Mm. p. 32 ; Anders. Proc. 



Zool. Soc. 1871, p. 163 ; Theoh. Cat. Rep. Brit. Ind. p. 94 ; Murray, 



Zool. Sind, p. 366. 

 hardwiokii, (non Gray) Murray, I. c. 



Differs from the preceding by the smaller and less numerous 

 tubercles, the granular interspaces being as wide as the tubercles 

 themselves ; these are subconical or slightly keeled. The body and 

 the digits are rather more elongate. Nine to fourteen prseanal pores 

 in the male. Young with five chestnut-brown transverse bands from 

 head to sacrum, slightly broader than their interspaces, which are 

 whitish, and simUar rings round the tail ; the first band is horse- 

 shoe-shaped, and encircles the occiput, each branch advancing to the 

 eye. In the adult these bands become more indistinct, and the head 

 and body become spotted or largely vermictdated with chestnut- 

 brown and whitish ; in some only the brown edges of the dorsal 

 bands remain. Specimen i has the two broad dorsal bands of 

 H. JiardwicJcii with the variegations of E. macularius. Lower sur- 

 faces white. 



Total length 199 millim. 



Head 32 „ 



Width of head 24 „ 



Body 87 „ 



Fore limb 40 „ 



Hind limb 50 „ 



TaU 80 „ 



North-western India, probably ranging through Baluchistan and 



Persia to the Euphrates*. 



a. $ . Between Cashmere and Murree. A. Kinloch, Esq. [P.], 



h-d. (J & yg. Kajampore, Punjab. C. Tufaell, Esq. [P.]. 



* I have examined a specimen, belonging to the Paris Museum, collected 

 at Nineveh by M. de Saulcy. 



