306 GEOGRAPHICAL AXD GEOLOGICAL DISTBIBUTIOBT. 



The coecilians are tropical forms belonging to the East Indies, 

 Africa (with the Seychelles — Hypogeophis rostratus), and America. 

 The American species, including all of the genus Coecilia itself, are 

 about twenty in number, and range from Mexico to Peru and 

 Brazil.* Kemarkable instances of divided genera are presented by 

 Dermophis, which possesses five American species and one from 

 "West Africa (D. Thomensis), and Uraeotyphlus, represented by two 

 species in Malabar and likewise one in West Africa. 



The urodele amphibians are comprised in four families : The 

 Sirenidae or sirens, with two or three species, inhabiting the South- 

 eastern United States; the Proteidaa, with two genera, Proteus and 

 Menobranchus (or Necturus), the former confined to the subter- 

 ranean waters of Carinthia, Carniola, and Dalmatia, and the latter 

 to the streams of Eastern and Central United States and Canada; 

 the Amphiumidae, with three genera, two of which, Amphiuina and 

 Menopoma, represent North American forms, while the third, Sie- 

 boldia (Cryptobranchus or Megalobatrachus), which is closely re- 

 lated to the menopomas, is confined to Japan and China; and the 

 Salamandrid£E (newts, salamanders, &c.), comprising upwards of 

 ninety species, very extensively distributed throughout temperate 

 Eurasia and North America, with some fifteen or more species in 

 tropical America (from Mexico southward — ^Amblystoma, Spelerpes), 

 a limited number in North Africa, and two (Tylotriton) in the 

 Himalayas. The North American forms belong principally to the 

 genera Plethodon, Desmognathus, Diemyctylus, Amblystoma (with 

 Axolotl), and Spelerpes, the first two of which appear to be restricted 

 to the Western Hemisphere. t Spelerpes has one species (S. fuscus) 

 in the south of Europe, and Amblystoma one (A. persimile) in 

 Siam, remarkable instances of separation in genera. The urodele 

 Amphibia of North America, north of the Mexican boundary, num- 

 ber about fifty species. The permanent larval forms of one or more 

 species of Amblystoma (A. tigrinum, A. mavortium), known as 



* Boulonger gives the range of Cljthonerpeton indistinctum as extending 

 to Bnenoa Ayres ; but tliis is considered doubtful by Petere (" Monatsb. Berl. 

 Akad.," 187a, p. S40). 



t American zoologists recogriae tlie Pletliodontidte (with Spelerpes), Des- 

 mognatIiid(B, and Amblystoir.iilse as distinct families ; Diemyctylus, repre- 

 senting tiic Pleurodolidas, is by Boulenger considered to be synonymous with 

 the Eurasiatio Molge (Triton of Laurenti). 



