12 L. G. ANDERSSON, DR. E. MJÖBERGS EXPEDITIONS TO AUSTRALIA 1910—1913. 9. BaATRACHIANS. 
Measurements. 
Total length SU DAM 210: 
Breadth of head P4 3 TIS 
Length of snout 6 > 4 > 
Diameter of eye 4,8 >» SO 
» of tympanum SNTRES 2 > 
Distance from tip of snout to hind margin 
of tympanum 14 » 8 > 
Length of humerus 9 > ARI 
From elbow to tip of 32 finger 19 » 10 » 
Length of femur 193505 3 11,2 > 
» of tibia 21.796 PPG 
> of tarsus with 4thtoe 2012 kan 
If the specimen from German New Guinea (Bogadjim at Stephansort) really 
was to be referred to Ph. fletcheri, which species up to that time had been found 
only in New South Wales, it was to be expected that it should live in Queensland 
as well. It was therefore very interesting to find this specimen in Dr. MJÖBERG's 
collections, by which the probability of the correctness of my first determination was 
confirmed. 
Chiroleptes inermis PErtErRS. — Four specimens, N. Queensland: two from 
dark caves at Chillagoe ”/s 1913, 35 and 25 mm., two from Alice River Sept. 1913, 
25 and 24 mm. 
Pseudophryne australis GraAyY forma bibronii GÖNTHER. — Three specimens 
from Mount Tambourine, Southern Queensland, Okt. 1912. 
The great variation in colour, characterizing this species, is distinetly shown 
already by these three specimens, which all are differently coloured, although they 
are of about the same size (20—23 mm.). The one is uniform brownish grey with 
two reddish yellow longitudinal dorso-lateral bands fading into the colour of the back 
but very distinctly limited from the black sides. In another the back is light brick- 
red with two pairs of black lines, viz. two short lines from the margin of the eyelid 
to the nuchal region, converging behind, and behind these two longitudinal lines on 
the sides of the back, extending to the vent; especially the hind parts of these lines 
are broken up into spots; the sides of the body are grey, dotted with black. The 
upper surface of the head in front of the anterior pair of dark lines is uniform 
brownish yellow, lighter than the back. The third specimen has a similar colour- 
pattern, but being much darker, it has the black lines rather indistinct. The under 
surfaces of all three specimens are marbled with black and yellowish white as usu- 
ally in this species. 
