CALOTES 139 



Variation. — Two other specimens, an adult female and a 

 young, in the Bureau of Science collection, are from the same 

 locality. The female has no gular pouch. The nuchal crest 

 is nearly as high as that of the male and consists of eleven 

 spines. The latter specimen has been preserved in alcohol. The 

 color is light grayish blue heavily reticulated v^ith spots and 

 lines of black-brown, those on sides of neck nearly black; the 

 belly scales are densely powdered with brown as are the scales 

 on the underside of neck, limbs, and base of tail. The tail is. 

 broken off but the extremity of the remaining part is light brown 

 with frequent dense brown spots; the light spot is present be- 

 hind the insertion of the hind leg. The young specimen re- 

 sembles the female specimen. 



Remarks. — The subspecies is known only from Polillo. The 

 subspecies is named for Rev. Francisco de P. Sanchez, S. J., 

 of the Ateneo de Manila. 



CALOTES CRISTATELLUS (Kuhl) 



Agama cristatella Kuhl, Beitr. Zool. Vergl. Anat. 108. 



Calotes cristatellus Fitzinger, Neue Class. Rept. 49. 



Agama moluccana Lesson, Voy. Coquille, Rept. pi. 1, fig-. 2. 



Calotes gutturosa Guerin, Icon. Req. Anim., Rept. pi. 7, fig. 3. 



Bronchocela cristatella Kaup, Isis (1827) 619; Dumeril and Bibron, 

 Erp. Gen. 4 (1837) 395; Cantor, Cat. Mai. Rept. (1847) 30; Girard, 

 U. S. Expl. Exped., Herp. (1858) *411; Gunther, Rept. Brit. India 

 (1864) 138; Peters, Mon. Berl. Ak. (1867) 17; Steindachner, 

 Novara, Rept. (1869) 27. 



Bronchocela moluccana Peters, Mon. Berl. Ak. (1868) 17. 



Bronchocela burmana Blanford, Journ. As. Soc. Bengal 48 (1878) 127. 



Calotes cristatellus Boulenger, Cat. Liz. Brit. Mus. 1 (1885) 316; 

 Taylor, Philip. Journ. Sci. § D 13 (1918) 264. 



Description of species. — (From No. 815, Bureau of Science 

 collection; collected on Busuanga, Calamianes, 1918, by E. H. 

 Taylor.) Rostral small, surrounded by five scales; nostril in 

 moderate nasal which is separated from rostral by two scales ; 

 nine upper labials; upper head scales rather small, more or 

 less uniform; canthus rostralis distinct, formed by shingled 

 scales; slightly projecting; scales delineating supraorbital region 

 enlarged and strongly keeled ; a few small compressed scales be- 

 hind superciliary edge ; gular pouch moderately developed ; tym- 

 panum about the size of eye opening, superficial; mental larger 

 than rostral ; eight lower labials ; scales on occiput small, strong- 

 ly keeled; a nuchal crest consisting of eight scales begins on 



