Batrachia. 
145 
MISCELLANEOUS RECORDS OF FROGS. 
Oxyglossus lima (Gravenh.). 
igi2. Oxyglossus limn, Boulenger, Fauna Malay Peninsula, Rept., p. 225. 
Larva. 
1907. Oxyglossus lima, van Kampen, in Weber's Zool. Ergebn. Ost.-Ind. IV, p. 384, pi. xvi, 
fig. I. 
1909. Oxyglossus lima, id., Natnurk, Tijdsch. Ned.-Ind. LXIX, p. 44. 
1916. Oxyglossis lima, vSmith, Jonrn. Nat. Hist. Soc. Siam II, p. 173, pi. . 
Several specimens v^^ere taken at the edge of the Tale Sap and in ditches at 
Patalung in the Siamese Peninsular Province of Singgora. 
Oxyglossus laevis subsp. martensi, Peters. 
1912. Oxyglosstts laevis, Boulenger, Fauna Malay Peninsula, Rept., p. 225. 
1916. Oxyglossis laevis martensi, Smith, Journ. Nat. Hist. Soc. Siam II, p. 172. 
Larva. 
1916. Oxyglossis laevis martensi. Smith, op. cit., p. 174, pi. 
Two specimens were taken in a small pool in the casuarina woods near the town 
of Singgora. The species is common in situations of the kind on the east coast of 
Peninsular Siam. 
Rana cyanophlyctis, Schneid. 
1912. Rana cyanophlyctis, Boulenger, Fauna Malay Peninsula, Rept , p. 228. 
I obtained a perfectly typical specimen of this species at the edge of the Tale 
Sap near the mouth of the Patalung River. The evidence of its occurrence in the 
Malay Peninsula has hitherto been very doubtful, depending on two specimens from 
Cantor's collection, labelled Penang." 
Rana plancyi. Lataste. 
1907. Rana plancyi, vStejneger, ^7.5. Nat. Mus. Bull. 58, p. loi. 
This frog is common round the Tai-Hu Lake in the Kiangsu Province of China, 
where I obtained several specimens. 
Rana namiyei, Stejn. 
1907. Rana namiyei, Stejneger, op. cit., p. 136, figs. 122-126. 
This species was described from fully adult specimens from the Liu-Kiu Islands. 
Stejneger compares it with Rana corrugata and Rana kuhlii, but it seems to be most 
closely related to Rana macrodon, from which it differs in its much less strongly 
developed palatal teeth. I have examined a half-grown specimen from Kuling in 
China that seems to belong to the species. It differs from the adult in exactly the 
same way as half-grown specimens of R. macrodon do, viz. chiefly in the narrower and 
smaller head and in the comparatively feeble development of the prominences in front 
of the lower jaw. Otherwise the agreement with Stejneger's description and figures 
is complete. Our specimen was obtained in exchange with the Shanghai Museum. 
