Taylor: Philippine Amphibia 
241 
as well as on the limbs. The margin of the upper jaw and sides 
of the head exhibit similar traces of maculae.” 
Remarks. — Two specimens were captured “in the Caldera, on 
Mindanao” near Zamboanga. Boulenger regards this as a doubt- 
ful species. It has not been rediscovered. 
Eana parva sp. nov. Plate 3, fig. 4. 
Type. — No. F409, E. H. Taylor collection; collected at Buna- 
wan, Agusan, Mindanao, P. L, August, 1912, by E. H. Taylor. 
Description of type. — Vomerine teeth in two elongate, oblique, 
converging series, beginning on inner side of choanae and ex- 
tending much beyond hinder level of choanae, narrowly separated 
medially; choanae small, rather hidden under edge of jaw; tongue 
oval, very slightly notched behind, the “horns” only slight rounded 
knobs, widely separated at their base ; head and body flat above, 
head about as wide as long; eye distinctly less than length of 
snout; tympanum distinct, its diameter about two-thirds that of 
eye ; nostril much nearer end of snout than eye ; tympanum sep- 
arated from eye by a distance equal to one-half its diameter; 
interorbital width one and one-half times upper eyelid; canthus 
rostralis distinct, rounded ; loreal region with slight oblique slope ; 
a slight depression behind nostrils, distance between nostrils 
much greater than their distance from eyes ; skin on back smooth ; 
on snout, sides, and upper side of limbs skin with numerous 
minute rounded depressions; chin, throat, and belly smooth; a 
very slight supratemporal fold above tympanum to near arm; 
no dorsolateral fold; fingers very slender, widened at tips into 
very small disks, slightly wider than the digits themselves ; first 
finger distinctly longer than second, slightly longer than fourth ; 
no skin fold on outer finger or on arm ; toes one-third to one-half 
webbed, third toe barely longer than fifth ; disks of toes slightly 
larger than those on fingers; subarticular tubercles moderate; 
an elongate, oval, inner metatarsal tubercle, more than a third 
the length of first toe ; no outer tubercle visible ; no tarsal fold ; 
tibiotarsal articulation reaches nostril. 
Color in life. — Above uniform reddish brown on back, snout, 
and head, with very indistinct darker areas interorbitally and 
between shoulders; sides of head and body darker brown than 
back, becoming almost black along the straight dorsolateral limit 
of the ground color of back, forming a distinct contrast; the 
ventrolateral area much lighter, with small yellowish spots ; belly 
cream, chin densely powdered with cinnamon brown; arms and 
limbs brown, lightly barred with darker brown. 
