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SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Bu tietin 194

AN ANNOTATED CHECKLIST AND KEY TO THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO

By HOBART M. SMITH ann EDWARD H. TAYLOR

UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1948

ee For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington 25, D. C. Price 50 cents

ADVERTISEMENT

The scientific publications of the National Museum include two series, known, respectively, as Proceedings and Bulletin.

The Proceedings series, begun in 1878, is intended primarily as a medium for the publication of original papers, based on the collections of the National Museum, that set forth newly acquired facts in biology, anthropology, and geology, with descriptions of new forms and revisions of limited groups. Copies of each paper, in pamphlet form, are distributed as published to libraries and scientific organiza- tions and to specialists and others interested in the different subjects. The dates at which these separate papers are published are recorded in the table of contents of each of the volumes.

The series of Bulletins, the first of which was issued in 1875, contains separate publications comprising monographs of large zoological groups and other general systematic treatises (occasionally in several vol- umes), faunal works, reports of expeditions, catalogs of type specimens, special collections, and other material of similar nature. The majority of the volumes are octavo in size, but a quarto size has been adopted in a few instances in which large plates were regarded as indispensable. In the Bulletin series appear volumes under the heading Contributions from the United States National Herbarium, in octavo form, published by the National Museum since 1902, which contain papers relating to the botanical collections of the Museum.

The present work forms No. 194 of the Bulletin series.

ALEXANDER WETMORE,

Secretary, Smithsonian Institution. II

CONTENTS

Page

EE ENOR EC C1 OTN 5 tee 9 tote rie nc Fe er er re ee rere RRO BEC 1

PSSM RIEU sye ree meeees eon. Kn mene sre ee SOMME SEE Br Ie VSS. 3

Key to Mexican orders of Ampbibiass 222-02 Sok Set. 3

Or Meee GnyIMRO PHO Nas eet en an ee ON SARE 3

amily’ Caeciliidae= Yo 222i eee 3

Key to Mexican genera of Caeciliidae.__.___._________ 4

Genus Dermophismeeneees. 2528 Set 4

GenusiGymro prises see ee a ee 5

OrderhC audatie. > eho arias oe Rr au PR Se Se Sates, ch bok 5

Key to) Mexican’ suborders‘of Caudatas 2-22 522" __..-..--=-=-=._. ry

Suborder=Meantess sete ae een meee eee le oe se oe 5

amily sSirenidaer. os: 2: eee sake ecko t el ee a 5

GenusiSiren2e sie ee es ee eee 6

Suborder-Ambystomoides!. 2) eset Ba siee ee) ait Roe! ee tue 6

Bamily Ambystomidae ws. Seess_ 2 0 = 5 see 6

Key to Mexican genera of Ambystomidae___.-___--_-_- 6

Genus -Bathystredoneeese. 022 2 22 eke see 7

GenustS7nedons te Se ae eee eee a

Genus Rhyacosiredont aoe. - 2-55 seca 8

GenuseAmbystoma= Su mee 23 se 3 ee 10

Suborder: Salamandroides: 2s he 2 eee et seh eee sae 14

Hamily Salamandridnew {i sunee! 2.2. Seat ae 14

Key to Mexican genera of Salamandridae__.__-------- 14

Gens Rartchatse 2s ae eS 282 cise eee 14

Genus Diemiciylust 2 eee es 15

Suborder-Plethodontoidess_ 2244 Beles). haa ee ee 16

Family, Plethodontidacsst' = e232... 225 2 2s SoS eek 16

Key to Mexican subfamilies of Plethodontidae-_----_--- 16

Subfamily’ Thoriinaes 8.2222 l22 see ee 8. SL. 16

Genuselhoriustes = Bee ee eee ete 16

Subfamily: Plethodontinae222e_ 22222. 2t = 18

Key to Mexican genera of Plethodontinae_ --_--_~-- 18

LOTUS ol 71S E070 a ee ae Se 19

. Genus-Batrachosepssaies22- 2s a= ss 19

Genus*Anerdes- 22 eee. ee eee ae 20

| GenuseParvimolge2= oe a ee Se eee a 20

[ Genus Oedipinag Re Sue ss Ss ee Sek 21

Genus Magnadiguds].-242- 2 == 21

Genus -Bolitoglossa_.3---—- = ee 22

Genus Pseudoeuriyceg. 22225 = 2 ae ne 25

| Genus Chireplerotriton 2+... 22-22 oe 228 —==2— = 30

| MircersCaliontrameen whe ee ne oe eee ee Bee ee eee 33

| III

j| }

IV BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Class Amphibia—Continued |

Key to Mexican suborders of Salientia_---.------ heen ee eee 33 Suborder Opisthocodla s-.=22 2222 e222 34 Family: Rhinophrynidas:+ oo == 2-52 se eee 34 Genus Rhinophrynus.__-.....-.------------ 34 Suborder Anomocoela <2: 22-3 See ae eee eee 34 | Family Pelobatidacs.. 25.5) =e ee 34 | Genus Scaphiopus.- 23] ee ee ee 35 ; Suborder ‘Procoéla. 222 25.20) 2-30 2. 2 eee 36 Key to Mexican families of Procoela_______-_____.-----2=2.2= 36 RamilyBufonidae 32 22 5s 2) ee eee 37

Genus Bufo. 2... Sons oe 37

Family Leptodactylidses=2 S222 Ba er a ee 46

Key!to Mexican genera of Leptodactylidae_______-_-- 46

Genus Engystomops= 4250 oe ee 47

Genus Pomoedactylus 222 "5 2 eae eee 47

Genus Syrrhophus= 22-222 eee 49

Genus Microbatrachylus. =. .222055 52322 53

Genus Léeptodactylus.... - => = 2-5 2 eee 55

Genus Eleutherodactylus_.....-.2--.-------- 57

Family Hylidae Jo 2. see ee Se eee ee 67

Key to Mexican genera of Hylidae____----_----_----- 67

Genus Centrolencilaz, =) 2 a eee 68

Genius@iaglenas 232283) he eee eee 69

Genus hreprion 2308 2 ee ee ee 70

Genus- Anothccases2cse2o. 2 ae eee 70

Genus. Piennohylae: 2258 ee ee 70

Genus Agalychnis:. 22222452 eee 71

Genus Plectrohyla= = 2 eee 73

Genus: Acrodyleg. eb te 74

GenusySmiliscas 223368 2 ee eee 75

Genus Hiyléligit8. -4282% 22 35 ee ee 76

Gens: Acrse ie he ak eek bo. eae ee ee ee

Genus Hylaz . 222 _ bee eee eee Gide

Genus Ptychohylases5 45-82 ee ee 91

Suborder: Diplasiocoelay. 2222-22 2en4n 5s sete ey ease See ee 91

Key to Mexican families of Diplasiocoela.____._.--._----------- 91

amily: Microhiyilid esa ee ee ee 91

Subfamily eMicrohylinaesetes eee eee 92

Key to Mexican genera of Microhylinae______-_--- 92

Genus MMccrohylate 2 ea8') eee Soe eee 92

Genuspilapopachtsseassee = 0 eee ae ee 94

Family Ranidae.= sess kee eee 96

Sublamily Raninaee ee seat ees 96

Genus Ranasesse: 22th so eee eee 96

State liste... 2-23. ee eee 100

AN ANNOTATED CHECKLIST AND KEY TO THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO

By HoBart M. SMITH and EpwWARD H. TAYLOR

INTRODUCTION

A NEw era in the study of Mexican herpetology was initiated in 1932, a year marked first by the appearance of Dr. Remington Kellogg’s “Mexican Tailless Amphibians in the United States National Mu- seum,”’ ! a work of fundamental importance; and second, by the renais- sance of intensive field exploration in Mexico.

Since 1932 the number of amphibians in collections from Mexico has increased about a thousand percent, and the number of recognizable forms more than a hundred percent. For example, Kellogg recog- nized 65 species of anurans, basing his study upon some 2,200 speci- mens. We recognize 161, represented by collections totaling about 25,000 specimens. ;

The salamanders of Mexico have never been treated fully, although Dr. E. R. Dunn’s “The Salamanders of the Family Plethodontidae,”’ which appeared in 1926, summarized over half the salamander fauna, 67 percent of which (by number of forms) is comprised by members of the family Plethodontidae (as of today). Dunn recognized 15 forms in 291 Mexican specimens; we list 43 forms, represented by some 9,000 specimens, and of all salamander groups combined 64 forms and 15,000 specimens. We are acutely aware that much revisionary work is still to be done in Mexico and in adjacent areas. Several genera and species obviously are polyphyletic assemblages; the study of some, like Rana pipiens, is beset with the difficulties of tremendous variability, wide range, and larger quantities of material than can easily be handled. Satisfactory solutions to many problems await collections from critical areas, and no doubt numerous species and subspecies remain to be discovered and defined. Probably many of the forms we regard as species will ultimately be regarded justifiably as subspecies. How- ever, assumption of subspecific status for geographically separated species (as we consider them) should be undertaken with temerity, as witness the implications of Moore’s recent work by which some widely

1U.8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932.

Z BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

differentiated species are shown to interbreed freely while other popu- lations inadequately differentiated taxonomically are shown to be in- capable of interbreeding. Furthermore, determination of the actual status of some forms which we here regard as species must undoubtedly await experimental investigation; we refer to extraordinary complexes like that of a certain group of closely related but morphologically very distinct species of Hleutherodactylus in central Veracruz (vide Taylor and Smith, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 572). Beyond question, en fin, much juggling of arrangement remains to be endured. This fact is a reflection of (1) the peculiar character of amphibians, which are provided with fewer well-defined obvious and interracially variable features than almost any other group of vertebrates, and (2) the difficulties attending their collection. The difficulties of am- phibian taxonomy are obvious to anyone who actually tries to identify preserved specimens without the benefit of field experience. Knowl- edge of the animals in life is practically indispensable even—or per- haps especially—to the expert. This fact has not always been appre- ciated by critics who may have felt that we have recognized, in some cases, more forms than exist.

That thorough collection of amphibians is not easily attained, especially in tropical areas, is well known. Some specimens emerge from their quarters into the open for breeding, where they are more easily collected, for extremely brief periods—perhaps one night a year. Except in breeding congresses many species are rarely if ever found; thus one must be on hand at just the right time and at just the right place to secure the species. Salamanders are collected in abundance ~ usually by special techniques not widely applied, such as seining or use of dipnets (for ambystomids) and search during the dry season in bromelias, stump holes, ete. (for most plethodontids). We have continually been surprised by repeated discovery of novelties at favorite collecting sites that we had considered completely surveyed. In view of these considerations, we feel that our view of the relative incompleteness of our present knowledge and the considerable length of time that will be required to approach completeness is not unwar- ranted.

Nevertheless we feel the time is ripe for a summary of the amphibian fauna of Mexico, the complexity of which has become steadily more apparent in recent years. Students in this field have accomplished reviewal of most available collections at least only in a preliminary fashion, partly because of dwindling accessions during war years. The coming years will undoubtedly be a period of review, during which the activities of the recent past and the problems revealed by them

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 3

will be subjected to individual attention at leisure. The present list takes a step toward such general review by providing a brief survey of the present status of Mexican forms and a concise analysis of recent advances, to which additions and emendations may be made readily.

In preparing this summary we have followed, with some exceptions, the style of our ‘Annotated Checklist and Key to the Snakes of Mexico.” ? The present account differs chiefly in the natural arrange- ment of the species and in the distribution of the keys, which instead of being united are scattered through the list in appropriate places. The keys are to transformed specimens, except where otherwise indicated, since the larvae are too incompletely known to permit the construction of useful keys. Likewise the eggs of relatively few forms are known. Juvenile transformed specimens will not be identifiable in all cases, since important characters may not be evident in them.

For the sake of brevity we have indicated the E. H. Taylor-H. M. Smith collection by the abbreviation EHT—-HMS.

Class AMPHIBIA Linnaeus

Amphibia LinnaEvus, Systema naturae, ed. 10, vol. 1, 1758, p. 194.

KEY TO MEXICAN ORDERS OF AMPHIBIA 4

ipeOneor two paits of limbs’ presents no scales —==--=- ===. === == ee 2 No limbs present; animals with slender, elongate, annulated, wormlike bodiessiscales hiddeminiskin =2-—2 225-222-255. 2 Gymnophiona (p. 3)

2. Animals with elongate bodies; hind legs not or slightly larger than fore;

a tail present in larvae and adults; neotenic forms sometimes occur- mings OF 4 MiMbs ise. 202 ee ae he Caudata (p. 5)

Animals with greatly shortened bodies; hind legs much stouter than fore- legs; tail absent in adult; no neotenic forms; always 4 limbs. Salientia (p. 33)

Order GYMNOPHIONA Miller

Gymnophiona Miter, Zeitschr. Physiol., vol. 4, 1832, p. 24. Family CAECILIIDAE Gray *

Caeciliadae 5 Gray, Ann. Philos., ser. 2, vol. 10, 1825, p. 217.

2U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 187, 1945.

3 Characters used in all cases apply to Mexican forms. These may not apply universally.

4 Despite rather remarkable skull differences, all living forms of the order Gymnophiona have been recognized under a single family.

5 Cited as Coeciliidae by Gray in 1850, Catalogue of the Batrachia Gradientia of the British Museum, p. 56; first use of present orthography, Caeciliidae, by Cope, Amer. Nat., vol, 23, 1889, p. 862.

4 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

KEY TO MEXICAN GENERA OF CAECILIIDAE

1. Eye visible; tentacle only slightly nearer eye than nostril; primary (97-110)

and secondary (51-80) rings reduced in number; stout; total length/ diameter ratio 14~26___.2_.2-.--+--=--=-----===--=--— Dermophis (p. 4)

Eye invisible or not, completely or partially encased under bone; tentacle

very close to eye; primaries (119-137) and secondaries (98-122) more

numerous; generally more slender; total length/diameter ratio DARA QHENGE I RET fe Os Sis i eee et See eee Gymnopis (p. 5)

Genus DERMOPHIS Peters

Dermophis Prrers, Monatsh. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1879, p. 987.—Duwn, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 91, 1942, pp. 461-479 (part).

Genotype-—Dermophis mexicanus Duméril and Bibron (by subse- quent designation, Noble, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 49, 1924, p. 305).

Range.—Veracruz and Guerrero, Mexico, to Ecuador.

Species—Five forms are recorded, three of which are races of D. mexicana; one enters Mexico.

DERMOPHIS MEXICANUS MEXICANUS (Duméril and Bibron)

Siphonops mexicanus Dumirit and Brsron, Erpétologie générale, vol. 8, 1841, pp. 284-5.

Dermophis mexicanus PrtErs, Monatsb. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1879, p. 937, fig. 6.

Dermophis mexicanus mezicanus Dunn, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 10, 1928, pp. 74-75, pl. 5.

Gymnopis mexicanus mexicanus DUNN, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 91, 1942, pp. 473-476.

Type—Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 5e (fide Dunn).

Type locality —Mexico.

Range.—The Atlantic coast from central Veracruz southeastward to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and perhaps to Yucatén; and on the Pacific coast from the Isthmus southeastward to western Nicaragua. In Mexico known from Veracruz: Cuatotolapam, Veracruz; Oazaca: Tehuantepec, Barrio; Tabasco: Teapa; Chiapas: La Zacualpa, Soco- nusco, Escuintla; Yucatdn: loc.? (Dugés).

6 In his revision of American caccilians, Dunn (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 91, 1942, pp. 487-540) unites Dermophis and Gymnopis (under the latter name) because of the existence of apparently annectant forms. The eye, visible and in an open orbit, is invariable in the three species of Dermophis but variable in visi- bility and presumably in extent of enclosure by bone in the four species of Gymnopis. However, the posi- tion of the tentacle (very near eye in Gymnopis, halfway between eye and nostril in Dermophis) does not overlap, the extent of closure of the orbit probably does not overlap (not known for all forms), and finally there is no indication that the present groupings of species under these two names are unnatural. For these reasons we retain Dermophis.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 5

Genus GYMNOPIS Peters

Gymnopis Prters, Monatsb. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1874, p. 616—Dunn, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 91, 1942, pp. 461-479 (part).

Genotype.—Gymnopis multiplicata Peters (by monotypy).

Range.—Guerrero, Mexico, and Alta Verapaz, Guatemala, to Brazil.

Species.—Hight forms are known, of which three are races of G. multiplicata. Two (G. pricei, G. braziliensis) have been described by Dunn since the appearance of his monograph in 1942. Only one form enters Mexico.

GYMNOPIS MULTIPLICATA OAXACAE Mertens

Gymnopis multiplicata oaxacae MrrtEens, Abh. Ber. Mus. Magdeburg, vol. 6, 1930, pp. 153-155, fig. 14.—Tayuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 299-300.—Dunn, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 91, 1942, pp. 466—-469.—Tayutor and Smit, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 523-524.

Type.—Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt, No. 22120.

Type locality—Cafetal Concordia, 600 meters, between Puerto Angel and Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, Mexico.

Range.—Pacific slopes from central Guerrero to southern Chiapas. Specimens are known from Guerrero: El Limoncito (near La Venta), Xaltianguis; Oaxaca: Cafetal Concordia, Mirador; Chiapas: Tonalé, La Esperanza (near Escuintla).

Order CAUDATA Oppel Caudata Oprrt, Ordnung, Familien und Gattungen der Reptilien . . ., 1811, p. 72.

KEY TO MEXICAN SUBORDERS OF CAUDATA

1. No teeth in upper or lower jaw’; body greatly elongated; hind limbs

absent; permanent larvae, with gills throughout life_____- Meantes (p. 5) Teeth in upper and/or lower jaws 7; fore and hind limbs present-------- 2

Zee Larasphenoid. teeth present..._.-.=..--.-_=------+--s-<-s--5-<-<< 3 Paraspuenoia” teeth absent..=-—2—-2===2 2 2+)-= Ambystomoidea (p. 6) BerNOmnasotmbial: gTOOVE-.2-2..----—=25-3524<-4- Salamandroidea (p. 14) ASMSSOlapial OTOOV Cs. = moose ee ee oe Plethodontoidea (p. 16)

Suborder MEANTES Linnaeus Meantes LinnaEvs, Systema naturae, ed. 12, vol. 1, pt. 2, 1766 (unpaged). Family SIRENIDAE;Gray

Sirenidae (part) Gray, Ann. !Philos., ser. 2, vol. 10, 1825, p. 216; Catalogue of the Batrachia Gradientia of the British Museum,{1850, p. 68.

7 Excluding palate.

6 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Genus SIREN Linnaeus Siren LinnarEus, Systema naturae, ed. 12, vol. 1, pt. 2, 1766, addenda (unpaged).

Genotype.—Siren lacertina Linnaeus.

Range.—District of Columbia southward through Florida and west- ward along the Gulf coast to Matamoros, Tamaulipas; northward in the valley of the Mississippi River to Lake Michigan.

Species.—Three forms, two of them subspecies of S. intermedia, comprise this genus; one enters Mexico.

SIREN INTERMEDIA NETTINGI Goin

Siren intermedia nettingi Goin, Ann. Carnegie Mus., vol. 29, 1942, pp. 211-217.

Type.—Carnegie Mus. No. 7580. Type locality.—Imboden, Lawrence County, Ark. Range.—‘‘Southern Louisiana northward to southern Illinois and Indiana, west and south to Maverick Co., Texas, and northern Tamau- lipas, Mexico.’ Known in Mexico only from Matamoros, Tamau- lipas. Suborder AMBYSTOMOIDEA Noble

Ambystomoidea Nostez, The biology of the Amphibia, 1931, p. 471.

Family AMBYSTOMIDAE Hallowell

Ambystomidae HALLOWELL, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, ser. 2, vol. 3, 1858, p. 338.

KEY TO MEXICAN GENERA OF AMBYSTOMIDAE &

1. Permanent larva (neotenic) in nature Normal transformation to adult form (possible exception of Rhyacosiredon zempoalaensis, Ambystoma fluvinatum, and Ambysioma rosaceum)__-_-_ 3 2. Three phalanges in fourth toe; digits short; the proximal phalanges, at least, included in a web; gill branches with filaments to near base; 8 to 10 gill rakers on anterior face of third arch; presumably incapable of trans- POLINA LION ese ete we ee te cco ere Bathysiredon (p. 7) Four phalanges in fourth toe; digits elongate and unwebbed; 12 gill rakers on the anterior face of third arch; capable of artificial transformation, or in case of lermaensis at least occasionally transformation may take

BlACGe soe es Be es Rs SA ew Ok See ere ae ee ec Siredon (p. 7) 3. Adults retaining vomerine teeth in a modified larval form; premaxillary POCCM LOSE OS wie Ni See aire a Aad eaten plate wih ates Rhyacosiredon (p. 8)

Vomerine teeth arranged with the pterygopalatine teeth to form a trans- verse or slightly arched series near level of choanae; premaxillary teeth TOCA C= sce 2 es ae a epee ee ee ara eae ee ae aor Ambystoma (p. 10)

8 The preparation of usable keys to the genera and species of the Ambystomidae is especially difficult owing to the fact that one genus is known only from neotenic larvae, while other genera contain some species known only from adults and others known only from larvae.

® There is a slight deposition of keratin within the mouth but no horny beak is present, as described by Dunn in the generic description, at any age.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 7

Genus BATHYSIREDON Dunn Bathysiredon Dunn, Not. Nat., No. 36, 1939, p. 1.

Genotype.—Siredon dumerilit Dugés.

Range.—Known only from Lake Pétzcuaro, Michoacan, Mexico. Species.—One. |

BATHYSIREDON DUMERILIT (Dugés)

Siredon Dumerilii Duais,! La Naturaleza, vol. 1, 1870, pp. 241-244, pl. 5a, figs. 1-13.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 426-427. Bathysiredon dumerilii Dunn, Not. Nat., No. 36, 1939, p. 1.

Type.—U.S.N.M. Nos. 16201-16202 (?) (cotypes). Type locality —Lake Patzcuaro, Michoacén, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality, Lake Patzcuaro, 2,055 m. elevation. Genus SIREDON Wasgier

Siredon WaGuER, Natiirliches System der Amphibien, 1830, pp. 209-210; Deserip- tiones et icones amphibiorum, 1830, pl. 20.

Avolotes OwrEN, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. 14, 1844, p. 23 (genotype Avzoloies gutiata Owen=Gyrinus mexicanus Shaw).

Genotype.—Siredon axolotl Cuvier=Gyrinus mexicanus Shaw.

Range.—The ancient lakes of the southern Mexican plateau: Lakes Lerma, Xochimilco, and Chalco.

Species.—Two.

KEY TO SPECIES OF SIREDON

1. Larvae dark gray with numerous dark or black spots; artificially trans- formed adults blackish with large yellow spots__------ mexicanum (p. 7) Larvae uniformly dark blackish or grayish black, lighter below; normally transformed adults grayish or olive-black, lighter be- 1 tee ee BEER SS bee 2 ee esp A er lermaensis (p. 8)

SIREDON MEXICANUM (Shaw) 1!

Gyrinus mexicanus Suaw, Nat. Mise., vol. 9, 1789, pls. 3438, 344.

Siredon mexicanum Bairp, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, ser. 2, vol. 1, 1849, p. 292—Smiru, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., zool. ser., vol. 24, 1939, pp. 16-17.—Tayutor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 424-425, pl. 45, fig. 3.

Siren pisciformis SHaw, Gen. Zool., vol. 3, pt. 2, 1802, p. 612, pl. 140.

Siredon axolotl Wacusr, Natiirliches System der Amphibien, 1830, p. 209.

Azolotes guitata OwErn, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. 14, 1844, p. 23 (lake near Mexico City; types unknown).

10 It is presumed that this species has become extinct owing to the introduction of exotic game and food fishes.

1 Sir. [edon] lich. [enoides] alba Dugés (La Naturaleza, vol. 1, 1869, p. 145) isa nomen nudum whose identity should not be guessed.

8 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Siredon humboldtii Dumér1t, Brsron, and Dumérit, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, pp. 177-181 (lake near Mexico City; types probably in Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris).

Gyrinus edulis Duméri, Brsron, and Dumérin, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, p. 178 (types and type locality same as preceding).

Lusus aquarum Dumérit, Brsron, and Dumériz, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, p. 178 (types and type locality as preceding).

Piscis ludricus Dumérin, Brsron, and Dumférit, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, p. 178 (type and type locality as preceding).

Type.—Brit. Mus. Nat. Hist.

Type locality —Meéxico, Mexico.

Range.—Valley of Mexico. Recorded from Lakes Xochimilco and Chalco.

SIREDON LERMAENSIS Taylor

Siredon lermaensis Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 427-430, pl. 48.—Taytor and Smrru, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 525-526. Type-—EHT-HMS No. 22578. Type locality—Lake Lerma, east of Toluca, México, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

Genus RHYACOSIREDON Dunn Rhyacosiredon Dunn, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 10, 1928, pp. 85-86.

Genotype.—Amblystoma altamirani Dugés.

Range.—The high mountains at the southern edge of the main Mexican plateau.

Species.—Four.

KEY TO SPECIES OF RHYACOSIREDON Aduits

1. Tail about as long as body (less than 5 percent longer); elevation of tail in tail length 3.8 to 5 times; pterygopalatine-vomerine series average about 18 teeth on each side; maxillary-premaxillary teeth about 31 on

each side; when limbs are adpressed, toes touch elbow_-_-_-_-_ rivularis (p. 9) Tail longer than head and body by more than 5 percent; elevation of tail IN Garten et ne fr omy GHG 9) Gini es meee ae eae ee ee a 2

2. Mouth strongly papillate; toes not reaching elbow of adpressed limb. leorae (p. 9) Mouth not obviously papillate; toes of adpressed limbs reaching elbows or beyond eres 8 a Ah ese hone Nee 2 nee rere een mea altamirani (p. 9)

Larvae

1. Lips and tips of toes whitish or cream; body nearly uniformly colored (knownt only: from larvac) 42-4 ee ee ee zempoalaensis (p. 9)

Lips and tips of toes not whitish; body dark, strongly mottled with CEB RI eae eee e rivularis, leorae, altamirani (p. 9)

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 9

RHYACOSIREDON RIVULARIS Taylor

Rhyacosiredon rivularis Taytor, Herpetologica, vol. 1, 1940, pp. 171-176, pl. 17, fig. 1.

Type.—EHT-HMS No. 16388. Type locality.—13 kilometers west of Villa Victoria, México, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

RHYACOSIREDON LEORAE Taylor

Rhyacosiredon leorae Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 29, 1943, pp. 345-347, pl. 26, fig. 3.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 22560.

Type locality —Near Rio Frio, México.

Range.—Known only from the type locality, a small stream, Rio Frio, which passes through a village of the same name in the state of México, at a point only a few hundred meters from the México- Puebla border, then flows into the state of Puebla after about a kilo- meter. The species occurs certainly in both states.

RHYACOSIREDON ALTAMIRANI (Dugés)

Amblystoma altamirani Ducks, Description d’un axolotl des Montagues de las Cruces (Amblysioma altamirani, A. Dugés), 1895, pp. 1-6, 1 pl., figs. 1-8.— SmitaH and Necker, Anal. Ese. Nac. Cienc. Biol., vol. 3, 1943, pp. 183-185, pl. 1, figs. 2-3.

Rhyacosiredon altamirani Dunn, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 10, 1928, pp. 85, 86.—Tartor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 262- 263, pl. 24, fig. 2; Herpetologica, vol. 1, 1940, p. 176, pl. 17, fig. 2.

Type.—Museo Alfredo Dugés, Guanajuato, México (6 cotypes).

Type locality —Manantial de los Axolotes, Serrania de las Cruces, Valle de México, Distrito Federal, Mexico.

Range.—High mountains of central Mexico, southern Distrito Federal, and northern Morelos. Known or recorded from numerous localities in the Ajusco Mountains. Known from Distrito Federal: Manantial de los Axolotes, Desierto de los Leones, Cafiada de Contre- ras; Morelos and Mézco:" Lagunas de Zempoala.

RHYACOSIREDON ZEMPOALAENSIS Taylor and Smith

Rhyacosiredon zempoalaensis Taytor and Smiru, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 527-529. Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 116617. Type locality—One of the nearly dry lake beds of the Zempoala lakes, Morelos, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality.

12 The ‘‘Lakes of Zempoala’’ are at the México-Morelos border; undoubtedly the species occurs on both sides of the boundary.

10 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Genus AMBYSTOMA Tschudi

Ambystoma Tscuup1, Mém. Soc. Sci. Nat. Neuchatel, vol. 2, 1838, p. 92.

Sirenodon Drsor, Bull. Soc. Sci. Nat. NeuchAtel, vol. 8, 1870, p. 269 (genotype, Sirenodon lichenoides Desor=Siredon lichenoides Baird= Ambystoma tigrinum mavortium Baird).

Genotype.—Ambystoma subviolacea Tschudi= Ambystoma maculatum Shaw.

Range.—Extreme southeastern Alaska, James Bay, and Labrador southward to the edge of the central plateau in Mexico; apparently not in Baja California.

Species.—Twenty-eight forms are recognized, 6 of which are sub- species of A. tigrinum; 11 occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF AMBYSTOMA Known as transformed adults

1. Small species (maximum known snout-to-vent measurement 62 mm.); adpressed limbs separated by three costal folds; vomeropalatine teeth 16-16; maxillary-premaxillary teeth in more than a single series, the outer containing about 40 teeth on each side; tail about 70 percent

of head=bodynlenptho 42 2os ate ee ee eee schmidti (p. 18) Larger species; snout-to-vent measurement exceeding 60 mm___-_----- 2

2. Body of adults uniformly colored on dorsal and lateral surfaces_-_------ 3 Body not uniformly colored on sides and dorsum_-_-_----------------- 4

Grayish black or plumbeous above and on sides; larvae with three rows of small cream spots marking Jateral-line system; caudal fin present, in adults, nearly as wide as fleshy part of tail; skin not especially smooth-42 se oe eee Pe ae eee el ordinarium (p. 18) Body of adults uniform grayish brown or lavender-brown, a little lighter below; toes reaching wrist when limbs are adpressed; tail without distinct dorsal fin, about 75 percent snout-to-vent length; maxillary- premaxillary teeth about 55-55; vomerine teeth 15-17; palatine teeth 10-12, the two series separate; skin especially smooth and shining; larvae “unknowns! te 2. SP eie.. 20. eerie bombypelium (p. 138) 4, Body uniform blackish above with an irregular row of cream spots or an irregular cream stripe low on sides; caudal fin reduced to a fine ridge; adpressed limbs overlap the length of hand; vomeropalatine teeth almost continuous, 31-37 on each side; maxillary-premaxillary series 70-80 on each side; tail about 72 percent of snout-to-vent Veen a ae ey rae le amblycephalum (p. 13) Body not uniformly dark above. =2-22-2--9-2-— =e. eee 5

oo

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO

Body black with more or less symmetrical rounded cream marks on head and body and a median series on compressed tail; tail short, about 62 percent snout to vent; maxillary-premaxillary teeth 56 on each side; a total of 55 vomeropalatine teeth in a continuous series; larvae large, golden yellow with numerous black spots; fleshy part of tale sapvenuated.— 2. 222 oo. SU phe bald Ne cepa subsalsum (p.

mody Tot wnanked)as;desctibed. $2 a7 248 See Bt

Olive-gray, with numerous, vertical, blackish dark bars on sides of

odyeand Giallo See ee ee eae has tigrinum proserpine (p.

Not olive-gray or with numerous vertical, blackish dark bars on sides of body and tail nadalnmilow:: 4irohel <li" os seer seifit) ye od pee EM. Aa AND Caudal fin high, thick, cream to olive-tan with numerous small dark spots; toes of adpressed limbs reach little beyond wrist; tail 80-82 percent of snout-to-vent length; maxillary-premaxillary teeth 48-50 on each side; vomeropalatine teeth total about 42, more or less con- tinuous; larvae light flesh with little or no pigment except on ventral PORELEOU CAUCal Mima cae. ee a ee ea, granulosum (p.

Olive to dark olive, with scattered black spots__________- lacustris (p. Brown to blackish with numerous small cream-white spots__ velasci (p.

Known only in larval state

Body pinkish or reddish with numerous dark spots which may form two irregular lines on each side; caudal fin arising a little posterior to fevelot anm pmserione..2 > S260 2 4. 28-6 3 ee rosaceum (p.

Body with brownish or blackish pigment on a greenish-yellow ground

color; caudal fin low, arising at tail base¥’___________ fluvinatum (p.

AMBYSTOMA SUBSALSUM Taylor

Ambystoma subsalsum Taytor, Copeia, Oct. 15, 19438, pp. 151-156, figs. 1-3.

Type.—_KHT-HMS No. 22139. Type locality—Lake Alchichica, Puebla. Range.—Type locality.

AMBYSTOMA VELASCI Dugés

he

11)

14)

12) 12) 11)

13)

14)

Stredon Tigrina Veuasco, La Naturaleza, vol. 4, 1879, pp. 212-236, pls. 7-9

(preoccupied by Salamandra tigrina Green, 1825= Ambystoma tigrinum).

Amblystoma velasci Ducks, La Naturaleza, ser. 2, vol. 1, 1888, p. 142 (substitute

name for Siredon Tigrina Velasco).

Ambystoma tigrinum velasci Dunn, Copeia, 1940, p. 157 (part). Ambystoma velasci TayLor and Smiru, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945,

pp. 531-532, pl. 18, figs. 3, 4.

13 It is not certain whether the known specimens of rosacewm are relatively as old as those of jluvinatum.

gi BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Ambystoma tigrinum velascoi LaAFRENTz,“4 Abh. Ber. Mus. Magdeburg, vol. 6, 1930, pp. 105-114, pl. 2, figs. 2-3, pl. 3, fig. 3 (Lakes Texcoco and Zumpango; type locality restricted here to Lake Texcoco; apparently no types desig- nated,

Type.—FProbably none preserved.

Type locality.—Laguna Santa Isabel, near Guadalupe Hidalgo, Dis- trito Federal, Mexico.

Range.—High plateau region in Puebla and México. Known or recorded from Puebla: La Virgin (Kilometer 224) between Puebla and Tehuacén; Mézico: San Diego, Santa Magdalena; Distrito Federal:

Atzacualco. AMBYSTOMA GRANULOSUM Taylor

Ambystoma granulosum Tayuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, pp. 57-61, pl. 8, figs. 1-3.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 29805.

Type locality.—Kilometer 74, about 12 miles northwest of Toluca, México, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from immediate region about type locality.

AMBYSTOMA LACUSTRIS Taylor and Smith

Ambystoma lacustris TayLor and SmitH, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 532-534, pl. 18, figs. 1-2.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 117410. Type locality —Lake Zumpango, México, Mexico. Range.—Lake Zumpango.

14 Determination of the author of this name is perhaps an academic matter. Heretofore Wolterstorff has generally been considered as the author, since he on page 132 of the same publication, in a separate article “Zur Systematik und Biologie der Urodelen Mexikos” names and describes an “‘Ambystoma tigrinum subsp. velascoi Wolt.’? Mowever, in an article (‘‘Untersuchungen tiber die Lebensgeschichte mexikanischer Ambystoma-Arten”’) which precedes Wolterstorff’s Lafrentz (p. 105) cites the name ‘“‘Ambystoma tigrinum velascoi subsp. n.”’ and proceeds to describe the race well enough to permit at least recognition and retention ofthe name. Neither author, it may be noted, citesatype. Technically, for that reason, neither description need be accepted, although we hesitate to follow the rules so Closely.

However, on page 145 a “‘Richtigstellung”’ states that ‘Ambystoma tigrinum velascoi subsp. n.’’ should read “Ambystoma tigrinum velascoi Wolt.’’

There can be no question that the original proposal of A. t. velascoi isin Lafrentz’s article. We believe, moreover, that he, not Wolterstorfi, should be regarded as the author—the correction on page 145 notwith- standing—for the following reason. The description was, obviously, written by Lafrentz; the treatment is much different from that which Wolterstorff gives, and there is no indication whatever that it isa quotation from any ms. of Wolterstorff. Although it may be ‘clear from the contents of the publication that some other person . . .” (i. e., in this case, Wolterstorff) “*. . is responsible for said name . . ”’, definitely it is quite apparent that he is not responsible for ‘‘. . . its indication, definition, or description.’’ (All quotes from art. 21, Intern. Rules Zool. Nomen.)

| i | i :

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 13

AMBYSTOMA SCHMIDTI Taylor

Ambystoma schmidti Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 263-264, pl. 26, fig. 1.

Type—EKHT-HMS No. 3999.

Type locality—10 miles east of San Martin (Asuncién) at Rancho Guadalupe, México, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

AMBYSTOMA AMBLYCEPHALUM Taylor

Ambystoma amblycephala Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 420-421, pl. 45, fig. 2—Tayor and Smiru, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 530-531.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 16443. Type locality —15 kilometers west of Morelia, Michoacén, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

AMBYSTOMA ORDINARIUM Taylor

Ambystoma ordinaria Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 422-424, pl. 46, figs. 1, 2, 3.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 16367.

Type locality —4 miles west of El Mirador, near Puerto Hondo, Michoacan, Mexico, elevation about 9,000 feet.

Range.—Known only from type locality.

AMBYSTOMA BOMBYPELLUM Taylor Ambystoma sp. Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pl. 24, meer. Ambystoma bombypella Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 418-420, pl. 45, fig. 1.

Type -—EKHT-HMS No. 3997.

Type locality —Near Rancho Guadalupe, 14 kilometers east of San Martin (Asuncién), México, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

AMBYSTOMA ROSACEUM Taylor

Azolotes maculata OwEN, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. 14, 1844, p. 23, 1 fig. (non Lacerta maculata Shaw, General zoology, vol. 3, 1802, p. 304; type, Brit. Mus. Nat. Hist., No. 41-6-18, 35, from Sierra Madre, Chihuahua, lat. 26°6’ N., long. 106°50’ W.).

Siredon Harlanii DumériL, Bipron, and Dumfrit, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, pp. 181-182, pl. 95, figs. 1, 1A (part: only the synonymic reference to Azolotes maculata Owen; restricted by Bishop (in press) to the specimens from the vicinity of Spring Lake, N. Mex. [= Ambystoma tigrinum mavortium)).

Ambystoma rosaceum Taytor, Copeia, Sept. 30, 1941, pp. 143-144, figs. 1A, 1B.

Type —EHT-HMS Neo. 23054.

Type locality —Mojarachic, Chihuahua, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from type locality. 757435—48——-2

14 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

: AMBYSTOMA FLUVINATUM Taylor Ambystoma flurinatum Taytor, Copeia, Sept. 30, 1941, pp. 144-146, figs. 2A, 2B.

Type.-—EHT-HMS No. 25383. Type locality —Mojarachic, Chihuahua, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

AMBYSTOMA TIGRINUM PROSERPINE Baird and Girard

Ambystoma proserpine Barrp and Girarp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 6, 1852, p. 173.

Amblystoma proserpina BatrD, Report on the United States and Mexican Bound- ary Survey, vol. 2, Reptiles, 1859, p. 29, pl. 35, figs. 7-14.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 4082 (6 cotypes).

Type locality Salado |River], 4 miles east of San Antonio, Texas; and enroute “from Montgomery, Mexico.”

Range.—Southern Texas and adjoming northern Mexico. Re- corded from Mexico only, possibly, ‘fon the route from Montgomery, Mexico.”’ 15

Suborder SALAMANDROIDEA Noble Salamandroidea Nosx£, The biology of the Amphibia, 1931, p. 473.

Family SALAMANDRIDAE Gray Salamandridae Gray, Ann. Philos., new ser., vol. 10, 1825, p. 215.

KEY TO MEXICAN GENERA OF SALAMANDRIDAE 1

1. Head flat, lacking dorsal keels; body unspotted, with numerous well- defined tubercles; fingers and toes relatively short-..._-_._ Taricha (p. 14) Head with two dorsal crests; middle fingers elongate___ Diemictylus (p. 15)

Genus TARICHA Gray

Taricha Gray, Catalogue of the Batrachia Gradientia of the British Museum, 1850, p. 25.

Genotype.—Triton torosus Eschscholtz.

Range.—Pacific North America, British Columbia, and possibly southeastern Alaska to northwestern Baja California.

Species.—Seven forms are recognized, of which three are considered as subspecies of 7’. granulosus; only one enters Mexico.

18 At least some of the several records of Ambystoma tigrinum from northern and northwestern Mexico probably are referable to this race. Since, however, we have been unable to determine with desirable accuracy the range of this or any other race of Ambystoma tigrinwm reported or expected from northern Mexico we do not allocate the uncertain locality records.

16 We follow the work of various European taxonomists, including Wolterstorff and Herre, in segregating American genera of this family. Evidence supporting such an arrangement has been gathered by the exhaustive researches of Barbara Leonard at the University of Rochester and is in preparation for pub- lication.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 15

TARICHA KLAUBERI Wolterstorff

Taricha torosa klauberi WourEerstorrr, Blatt. Aquar. Terrarienk., vol. 46, 1935, pp. 179-184, figs. a, b.

Triturus torosus klaubert StEINEGER and Barsour, Checklist of North American amphibians and reptiles, ed. 5, 19438, p. 7.

Triturus pax Bisuop, Handbook of salamanders, 19438, pp. 80-82, fig. 20, map 6.

Type.—Magdeburg Mus.?

Type locality.—Boulder Creek, San Diego County, Calif.

Range.—Extreme southwestern California and northwestern Baja California. Recorded from San Andreas and Keller, in Baja Califor-

nia. Genus DIEMICTYLUS Rafinesque

Diemictylus Ra¥FInESQUE, Ann. Nature, No. 22, 1820, p. 5.

Genotype.—Dremictylus viridescens Rafinesque. Range.—The Gaspé Peninsula of Ontario westward to Minnesota and southward through Florida and the Atlantic Coast of Mexico to southeastern San Luis Potosi. Species.—Six forms are recognized, three of which are subspecies of D. viridescens; two occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF DIEMICTYLUS

1. Olive above and yellow below; all surfaces with relatively large, round,

black spoltss-2=22-- Bees ae ee eee eee ee meridionalis (p. 15) Above gray-brown with small black dots and numerous citron-yellow SpOtsice ne 38 eee oe aoc See eee ee kallerti (p. 15)

DIEMICTYLUS MERIDIONALIS Cope

Diemictylus miniatus meridionalis Corr, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 17, 1880, p. 30. Triturus meridionalis Dunn, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 62, 1918, p. 452.— Bisnorp, Handbook of salamanders, 1943, pp. 82-86, frontis., fig. 21, map 5.

Type.—U.S.N.M. (jfide Cope, loc. cit.).”

Type locality —Matamoros, Tamaulipas, and “tributaries of the Medina River and southward.” Type locality here restricted to Matamoros, Tamaulipas.

Range.—Southern Texas, in the United States; northeastern Ta- maulipas in Mexico. Recorded from Matamoros in Tamaulipas.

DIEMICTYLUS KALLERTI Wolterstorff

Diemyctylus kallerti Woutrrersrorrr, Abh. Ber. Mus. Magdeburg, vol. 6, 1930, pp. 147-149, pl. 3, fig. 1, and text figs. 12, 13. T(riturus) kallerti Smirn, Amer. Midl. Nat., vol. 15, 1934, p. 407.

17 “The first specimen of this form which I met with was sent to the Smithsonian Institution from Mata- moras, Mexico.” Cope (U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 34, 1889, p. 213) cites two specimens, uncataloged, from Matamoros, and three from “‘San Diego.’’ None are cited from the “tributaries of the Medina River.” We herewith restrict the type locality to Matamoros, Tamaulipas. Dr. Doris Cochran reports (January 1947) that the type or types cannot now be found in the U. S. National Museum.

16 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Type.—Museum Magdeburg, NV, 44/29, Ex. Nr. 1.

Type locality—Tampico, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Northern Veracruz and eastern San Luis Potosi. Recorded from the type locality and Villa Juarez, San Luis Potosi.

PLETHODONTOIDEA, new suborder

This group consists of the families Desmognathidae and Pletho- dontidae.

Family PLETHODONTIDAE Gray

Plethodontidae Gray, Catalogue of the Batrachia Gradientia of the British Museum, 1850, p. 31 (part).

KEY TO MEXICAN SUBFAMILIES OF PLETHODONTIDAE

1. Tarsals and carpals well ossified; a strong groove from eye to lip. Thoriinae (p. 16) Tarsals and carpals normally cartilage '8; no groove from eye to lip. Plethodontinae (p. 18)

Subfamily THORIINAE Cope

Thoriidae Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 21, 1869, pp. 110-111. Thoriinae Coprgr, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 31, 1893, p. 334 (part).

Genus THORIUS Cope

Thorius Cork, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 21, 1869, p. 111.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, pp. 228-229.

Genotype.— Thorius pennatulus Cope.

Range.—Mountains at the extreme southeastern edge of the main Mexican plateau, in Veracruz and Puebla; the high mountains of central Oaxaca.

Species.—F ive.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF THORIUS

1. Nostril large, oval, greatly elongated, nearly twice as long as wide; foot and hand broadened, the digital tips more or less pointed; premaxillary teeth apparently never piercing upper lip in males-_----_- pulmonaris (p. 17)

Nostril large, round or oval, never greatly elongated____....---------- 2

2. Nostril very large, circular; digits pointed; usually a single premaxillary

tooth piercing lip; subnarial swelling pendant; submental gland very

MISbINGt oo 2 oo es Sea See ae ae ee es eee pennatulus (p. 17) Nostrils large, oval; digits rounded at tips; one or two premaxillary teeth piercing lip; subnarial swelling not pendant____-.-------------- 3

18 Dunn, in ‘“The Salamanders of the Family Plethodontidae,’’ 1926, p. 45, mentions a cleared and stained Plethodon glutinosus that shows ossified carpals and tarsals. I have examined numerous specimens of the genus and find the carpals and tarsals to be cartilage, which disintegrates in rotting out the skeletons of preserved specimens. P, glutinosus may be an exception. I have not examined very old specimens of this form.—E. H. T.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 17

3. Skin of head smooth or with only a faint trace of pitting; the upper ex- tension of hyoid (epibranchial) reaches level of arm insertion; usually a single tooth piercing lip; body and tail more or less compressed _dubitus (p.17)

Skin of head usually more or less pitted; upper extension of hyoid (epi- branchial) usually extending to at least posterior level of arm or farther; body not compressed, but rounded or somewhat flattened; tail more or hese re yunuricum at“bases. 3 205 Soul LoL Pe ee ipa eee 4

4, Larger; maximum snout-to-vent length 32 mm.; head and body strongly pitted; three premaxillary teeth pierce lip; nostril larger; about 35 caudal grooves in full-grown specimen; found above ground under bark DIL IR POP Serre eS Se ee narisovalis (p. 18)

Smaller; maximum snout-to-vent length about 26 mm.; head and body usually dimly (rarely distinctly) pitted; usually one, rarely two, pre- maxillary teeth pierce lip; nostril proportionally smaller; about 40 caudal grooves; dorsum lighter; found under rocks or in cavities in eliy animal burrowsyete.< 25S Os SSC Sola o2Le troglodytes (p.18)

THORIUS PULMONARIS Taylor

Thorius pulmonaris Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 411-414, text figs. 3, 4.

Type—EHT-HMS No. 16684.

Type locality —Cerro San Felipe, about 12 kilometers northeast of Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the vicinity of the type locality; Cerro

~ San Luis.

THORIUS PENNATULUS Cope

Thorius pennatribus [Corr], Amer. Nat., 1869, p. 222 (typographical error for T. pennatulus [nomen nudum], see Cope, type description).

Thorius pennatulus Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 21, 1869, pp. 111-112.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 105-107, pl. 3, fig. 5.

Spelerpes minimus WiEpERSHEIM (Spengel?), Morph. Jahrb., vol. Snel Sats Ds 544 (“Vera Cruz”; probably no types in existence).

Type.—Originally U. S. N. M. No. 6341, now lost. Neotype, U. S. N. M. No. 111017, Cuautlapan (near Orizaba), Veracruz.

Type locality —‘‘Orizava,” Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Known from low mountains (3,000 feet more or less) in the region about and below Orizaba in Veracruz. Recorded from Orizaba and Cuautlapan, Veracruz.

THORIUS DUBITUS Taylor

Thorius pennatulus Taytor (nec Cope), Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1940,

pp. 414-416 (part), pl. 47, fig. B. Thorius dubitus Tayyor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 108-110,

pl. 3, fig. 3. Type -—EHT—HMS No. 17751. Type locality Two miles south of Acultzingo, Veracruz, Mexico.

18 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Range.—High mountain crests (—7,000 feet) in eastern central Veracruz. Specimens recorded from the type locality, and from nearby localities in Puebla.

THORIUS NARISOVALIS Taylor

Thorius narisovalis TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1989 (1940), pp. 416-418, pl. 47, fig. 3. Type-—EHT-HMS No. 17859. Type locality—Cerro San Felipe, 15 kilometers northeast of Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico, elevation 2,600 to 3,000 meters. Range.—Known from the vicinity of the type locality (including Cerro San Luis) and Reyes, Oaxaca.

THORIUS TROGLODYTES Taylor

Thorius pennatulus TayLor (nee Cope), Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1988 (1939), pp. 293-294; vol. 26, 1939 (1940, pp. 414-416 (part), pl. 47, fig. A. Thorius troglodytes Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 110-112, pl. 3, fig. 4—Taytor and Smita, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 535, pl. 19. Type-—EHT-HMS No. 17791. Type locality —Two miles south of Acultzingo, Veracruz, Mexico. Range.—Known from the type locality and immediately adjacent areas in the state of Puebla, at an elevation of about 7,000 feet.

Subfamily PLETHODONTINAE Boulenger

Plethodontinae BouLENGER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Gradientia of the British Museum, ed. 2, 1882, p. 51.

KEY TO MEXICAN GENERA OF PLETHODONTINAE

1. Tongue attached in front; septomaxillae present____.__..._.__.._-_--__-_- 2 Tongue boletoid, free; one premaxilla; bony septomaxilla usually if not

invariablyabsemb2. = tep8_ 3A. <a tee See oe ee See eee 4

2.. Pwo premaxillaa spresent.2 2 2 eo 0 ee ee ee Ensatina (p. 19)

One premaxilla present. <2 po we ae 3

Oo

. Digits 4-4; some if not all forms with several rows of maxillary teeth. Batrachoseps (p. 19)

Digits 4—5; ‘distinct; unwebbeds213 4 -o4 2 eek see! bee Anoides (p. 20)

4. No sublingual fold present; vertebrae amphicoelous______.___.____-___- 5 A sublingual fold present; vertebrae never typically amphicoelous (ante-

rior part of centrum partly or wholly filled with bony deposit) _.______ 6

5. Digits completely or almost completely webbed or palmate, the tips, if free, not widened; no distinct subterminal pads present; maxillary teeth not typically pleurodont_____...-_.-----_-._- Bolitoglossa (p. 22)

Digits with at least the outer series of phalanges free on outer toes; toes widened “truncate. 2. ke tee Magnadigita (p. 21)

6. A double series of enlarged dorsal glandules; skull well ossified; diminutive;

12 costal foldssnogtril-lange- 34320 a as ee Parvimolge (p. 20) No double series of glandules along middorsal line__________-._________ 7

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 19

7. Body elongated; 13 or more costal folds; skull well ossified___ Oedipina (p. 21) Body mormalsless than.13 costal folds. 2- 2... =-. 2. Soci eens 8 8. Digits free beyond metatarsals and metacarpals (or only slightly webbed beyond) (cephalica group); skull well developed; vertebrae not com- pletely opisthocoelous; larger_._.._......._.--___- Pseudoeurycea (p. 25) Digits webbed to end of proximal phalanx; the hand and foot widespread with well-developed terminal pads; vertebrae opisthocoelous but with- out a rounded articular condyle; smaller_______- Chiropterotriton (p. 30)

Genus ENSATINA Gray

Ensatina Gray, Catalogue of the Batrachia Gradientia of the British Museum, 1850, p. 48.

Genotype.—Ensatina eschscholtzii Gray.

Range.—Pacific North America from British Columbia to north- western Baja California.

Species.—Four, two of which are races of E. eschscholtzii; one occurs in Mexico.

ENSATINA CROCEATER (Cope)

Plethodon croceater Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 19, 1867, p. 210.

Ensatina croceater STEINEGER and Barsour, A checklist of North American amphibians and reptiles, ed. 2, 1923, p. 12—Br1sHor, Handbook of sala- manders, 1948, pp. 295-297, fig. 88, map 36.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 4701 (now lost).

Type locality.—‘‘Fort Tejon,” Calif.

Range.—Southern California and northern Baja California, above elevations of about 4,000 feet. Recorded from Cape San Lucas (doubtful occurrence), ‘75 mi. southeast San Diego, California,’ and San Pedro M4rtir Mountains.

Genus BATRACHOSEPS Bonaparte

Batrachoseps BoNAPARTE, Iconografia della fauna Italica, vol. 2, fasc. 26, 1839, fol, 131, not paged.

Genotype.—Salamandrina attenuata Eschscholtz.

Range.—Pacific North America from southern Alaskato northern Baja California; possibly Colima.

Species—Six forms are described, all but one of which are sub- species of B. attenuatus; one occurs in Mexico.

BATRACHOSEPS ATTENUATUS LEUCOPUS Dunn

Batrachoseps leucopus Dunn, Copeia, No. 109, 1922, pp. 61-62.

Batrachoseps attenuatus leucopus DunN, The salamanders of the family Pletho- dontidae, 1926, pp. 241-243.—Bisnop, Handbook of salamanders, 1943, pp. 317-320, fig. 91, map 38.

20 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 64319.

Type locality.—Los Coronados, North Island, Baja California.

Range.—Southwestern California and northwestern Baja California. In Mexico, recorded from La Paz, San Pedro MArtir Mountains, East Coronado Island, North Coronado Island. (The report of Batracho- seps attenuatus from Nevado de Colima [Jalisco or Colima] may be authentic or may represent the presence of an undescribed species.)

Genus ANEIDES Baird

Aneides Bairp, Iconographie encyclopaedia of science, literature and arts, vol. 2, z00l., 1849, p. 257.

Genotype.—Salamandra lugubris Hallowell.

Range.—Southwestern British Columbia to northwestern Baja California; central eastern United States from northeastern Alabama to northern West Virginia.

Species.—Five forms, two of which are subspecies of A. lugubris; one occurs in Mexico.

ANEIDES LUGUBRIS LUGUBRIS (Hallowell)

Salamandra lugubris HALLOWELL, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 4, 1849, p. 126.

Aneides lugubris Batrp, Iconographic encyclopaedia of science, literature and arts, vol. 2, zool., 1849, p. 257.

Aneides lugubris lugubris GRINNELL and Camp, Univ. California Publ. Zool., vol. 17, 1917, p. 134.—SLEvin, Occ. Pap. California Acad. Sci., No. 16, 1928, pp. 71-74, pl. 10, fig. 1.—Buisuop, Handbook of salamanders, 1943, pp. 340-343, figs. 95c, 99, map 41.

Type.—Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia No. 1257.

Type locality —Monterey, Calif.

Range.—Western California from Humboldt County to near the border of Baja California; Los Coronados Islands, Baja California.

Genus PARVIMOLGE Taylor Parvimolge Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, pp, 223, 226,

Genotype.—Oedipus townsendi Dunn. Range.—F oothills of central Veracruz. Species. —One.

PARVIMOLGE TOWNSENDI (Dunn)

Oedipus townsendi Dunn, Proce. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 35, 1922, pp. 5-6 (part). Bolitoglossa townsendi Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, p. 107. Parvimolge townsendi Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 223.

19 Gadow, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1905, p. 204.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 21

Type.——Mus. Comp. Zool. No. 8017.

Type locality—Cerro de los Estropajos, near Jalapa, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Known from the type locality, and Cuautlapan, Veracruz.

Genus OEDIPINA Keferstein

Oedipina Krrersrein, Nachr. Ges. Géttingen, vol. 15, 1868, p. 331.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, pp. 226-228.

Genotype.—Oedipina uniformis Keferstein. Range.—Central Veracruz to Colombia. Species.—Seven, one occurring in Mexico.

OEDIPINA LINEOLA (Cope)

Spelerpes lineolus Corn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 17, 1865, p. 197.

Opheobatrachus lineolus Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 21, 1869, pp. 101-102.

Oedipina lineolus Corr, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 32, 1887, p. 8; Amer. Nat., 1896, p. 1022.

Oedipus lineolus Dunn, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., zool. ser., vol. 12, 1924, pp. 99-100.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 294-295, pl. 29, fig. 3.

Spelerpes (Oedipus) infuscatus? Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1879, p. 778 (“Haiti,” in error; Berlin Mus. No. 6556).

Type.—Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia No. 735.

Type locality—‘‘Mexican Tableland.” Probably eastern central Veracruz, below 4,000 feet.

Range.—FEastern central Veracruz, between 2,000 and 4,000 feet above sea level. Recorded or known from Jalapa, Cuautlapan, San Lorenzo, Metlac, and San Juan de Gracia in Veracruz.

Genus MAGNADIGITA Taylor

Magnadigita Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 218.

Genotype.—Bolitoglossa nigroflavescens Taylor. Range.—Central Veracruz to Colombia and Venezuela. Species.—Fourteen are recorded, three of which occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF MAGNADIGITA

1. An irregular, dorsolateral light line on each side___---------- sulcata (p. 22)

nNaisuchuliticion Gach cide. fi i it Cv ina? 9 Pea let SUEY cesar

2. Gray to purplish black above, the tail darker than body; lower sides and

venter lighter, cream or yellowish cream, usually with large, irregular,

yellow-green to yellowish spots ------------------ nigroflavescens (p. 22) Black above, making a gradual transition to the lighter underside of belly and neck; a few silver-gray flecks on sides, back, and first third of

UML ee ee ns re pe eee, See ere eee Se oe oe macrinii (p. 22)

22 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

MAGNADIGITA SULCATA (Brocchi)”

Spelerpes sulcatum Broccut, Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans l’Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 3, 1883, p. 112, pl. 20, fig. 2.

Type.—Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris. Type locality —Mexico. Range.—Unknown.

MAGNADIGITA NIGROFLAVESCENS (Taylor)

Bolitoglossa nigroflavescens Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 150-152, pl. 8, pl. 9, figs. 9-10. Magnadigita nigroflavescens Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 218.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 111169.

Type locality Cerro Ovando, Chiapas, Mexico, elevation between 5,000 and 6,000 feet. :

Range.—Known only from type locality.

MAGNADIGITA MACRINII (Lafrentz)

Oedipus macrinit LarrEeNntTz, Abh. Ber. Mus. Magdeburg, vol. 6, 1930, pp. 150— 152.71

Bolitoglossa macriniit Taytor, Herpetologica, vol. 2, 1941, p. 65.

Magnadigita macrintt Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 218.

Type.—Museum Madgeburg N. V. 52/29.

Type locality.—Cerro Espino, 1,000 meters, near Concordia, Oaxaca, Mexico.

Range.—Known from the type locality.

Genus BOLITOGLOSSA Duméril, Bibron, and Duméril

Bolitoglossa (part) Dum#érit, Brsron, and Dumiirit, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, p. 88.

Genotype.—Bolitoglossa mexicana Duméril, Bibron, and Duméril (=—Salamandra platydactylus Gray).

Range.—Eastern San Luis Potosi to Paré, Brazil, and northern Bolivia.

Species—Twenty are recorded, of which six are known from

Mexico. KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF BOLITOGLOSSA

1. Teeth absent on maxilla; diminutive form; tail much shorter than head and bod yok 5 kek dene apy ye He Me Li ei eeranerm ae aR eee ee rufescens (p. 23) Teeth present on maxilla, arising from a flat surface, not from edge of jaw- 2 2. Diminutive species; tail much shorter than head and body. occidentalis (p. 23)

_ »% Generic allocation uncertain, since the type (the only known specimen) has not been examined. © %1 Also described as a new species in Lafrentz, Blitter fiir Aquar.-Terr., vol. 32, Feb. 28, 1931, pp. 55-56, 1 fig. This actually may have antedated the publication referred to here.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 23

Large species, the tail in adults as long as, nearly as long as, or a little longer than head and body : 3

See ieessandapelly: blackish Sse. 3s. 2, Stl ioe poe vial) arp. nT 4 Belly cream, immaculate (or rarely with slight pigmentation).

flaviventris (p. 24) 4. Vomerine teeth in a single series usually____._.-..___...--._22____2 =. 5

Vomerine teeth in several short series (‘‘patch’’)_________ yucatana (p. 25) 5. Dorsum orange to orange-brown with usually a dark triangular occip- ital spot and often a few irregular or rounded, small, dorsal, black

SRLATKSESEe ce USE a ee 2 PL Ae as platydactyla 2? (p. 23) Dorsum yellowish or cream with numerous dark spots occasionally

forming continuous lines, or rows of black spots; belly and sides with Binatiecreani-flecKso +2. -tiSs24 2... Lee lina. sink ece moreleti (p. 24) BOLITOGLOSSA RUFESCENS (Cope)

Oedipus rufescens Cor, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 21, 1869, p. 104. Bolitoglossa rufescens 'TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, p. 145.

Type.—Apparently lost.

Type locality.—Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—San Luis Potosi to Guatemala, Atlantic drainage. Known or reported from San Luis Potosi: 3 miles north of Huichihuayén; Veracruz: Cérdoba, El Potrero, Mata de Cafia, Potrero Viejo, Cuaut- lapan, Pefiuela, Presidio, Tezonapa; Oaxaca: Santa Efigenia; Tabasco: no specific locality; Chiapas: Palenque; Petén: Piedras Negras.

BOLITOGLOSSA OCCIDENTALIS Tayijor

Bolitoglossa occidentalis TayLtor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 145-147, text fig. 1, C, pl. 9, figs. 1-4.

fyge—U..5. No M. No: 111085. a

Type locality.—La Esperanza, near Escuintla, Chiapas, Mexico.*

Range.—Pacific drainage areas of Chiapas, Guatemala, and probably of Oaxaca. Known from the type locality and Finca Judrez, Chiapas, in Mexico.

BOLITOGLOSSA PLATYDACTYLA (Gray)

Salamandra variegata Gray, Supplement, in Griffith and Pidgeon’s Animal Kingdom . . .,’”’ vol. 9, 1831, p. 107 (not of Bory de St. Vincent, 1829, Dict. Class Hist. Nat., vol. 15, p. 68; Mexico, types in Brit. Mus. Nat. Hist.).

Oedipus variegatus Gray, Catalogue of the Batrachia Gradientia of the British Museum, 1850, p. 48.

Spelerpes variegatus Straucu, Mém. Acad. Sci. St. Pétersbourg, ser. 7, vol. 16, 1870, p. 84.

Geotriton variegata GARMAN, Bull. Essex Inst., vol. 16, 1884, p. 39.

Salamandra platydactylus GRay, Supplement, in Griffith and Pidgeon’s ‘‘ Animal Kingdom .. .,’’ vol. 9, 1831, p. 107.

acon eeoecinens from the Potrero Viejo region of Veracruz have the vomerine teeth in a “patch,” where-

as others taken at the same time and place, and presumably of the same age, have only a single continuous series,

24 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Oedipus platydactylus Tscuupt, Mem. Soc. Sci. Nat. Neuch4tel, vol. 2, 1838, p. 58.— Dunn, The salamanders of the family Plethodontidae, 1926, pp. 400—403.— Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 297-299, pl. 28, fig. 1.—Sruart, Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 56, 1943, pl. 2, fig. 1.

Bolitoglossa platydactyla Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 219.

Bolitoglossa mexicana Dumfrit, Brpron, and Dumé&rin, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, pp. 93-97, pl. 104, fig. 1 (part only, cotypes in Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, from Veracruz, Oaxaca, México, and (?) Dolores in Petén).

Spelerpes mexicanum Broccut, Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans l’ Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 3, 1883, pp. 113-114 (part), pl. 28 bis, figs. 1-4 (restricts the name to a cotype from Veracruz).

Salamandra togata DuM&RiL, Bipron, and Dumsérit, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, p. 94 (type that of B. mexicana).

Geotriton carbonarius CorE, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 12, 1860, p. 373 (Jalapa, Veracruz, Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. Nos. 503-504).

?Spelerpes punctatum Broccut, Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans |’ Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 3, 1883, p. 115 (Mexico, types presumably in Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris).

Type.—Brit. Mus. Nat. Hist., those of S. variegata Gray.

Type locality.—Mexico.

Range.—From San Luis Potosi south to southern Veracruz and Oaxaca, below elevations of about 3,500 feet. Aside from the type locality it is known or reported from San Luis Potost: 15 miles south of Valles, Tamazunchale, Huichihuay4n; Hidalgo: Chapulhuacén; Veracruz: Jalapa, Orizaba, Motzorongo, Achotal, Cuautlapan, Potrero Viejo, Cerro Gordo, Mata de Cafia, Tezonapa, Cuatotolapam, San Juan de la Punta, Presidio, 5 miles east of Cérdoba, near San Lorenzo; Oaxaca: San Cristébal.

BOLITOGLOSSA FLAVIVENTRIS (Schmidt)

Oedipus flaviventris Scumipt, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., zool. ser., vol. 20, 1936, pp. 148-150.

Bolitoglossa flaviventris TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 219.

Spelerpes salvinit Broccut (nec Gray), Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans V’ Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 3, 1883, p. 117, pl. 18, figs. 3, 4.

Oedipus salvinii Taytor (nec Gray), Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 296-297, pl. 28, fig. 2.

Type —U.S. N. M. No. 46922.

Type locality—Chicharras, Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Pacific coast of Chiapas. Recorded from the type locality and La Esperanza, Chiapas. Specimens in the U.S. National Museum are from ‘‘Tehuantepec.”’

BOLITOGLOSSA MORELETI Smith

Bolitoglossa mexicana Dumérit, Brrron, and Dummer, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, pp. 96-97 (part).—Tayior and Sarrn, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 545-547, fig. 58.

~

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 25

Oedipus mexicanus ScumipT, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., zool. ser., vol. 20, 1936, pp. 146-147 (part).—Srvuarr, Mise. Publ. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 56, 1943, pl. 2, fig. 2 (part).

Bolitoglossa moreleti Smiru, Herpetologica, vol. 3, 1945, pp. 14-19.

Type.—U. S. N. M. No. 116079.

Type locality —Palenque, Chiapas.

Range.— Atlantic slopes of Chiapas and Petén, Guatemala. Re- corded in Mexico only from the type locality.

BOLITOGLOSSA YUCATANA (Peters)

Spelerpes (Oedipus) yucatanus PETERS, Sitzb. Ges. Nat. Freunde Berlin, 1882, pp. 1387-138. Spelerpes yucatanicus BOULENGER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Gradientia of the British Museum, ed. 2, 1882, p. 72 (Yucatén, Mexico; type Brit. Mus.). Bolitoglossa yucatana Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 219. Type.—Mus. Nat. Berlin No. 10231. Type locality —Yucatén, Mexico. Range.—Yucatén, Mexico; northern Guatemala.

Genus PSEUDOEURYCEA Taylor Pseudoeurycea TAYLOR, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull, vol. 30, 1944, pp. 209, 212.

Genotype.—Spelerpes leprosus Cope.

Range—Zacatecas and Nuevo Leén southward to Guatemala.

Species—LHighteen forms are recorded, three of which are sub- species of P. cephalica; all but three occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF PSEUDOEURYCEA 1. Body black or lead color in life, with paired series of red or orange mark-

ings; very large forms-_-_.--------------------------------------- 2 Body without dorsal red or red-orange Markings] |. oe see ae oe eae 3

2. A pair of large red marks on occiput; adpressed limbs in males separated by three costal folds; teeth less numerous__--------------- bellii (p. 26)

No pair of red or orange spots on head; adpressed limbs of males touch or are separated by a single costal fold; teeth more numerous- gigantea (p. 27) 3. Premaxillary teeth of males large, bifid, the outer section elongate,

curved, clawlike.__.....--2.25- Jeu 352-48 22S a sso a == == tt Premaxillary teeth of males lacking an elongate clawlike terminal part-. 7

4. Paired series of small yellow spots on back and one lateral series, more or less GistinGh... =.= coe ne oe ee ae eae eee =e 5 No series of dorsal or lateral light spots_-_--------------------------- 6

5. Lavender above, yellow cream below; limbs proportionally shorter, teeth ROWEDSINE ABS eLICS ee aaa oe eee eee aa gadovii (p. 27)

Black above, gray-black below, limbs proportionally longer; teeth more MILTMETOUS ee eee ees 2 See melanomolga (p. 27)

6. Usually uniform olive or gray-olive above; limbs longer, touching or over- lapping somewhat in adults; hands and feet larger_. unguidentis (p. 27)

Olive to gray or brownish with some dark-brown or reddish-brown flecks,

the costal grooves usually with a dark line; limbs shorter, the adpressed limbs separated by two or more costal folds-_------------- smithi (p. 28)

26 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

7. Web including none to about half of proximal phalanx of middle digits__ 8 Web between middle toes including entire phalanx; toes broad, narrow-

ing toward fips.) os Ao. eee Bea ee Ae ae 12 8. Maxillary-premaxillary teeth less than 30 on each side_______________ 9 Maxillary-premaxillary teeth 40 or more on each side_________________ 11

9. Tail short, about 70 percent of head-body length ; adpressed limbs sepa- rated by two costal folds; body dark or blackish brown with numerous small virreculan darkespots. 2. 2.0. $= 9813 cochranae (p. 28)

Tail longer, about 90 to 100 percent of head-body length; adpressed limbs separated by one costal fold or touch, in adults__._.__________ 10

10. Teeth less numerous (22-24); body brownish to brownish gray with cream flecks (rarely darker flecks)___-____________ altamontana (p. 28) Teeth 19-20; a red-brown, fawn, or orange dorsal stripe___ robertsi (p. 28)

11. Teeth small with reddish-brown tips; toes not widened terminally; maxil- lary-premaxillary teeth about 40 on each side___________ leprosa (p. 28)

Teeth not tipped with red-brown; teeth large, about 50 in maxillary-pre- maxillary series; toes widened at tips.__________ nigromaculata (p. 29)

12. Large (70 mm. snout to vent); maxillary-premaxillary teeth 59 on one

side; vomerine teeth 18-20; tail, rarely body, spotted white; terminal pads under digit tips well developed__________________ galeanae (p. 29) Smaller, not exceeding 60 mm. snout to vent________________________ 13

13. Body dark, limbs red; tip of tail red or lighter colored than body.

cephalica rubrimembris (p. 30)

Limbs not red, tail usually colored like ody Sh) Se SRe 7 weirs eee eee ee 14 14. Body in life lead-colored, flecked and clouded with cream-white, espe- cially on venter; central western plateau________ cephalica manni (p. 30)

Body uniformly colored, lacking light flecks; eastern plateau. cephalica cephalica (p. 29) PSEUDOEURYCEA BELLII (Gray)

Oedipus platydactylus Barrp, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, ser. 2, vol. 1, 1849, p. 286 (nec Salamandra platydactylus Cuvier).

Spelerpes belli Gray, Catalogue of the Batrachia Gradientia of the British Mu- seum, 1850, p. 46.

Oedipus bellit DunN, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 62, 1918, p. 471.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 264-266, pl. 27, figs. 1, 2.

Bolitoglossa belliit Tayuor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 54, 1941, p. 77.

Pseudoeurycea bellit Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Bolitoglossa mexicana Dumérit, Bisron, and Dumérit, Erpétologie générale, vol. 9, 1854, p. 93 (part), pl. 104, fig. 2.

Type.—Brit. Mus. Nat. Hist.

Type locality Mexico.

Range.—High elevations, Nayarit southeastward to Querétaro and western Puebla; also in the Sierra Madre del Sur of Guerrero and the central mountains of Oaxaca. Known or reported from Jalisco: Belén, Cumbre de los Arrastrados, Talpa, Mascota, Guadalajara; Nayarit: Sierra de Nayarit, Tepic; Michoacdn: Paétzcuaro, Tangan- zicuaro, Carapa; Oaxaca: Putla, Cerro San Felipe near Oaxaca, Mount Zempoaltepec; Guanajuato: Guanajuato; Querétaro: San Juan del Rio; Hidalgo: Guerrero; México: 10 miles west of Villa Victoria,

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 27

Nevado de Toluca; Guerrero: Omilteme; Tlaxcala: no specific locality; Morelos: Lakes of Zempoala; Puebla: 2 miles east of Rio Frio, México.

PSEUDOEURYCEA GIGANTEA (Taylor)

Oedipus giganteus TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 266-269, pl. 27, figs. 3, 4.

Bolitoglossa gigantea TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, p. 112.

Pseudoeurycea gigantea Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type—Mus. Comp. Zool. No. 8435.

Type locality Jalapa, Veracruz.

Range.—Known from eastern Hidalgo, northern Puebla and high- lands of northern Veracruz. Besides the type locality, spectmens are known from Hidalgo: near Santa Anita; Puebla: near Tezuitlin; Veracruz: Cofre de Perote.

PSEUDOEURYCEA GADOVIE (Dunn)

Oedipus gadovit Dunn, The salamanders of the family Plethodontidae, 1926, pp. 437-438.

B. (olitoglossa) gadovit Taytor, Herpetologica, vol. 2, 1941, p. 58.

Pseudoeurycea gadovit TAYLoR, Univ. of Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type.—Brit. Mus. Nat. Hist. No. 1903.9.30.312.

Type locality—Xometla, 8,500 feet elevation, Mount Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Mount Orizaba, in Puebla and Veracruz; known also from Mount Malintzin (Malinche), Puebla.

PSEUDOEURYCEA MELANOMOLGA (Taylor)

Bolitoglossa melanomolga Taytor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 54, 1941, pp. 81-83. Pseudoeurycea melanomolge Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 24626.

Type locality.—20 kilometers north of San Autonio Limén (Totalco), Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality, and from Tezuitlin, Puebla.

PSEUDOEURYCEA UNGUIDENTIS (Taylor)

Bolitoglossa unguidentis TayLor, Herpetologica, vol. 2, 1941, pp. 57-62, figs. 1 A-C, C-D, 3 A-B. Pseudoeurycea unguidentis TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type.-—EKHT-HMS No. 17102.

Type locality —Cerro San Felipe, 15 kilometers northeast of Oaxaca, Mexico, elevation 2,200 meters.

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

28 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

PSEUDOEURYCEA SMITHI (Taylor)

Oedipus sulcatus Dunn (nec Brocchi), The salamanders of the family Plethodonti-

dae, 1926, pp. 364-366, fig. 60 (map). Oedipus smithi TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 269-272,

4 pl. 25, figs. 5-6. Bolitoglossa smithi TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), p. 418. Pseudoeurycea smithi TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type—EHT-HMS No. 3966. Type locality.—Cerro de San Luis, 15 miles northeast (not northwest) of Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico. Range.—Known only from Cerro San Felipe and Cerro San Luis, Oaxaca. PSEUDOEURYCEA COCHRANAE (Tayler)

Bolitoglossa cochranae Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 29, 1943, pp. 343-345. Pseudoeurycea cochranae TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type.-—EHT-HMS No. 24594. Type locality —Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

PSEUDOEURYCEA ALTAMONTANA (Taylor)

Oedipus altamontanus TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 272-274, pl. 25, figs. 3-4.

Bolitoglossa altamontana Taytor, Herpetologica, vol. 2, 1941, p. 57.

Pseudoeurycea altamonitana TAYLOR, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type-—KHT-HMS No. 12245.

Type locality—Lake Zempoala (Cempoala), Morelos, Mexico, elevation 10,500 feet.

Range.—Known from type locality and from the west slope of Mount Popocatépetl.

PSEUDCEURYCEA ROBERTSI (Taylor)

Oedipus robertst Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 287— 289, pl. 26, fig. 2. Pseudoeurycea robertst Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type.-—EHT-HMS No. 12503.

Type locality—Nevado de Toluca, México, elevation 10,000 to 11,000 feet.

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

PSEUDOEURYCEA LEPROSA (Cope)

Spelerpes leprosus Core (part), Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 21, 1869, pp. 105-106.

Oedipus leprosus Dunn, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 62, 1918, p. 470.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 19388 (1939), pp. 274-276, pl. 29, fig. 2.

Bolitoglossa leprosa Tayutor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, p. 143.

Pseudoeurycea leprosa Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 29

?Spelerpes laticeps Broccut, Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans l’ Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 3, 1883, p. 110, pl. 18, fig. 1 (Veracruz, Mexico; Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris).

Spelerpes orizabensis Buatcnury, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 16, 1893, p. 37 (Mount Orizaba, Veracruz; U. S. N. M. Nos. 19266-19267).

Oedipus orizabensis Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 280-283, pl. 25, figs. 1, 2.

Spelerpes gibbicaudus Buatcuury, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 16, 1893, pp. 38-39 (same type specimen as Spelerpes leprosus).

Oedipus cephalicus DuNN (part), The salamanders of the family Plethodontidae, 1926, pp. 380-384, fig. 67 (map).

Type.—Originally U.S.N.M. No. 6340; now U.S.N.M. No. 19255. Type locality —Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico. Range.—High mountains of Puebla, Veracruz, Morelos, México,

and Distrito Federal. Known or reported from Distrito Federal:

mountains near EH] Guardia, Vaile Alegre (Ajusco), Kilometer 35 on road between Mexico City and Tres Cumbres, Morelos, Desierto de los Leones; México: West slopes of Mount Popocatépetl, Llano Grande; Morelos: near Tres Cumbres, Lakes of Zempoala; Puebla: region about Rio Frio, México, west slope of Cerro Negro, near Tezuitlin; Veracruz: near Las Vigas, Cruz Blanca, 17 kilometers northeast of Totalco.

PSEUDOEURYCEA NIGROMACULATA (Taylor) Bolitoglossa nigromaculata TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 141-145, text figs. 1A, 1B, pl. 9, figs. 5-6. Pseudoeurycea nigromaculata 'TAyLoR, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 110635. Type locality —Cuautlapan, Veracruz, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality.

PSEUDOEURYCEA GALEANAE (Taylor) Bolitoglossa galaenae (sic, error typ.) Taytor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 54, 1941, pp. 83-85. Pseudoeurycea galeanae Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type —EHT-HMS. No. 17146.

Type locality—Near Galeana, Nuevo Leén, Mexico, 7,000 feet elevation.

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

PSEUDOEURYCEA CEPHALICA CEPHALICA (Cope)

Spelerpes cephalicus Copr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 17, 1865, . 196. Denepis cephalicus Dunn, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., zool. ser., vol. 12, 1924, p. 99.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 283-287, pl. 26, figs. 3, 4. Pseudoeurycea cephalica cephalica Tayitor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209. 757435—48——3

30 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

?Spelerpes laticeps Broccui, Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans l’Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 3, 1883, p. 110, pl. 18, fig. 1 (Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, Veracruz).

Type.—Lost (fide Dunn); neotype EHT-HMS No. 4372, Cruz Blanca, Veracruz.

Type locality.—‘‘Mexican Tableland,” Mexico.

Range.—Veracruz, Puebla, México, and Morelos. Known or re- ported from Veracruz: Cruz Blanca, north slope of Cofre de Perote up to 10,500 feet, Pan de Olla, 17 kilometers north of Totalco, Tequeyu- tepec, 2 kilometers west of Acultzingo; Puebla: between Rio Frio and Puebla; 2 miles east of Rio Frio; Morelos: Tres Cumbres, Lakes of Zempoala; Aférico: Rio Frio, Llano Grande, 10 miles west of Villa Victoria, Mount Popocatépetl.

PSEUDOEURYCEA CEPHALICA RUBRIMEMBRIS (Taylor and Smith)

Bolitoglossa cephalica rubrimembris Taytor and Smita, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol, 95, 1945, pp. 5389-541.

Type.—U. 8S. N. M. No. 110661. Type locality. Six kilometers south of Santa Anita, Hidalgo, Mexico. Range.—Northern Hidalgo, at high elevations (about 4,500 feet).

PSEUDOEURYCEA CEPHALICA MANNI (Taylor)

Oedipus manni Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 277-280. Pseudoeurycea cephalica manni Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 209.

Type.—Mus. Comp. Zool. No. 3915. Type locality —Guerrero, Hidalgo, Mexico. Range.—High mountains of southern Hidalgo.

Genus CHIROPTEROTRITON Taylor Chiropterotriton TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, pp. 213-218.

Genotype.—Oedipus multidentatus Taylor. Range.—Hidalgo to Honduras and possibly Costa Rica. Species.—Ten, possibly eleven;* nine occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF CHIROPTEROTRITON

1. Nostrils large in adults; limbs separated by 4 to 5 costal folds; para- sphenoid tooth groups close together; diminutive species, maximum size 28 mm. snout to vent; terrestrial._..._____._-- dimidiata (p. 31) Nostrils small in adults. 2. 322 oe es 2 2. Skull poorly ossified in adults; adpressed limbs separated by two costal folds; maxillary-premaxillary teeth about 20 on each side in females, 16 to 18 in males on each side; tail longer than head and body; para- sphenoid teeth closely approximated; terrestrial._.._ chondrostega (p. 31)

38 By tentative allocation here of Chiropterotriton picadoi (Stejneger).

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 31

Skull normally well ossified in adults__2 0023 7_U de 3 3. Maxillary-premaxillary series of teeth not greatly reduced in males (more than half) ; tails distinctly longer than head and body__________ 4 Maxillary-premaxillary teeth greatly reduced in adult males, usually less than half number of teeth in females___._______________._______ 6

4. Teeth larger, curved; arms touch or overlap when adpressed; digits more dilated at tips; maxillary-premaxillary series about 21 on each side; females darker on venter than males; arboreal_________ arborea (p. 32)

mreth not-especially largeor eurved__£22-_... -.- 9 22.2_.-5__._.. 5

5. Digits less dilated at tips; maxillary-premaxillary tooth series about 34 in females, 25 in males; teeth not elongate or noticeably curved; males and females white below; terrestrial or arboreal_____ multidentata (p. 32)

Maxillary-premaxillary tooth series 25 to 31; vomerine teeth 8 to 13; limbs overlap width of 2 costal folds; second finger longer than fourth; RERCC SOTA Peco 2 Set Joe tla oe ea th rey ae an e mosaueri (p. 32)

6. Adpressed limbs touch or overlap in both sexes; maxillary-premaxillary

teeth 25 in adult females, 5 to 8 in adult males; vomerine teeth about

PREatOGCa le af. ket. ee See ae ee eS lavae (p. 32) Adpressed limbs separated usually in both sexes (may touch in zolocalcae

Baa eee a PS vee hs See Coe 5 PRED Dee tReet oaieee e 7

7. Surface of head not roughened, not flattened especially; terrestrial______ 8

Head flattened, the surface somewhat roughened; adpressed limbs sepa- rated by about one costal fold in females, may touch in males; vomerine teeth 13 on each side; maxillary-premaxillary teeth 36 on each side iMUateMalessraT Ores lees ase ee a eee ee ee ee xolocalcae (p. 33)

8. Adpressed limbs separated by from 2 to 4 costal folds; females about 24 maxillary-premaxillary teeth on each side, males 6 to 8; vomerine teeth Oe 0/3 TENS eae ae * a ee ae nel Pe eee chiroptera (p. 32)

Adpressed limbs separated by from 1% to 3 costal folds; females 25 to 27 maxillary-premaxillary teeth, males 13 or 14; vomerine teeth 4 or 5; Smialleneers ameter see hey ae te Ao eee terrestris (p. 33)

CHIROPTEROTRITON DIMIDIATA (Taylor)

Bolitoglossa dimidiata Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1989 (1940), pp. 408-411, figs. 1-2.

Chiropterotriton dimidiata TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 216.

Type —EKHT-HMS No. 17677.

Type locality—Guerrero, near Mineral del Monte, southern Hidalgo, Mexico.

Range.—Hidalgo. Known only from the type locality and the nearby El Chico National Park.

CHIROPTEROTRITON CHONDROSTEGA (Taylor)

Bolitoglossa chondrostega TAyLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 113- alse Chiropterotriton chondrostega Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944,

p. 216. Type —EHT-HMS No. 17304. Type locality Durango, Hidalgo, Mexico, elevation 5,000 to 6,000 feet. Range.—Northern Hidalgo. Known only from the type locality.

32 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

CHIROPTEROTRITON ARBOREA (Taylor) Bolitoglossa arborea Taytor, Herpetologica, vol. 2, 1941, pp. 62-65, figs. 4 a-c,

5 a-c. Chiropterotriton arborea Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 216.

Type-—EKHT-HMS No. 16743. Type locality —Near Tianguistengo, Hidalgo, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality and vicinity.

CHIROPTEROTRITON MULTIDENTATA (Taylor)

Oedipus multidentata Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1988 (1989), pp. 289-291, pl. 29, fig. 1.

Bolitoglossa multidentata TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), p. 407.

Chiropterotriton multidentata TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 216.

Type.——Mus. Comp. Zool. No. 14812.

Type locality—Alvarez (Kilometer 53, on Potosi y Rio Verde Railroad), San Luis Potosi, Mexico.

Range.—San Luis Potosi and Hidalgo. Reported from El Chico National Park in Hidalgo.

CHIROPTEROTRITON MOSAUERI (Woodall)

Oedipus mosauerti Woopauu, Oec. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 444, 1941, pp. 1-4. Chiropterotriton mosauert Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 80, 1944, p. 216.

Type-—Univ. Mich. Mus. Zool. No. 88839. Type locality—Durango, Hidalgo, Mexico, 7,200 feet elevation. Range—Known only from the type locality.

CHIROPTEROTRITON LAVAE (Taylor)

Bolitoglossa lavae Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 295-298, pl. 27, figs. 5-6. Chiropierotriton lavae TaAyLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 80, 1944, p. 216.

Type —EHT-HMS No. 28937. Type locality —2 miles west of La Joya, Veracruz, Mexico. Range.—Known from Toxtlacuaya and La Joya, Veracruz.

CHIROPTEROTRITON CHIROPTERA (Cope)

Spelerpes chiropterus Corn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 15, 1868, p 54.

Oedipus chiropterus DUNN, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., zool. ser., vol. 12, 1924, pp. 99-100.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 291-298.

Bolitoglossa chiroptera TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 410-411.

Chiropterotriton chiroptera TAyLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 216.

“Spelerpes orculus Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 17, 1865, pp. 196-197 (‘‘Mexican Table Land”’; types lost).

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 33

Type.—Unknown.

Type locality—Mirador, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Puebla, Veracruz, México, Morelos. Recorded or known from Puebla: near Rio Frio, Mount Popocatépetl; México: Llano Grande, Rio Frio, northwestern slope Mount Popocatépetl; Veracruz: Cruz Blanca, Cofre de Perote up to 11,000 feet, near Vigas, 17-20 kilometers north of Totalco (San Antonio Limén), Toxtlacuaya; Distrito Federal: Desierto de los Leones; Morelos: Tres Cumbres, Lakes of Zempoala, Mount Ajusco.

CHIROPTEROTRITON TERRESTRIS (Taylor) Bolitoglossa terrestris TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 115-117. Chiropterotriton terrestris TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 216.

Type—KHT-HMS No. 23354. Type locality.—Six miles south of Tianguistengo, Hidalgo, Mexico, elevation about 5,000 feet. Range.—Hidalgo. Recorded from the regions about Tianguistengo and Zacualtipén, Hidalgo. CHIROPTEROTRITON XOLOCALCAE (Taylor)

Bolitoglossa xolocalcae Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 148-150, pl. 7, pl. 9, figs. 7, 8. Chiropterotriton xolocalcae TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 216.

Type—vU.S.N.M. No. 1113871. Type locality —Cerro Ovando, Chiapas, Mexico. Range.— Known only from type locality.

Order SALIENTIA Laurenti

Salientia LavRENTI, Synopsin reptilium, 1768, p. 24. KEY TO MEXICAN SUBORDERS OF SALIENTIA

1. Sacral vertebra procoelous, fused to the coccyx, 8 presacral vertebrae uniformly procoelous or amphicoelous (with free intervertebral balls)

(spRderootewOaGs ieee ss 42 Ss Soa ee ee Anomocoela (p. 91) Sacral vertebra not fused to coccyx; a double, posterior condyle, for

ANCL MIs LIONIOl COCCY Ka. = 22 ce So Se ee oe i eee ola he 2

2. Centrum of sacral vertebra concave anteriorly__-----.--------------- 3

Centrum of sacral vertebra convex anteriorly; eighth vertebra bicon- cave; 7 preceding vertebrae procoelous, rarely the first two, and rarely eighth and sacral, fused (true frogs and narrow-mouthed

Lon ts) Meee eran ENR Cn ey ee eee Diplasiocoela (p. 91) 3. Sacral vertebra and eight presacral vertebrae uniformly procoelous (true TONGS MCTECTLOACE ELC) ec a eee a eee ee Procoela (p. 36)

Presacral vertebrae opisthocoelous, the intervertebral disks partly or

wholly fused with anterior faces of centra (Rhinophrynus). Opisthocoela (p. 34)

34 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Suborder OPISTHOCOELA Nicholls

Opisthocoela NicHouuis, Proc. Linn. Soc. London, vol. 128, 1915-1916 (1916), p. 86. Family RHINOPHRYNIDAE Giinther *

Rhinophrynidae GUNTHER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, 1858 (1859), p. 127.

Genus RHINOPHRYNUS Duméril and Bibron

Rhinophrynus Dumérit and Bisron, Erpétologie générale, vol. 8, 1841, p. 757- 758.—Kertuoae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 17, 24-25.— WaLxmrR, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 372, 1938, pp. 1-11, figs. 1-3.

-Genotype.—Rhinophrynus dorsalis Duméril and Bibron. Range.—Tamaulipas to Guatemala. Species.—One.

RHINOPHRYNUS DORSALIS Duméril and Bibron

Rhinophrynus dorsalis Dumf&RIL and Brpron, Erpétologie générale, vol. 8, 1841, pp. 758-760, Atlas, 1854, pl. 91, figs. 2, 2a.—Orron, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 472, 1948, pp. 1-7, pl. 1 (tadpole) —Taytor and Smitru, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 550-551, pl. 2, fig. 2.

Rhinophryne dorsalis Gapow, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1905, vol. 2, pp. 193-205.

Rhinophrynus rostratus Broccui, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 1, 1877. p. 196 (Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico; types in Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris).

Type.—Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 693 (No. 743).

Type locality. Veracruz, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Atlantic lowlands from Tamaulipas and Pacific lowlands from the Isthmus of Tehuantepec southward to Guatemala, including Yucatan. The species has been reported from Tamaulipas: Hacienda la Clementina; Veracruz: Potrero Viejo, Veracruz, Cérdoba, Hacienda Cerro del Gallo, Tuxpam, Cuatotolapam; Oaxaca: Tehuantepec, borders of the Gulf of Tehuantepec, Tuxtepec; Chiapas: La Esperanza, Cruz de Piedra, Colonia Soconusco; Campeche: Tuxpefia Camp, Champotén, Encarnacién; Tabasco: Montecristo; Yucatén: Chichen Itzi; Quintana Roo: Xcopen.

Suborder ANOMOCOELA Nicholls Anomocoela Nicuo.tus, Proc. Linn. Soc. London, vol. 128, 1915-1916 (1916), p. 86.

Family PELOBATIDAE Lataste

Pelobatidae Larastz, Compte Rendu Assoc. Frang. Avan. Sci., 1878 (1879), pp. 761-762.

2 Formerly placed in the suborder Procoela. Its true relationships have been shown by Walker (Occ. Papers Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 372, 1938, pp. 1-11) on the basis of adult anatomy and by Orton (ibid., No. 472, 1943, pp. 1-7) on the basis of larval anatomy.

jue ee ei

Cha en Pieces sidan So

| ;

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 35

Genus SCAPHIOPUS Holbrook

Scaphiopus Housroox, North American herpetology, ed. 1, vol. 1, 1836, p. 85. Spea Corz, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, ser. 2, vol. 6, 1866, p. 81 (genotype, Scaphiopus bumbifrons Cope).

Genotype—Scaphiopus solitarius Holbrook=Scaphiopus holbrookii (Harlan).

Range-—New England and British Columbia southward through Mexico as far as Cape San Lucas and the southern edge of the plateau in Oaxaca.

Species.—EKight forms are recorded, two of which are subspecies of S. holbrookw; three occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF SCAPHIOPUS

1. Width of an eyelid equal to or very slightly less than the interorbital space; eye as long as the snout or a little shorter; skin of head somewhat involved in the cranial ossification in fully adult specimens; dorsal markings a broad reticulum of dark brown or black on a cream or light fanspackeround ss 74 ans sees a Lo eee eee ease couchii (p. 35)

Width of an eyelid 1% to 1% of the interorbital distance; length of eye 1% to nearly twice the length of snout; skin of head not involved in the cranial ossification; dorsal pattern not a dark reticulation on a lighter packpround=§ =J220V 100 Wy 216k oY Eee Jee. oie) wii NS aR 2

2. Hand small and all digits slender; heel not reaching tympanum; dorsal

tubercles small, irregular, often arising from a black base; 61 mm. hammondii (p. 36) Hand and foot larger, the individual digits thicker; heel usually to tym- panum or as far as anterior edge of eye; dorsal tubercles larger, rounded, and much more numerous; parotoids often very distinct; 65 mm. NERO SIGE Se tm ee ae ee ee a eee eS multiplicatus (p. 36)

SCAPHIOPUS COUCHII Baird

Scaphiopus couchit Bairp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 62.—Kertioee, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 20-21.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 24, 1936 (1988), p. 508, pl. 44.

?Scaphiopus varians Cork, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 15, 1863, pp. 52-53 (Cape San Lucas, Baja California; type U.S.N.M. No. 5893).

S{caphiopus] rectifrenis Corn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 15, 1863, p. 53 (Tamaulipas; Rio Nazas, Coahuila; type U.S.N.M. Nos. 3715 [de- stroyed] and 3714).

Type—-Two cotypes, originally U.S.N.M. Nos. 3713 and 3714, the latter number referred to rectifrenis by Cope.

Type locality —Rio Nazas, Coahuila, and Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico.

Range.—Northern Mexico southward through San Luis Potost, Nayarit, and Baja California. Recorded from the states of Tamauli- pas, Nuevo Leén, Coahuila, San Luis Potosi, Chihuahua, Zacatecas, Sonora, Baja California, Nayarit, and Sinaloa.

36 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

SCAPHIOPUS HAMMONDI Baird

Scaphiopus hammondii Barrp, Explorations and surveys for a railroad route from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean, vol. 10, Williamson’s route, pt. 4, No. 4, 1857 (1859), p. 12, pl. 28, fig. 2.

Spea hammondit Corz, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 34, 1889, pp. 303-304, fig. 77.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 3695.

Type locality —F ort Reading, Calif.

Range.—British Columbia southward to northern Baja California, and eastward in the north to extreme western Nevada, in the south to central Texas, passing through northern Mexico, central Arizona, and New Mexico. Reported from Baja California, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leén, Tamaulipas, Sonora. (Other mainland records are probably not of this species.)

SCAPHIOPUS MULTIPLICATUS Cope

S(caphiopus) multiplicatus Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 15, 1863, p. 52.—Tayuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 42-44, pl. 2, fig. 3, pl. 3, fig. 3.

Scaphiopus hammondii multiplicatus Knuttoae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 19, 22-24.

Scaphiopus dugesii Broccut, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 3, 1879, p. 23 (Mexico; Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, No. 281a, two cotypes).

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 3694.

Type locality‘ Valley of Mexico’’; Mexico.

Range.—The plateau of central Mexico from Durango and Zacatecas southward to Guerrero and Oaxaca. Recorded from the states of San Luis Potosi, Guanajuato, Jalisco, México, Distrito Federal, Puebla, Veracruz (western), Zacatecas, Durango, Aguascalientes, Guerrero, and Oaxaca.

Suborder Procorua Nicholls

Procoela NicHo.uzs, Proce. Linn. Soe. London, vol. 128, 1915-1916 (1916), p. 87. KEY TO MEXICAN FAMILIES OF PROCOELA 1. Maxillary and vomerine teeth absent; generally a distinctly visible paro-

bowl: lam = on = Se oe a ge ta 2 Maxillary teeth present; parotoid glands invisible; vomerine teeth present inmost: generis 2 2528 ok eee he ee ee re 3

2. A conical tubercle on middle of inner edge of tarsus, marking end of tarsal fold; terminal phalanges with nodular extremities. Leptodactylidae % (p. 46) No tubercle as described; terminal phalanges with T-shaped or simple Extremities ss oi... SAT le ee a pi ah ee ee are Bufonidae (p. 37) 3. No intercalary cartilage or bone between ultimate and penultimate phalanges of each digit, supporting the claw-shaped or T-shaped termi- nal joint; sacral diapophyses cylindrical or dilated. Leptedactylidae (p. 46) An intercalary cartilage or bone supporting terminal phalanges, which are generally claw-shaped; sacral diapophyses dilated-... Hylidae (p. 67)

25 Wngystomops only.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 37

Family BUFONIDAE Hogg Bufonidae Hoaa, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 2, vol. 7, 1841, p. 361. Genus BUFO Laurenti

Bufo Laurent, Synopsin reptilium, 1768, p. 25.

Docidophryne FitzincER, Systema reptilium, fase. 1, 1848, p. 32 (genotype Bufo Agua Daudin= (Rana) marina Linnaeus).

Anazyrus Tscuups, Untersuchungen tiber die Fauna Peruana, Herp., 1845, p. 78 (genotype Anazxyrus melancholicus Tschudi= Bufo compactilis Wiegmann).

Dromoplectrus CAMERANO, Atti Accad. Sci. Torino, vol. 14, 1879, p. 882 (genotype Dromoplectrus cnomalus Camerano= Bufo compactilis Wiegmann).

Genotype.—Bufo vulgaris Laurenti= (Rana) bufo Linnaeus, 1758.

Range.—World-wide except in sub-Arctic and Arctic regions and excluding New Guinea, Polynesia, Australia, and Madagascar. In the Americas, Hudson Bay, Labrador, Aleutian Islands, and Prince William Sound (southern coast of central Alaska) southward through South America.

Species—About 250 forms are known, and of these some 65 or 70 occur in the Americas; 22 occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF BUFO

1. An enlarged gland present on arm; two or more glands on leg; large, 147 alvarius (p. 39) No well-defined enlarged gland present on arms, none on legs (glands

on legs only on Bufo boreas halophilus)_-..------------------------

2. The inner metatarsal tubercle horn covered, black_----.-------------- 3 Inner metatarsal tubercle not shovellike, lacking a horny, cutting edge, MOtRCOVere dawathy blac ke horn = oe Seren ee ee eee a 6 3. Inner metatarsal tubercle a large, well-defined shovel with a rather sharp, 4

honiyercutting’edges 2. 2 ae eee a ee ee ce ee aoe Inner metatarsal tubercle small, rather sharp-pointed, not shovel-shaped; californicus (p. 41) 4. Tarsal fold very indistinct or absent; postorbital crest forming right angle with the interorbital crest; 120 mm_---- woodhousii woodhousii (p. 40) Tarsal fold present, distinct, but narrow - --------------------------- 5. Cranial crests poorly defined or absent; if present, an occipital crest may be faintly indicated; 88 mm__..-__.-.------------- compactilis (p. 40) A pair of strong supraorbital crests converging anteriorly to a bony boss between the nostrils; angle between postorbital and interorbital crests usually greater than a right angle; no occipital crest; 97 mm. cognatus (p. 41) 6. Very large toads; parotoid gland very large, of greater area than side of head; prominent cranial crests; parotoids usually colored different istaeDOG\ eee ee ee ae os et A Renee eee aon Small and medium to large toads, parotoid usually smaller than side of head (or if larger the species very small, glands colored like body) ---- 7. Body more elongate, not strongly tubercular; parotoid not encroaching on tympanum; foot slender; 127 mm_--_------------- angustipes (p. 41) Body more triangular, strongly tubercular (spiny in males); parotoid

encroaching on tympanum; foot less slender; 170 mm_-- horribilis (p. 41)

38 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

8. Large parotoids present, not in contact with eye, colored like body; small foads..0 95.2 25 2 oop (re aa ape ho ed a 9

9. Dorsal cranial ridges not or scarcely discernible; if present, represented by very low (or discontinuous) elevations or tubercles; lateral head crests better developed; parotoid not widest anteriorly, much longer than wide; tibiotarsal articulation to about middle of parotoid_______ 10 Dorsal cranial ridges strongly developed in adults, surmounted by a continuous line of spiny tubercles; parotoid generally triangular, nearly as wide as long, widest anteriorly; tibiotarsal articulation barely reaches parotoid 344 mm 2001500 Se. due IL ees kelloggi (p. 42) 10. Toes about one-third webbed; nostril back from tip of snout; preorbital and suborbital crests smooth, without tubercles; parotoid as large as side of head; anterior edge of tympanum not strongly elevated; 52 MIN so es ETS. Ee SAG EYE SE ee aes debilis (p. 42) Toes about one-half webbed; nostril at extreme tip of snout; parotoid larger than side of head; preorbital and suborbital crests with some flat tubercles; anterior edge of tympanum elevated; 59 mm _. insidior (p. 42) 1i. Parotoids 1% to 1% area of eyelid, in contact or narrowly separated from

it; tubercles under toes not prominent or numerous; large toads___._ 12 Parotoid less than eyelid and separated from it; or if larger, very narrow, elongate; tubercles prominent under toes__________.._.__.__-___---_~- 13

12. Parotoid 144 to 1% area of eyelid, touching eyelid; foot less than one-half webbed; no specialized tibial gland; tympanum often indistinct or covered; straight, heavy supraorbital crests; 95 mm______~ simus (p. 42)

Parotoid 1% to 1% area of eyelid, very narrowly separated from eyelid; foot two-thirds webbed, larger; one or more specialized glands on tibia; NORCLAMIAL ECRES tS 10 (betray ean cee ee boreas halophilus (p. 43)

13. Very small toads with narrow elongate parotoids, twice as long as wide;

cranial crest very low; supraorbital and postorbital crests forming a

CUrVE SOL mimi ae eee WS ee eee ae ee canaliferus (p. 48) Larger toads; parotoids usually smaller than an eyelid, not long and narrow, usually as wide as long (little more or less) _-___________---_- 14

14. Cranial crests high, well defined, consisting of a preorbital, supraorbital, postorbital, pretympanic, supratympanic; the occipital crest present or bse ite, me os rape he hs er ee en ee 15 Cranial crests low, inconspicuous (absent in younger specimens) __----- 20 15. Occipital crest absent, or occasionally barely indicated; parotoid smaller than eyelid, its greatest length equal to or less than eye diameter; large, rather elongate-bodied toads with rather long legs; tibiotarsal articulation reaching to tympanum or near it-________________--_-- 16 Occipital jenests; présents-2. 2-5 ee a ee ee 1 16. Distance between summits of supraorbital ridges greater than width of eyelid; pretympanic crest equal to supratympanic; greatest diameter of tympanum not more than two-thirds eyelid; 99 mm__ gemmifer (p. 43) Distance between summits of supraorbital ridges less than width of eyelid; height of tympanum equals seven-eighths of eye diameter; supratym- panic crest shorter than pretympanic; parotoid about one-half eyelid; 86 WVU ge ay eres 5 RE ee eh See Ane a mazatlanensis (p. 48)

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 39

17. All cranial crests thickened; occipital crest arising from highest point of the supraorbital crest and continuous with it, converging more or less pos- teriorly; belly sulphur vellow with or without some blackish spots or flecks; parotoids longer than wide, occasionally a little larger than eyelid; postorbital and supraorbital crests present; supratympanic crest heavier than and about as long as pretympanic; 80 mm_______ cristatus (p. 44)

Cranial crests narrow, not conspicuously thickened; occipital crest lower, not arising from highest point of supraorbital crest and not continuous with it; supraorbital and postorbital crests forming a continuous curve; Bes WW see eRe Been ee AS Ee cee Oe eR 18

18. Parotoids about size of eyelid, nearly transverse, broader than long; supratympanic crest shorter than pretympanic crest; subarticular tubercles normally undivided under digits (rarely the distal on third

MUPCTECLVIGCG))s. 73 ANI. ee a Rete eee eee nayaritensis (p. 44) Parotoids a little larger than eyelid, robust, diagonal, longer than wide SEREC by SUD CIRCULAR) = so 2. eo A EE, COREE) 19

19. Parotoid robust, smooth, diagonal, longer than wide, outer edge rounded; no linear series of enlarged warts on sides of body; one or more subarticu- lar tubercles under two outer fingers and tubercles on three outer toes double or bifid; dorsal tubercles all rather larger; 75 mm__ coccifer (p. 44) Parotoid rather flat, often differently colored than surroundings, yellowish or brownish, outer edge nearly straight; a linear series of enlarged warts on sides of body; dorsal tubercles proportionally smaller; 100 GOW 00 i ea a Lh lg el 8 ie valliceps (p. 44) 20. Supraorbital and postorbital crests together forming a curve; space be- tween supraorbital crests less than width of an eyelid; a small supra- tympanic crest, less than pretympanic; sexual dimorphism in markings; (iS ELITIT esee ey eeeeea er eee ls ee NT ee marmoreus (p. 45) Supraorbital and postorbital crest forming angle_________-__---------- 21 21. Crests form obtuse angle; the supratympanic crest absent, leaving paro- toid in contact with the postorbital crest; no divided tubercles on hand or foot; sexual dimorphism in markings; large blotches; interorbital WithimMequal to anveyelia: 66 mm. -~--- 2 82 perplexus (p. 45) Supraorbital and postorbital crests form a right angle (or less) if crest is evident (often very low or not discernible); not sexually dimorphic in markings; usually uniform olive or brown-olive with small brick red spots which fade; head flat; interorbital width much greater than an Perea er eR Nl erene. a See I Ie ee ene ee punctatus (p. 46)

BUFO ALVARIUS Girard

Bufo alvarius Girarp, in Baird, Report on the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, vol. 2, Reptiles, 1859, p. 26, pl. 41, figs. 1-6.—KxE Loa, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 31, 35-40, fig. 4, and pl. 1.

Type.—Two cotypes, U.S.N.M. Nos. 2571, 2572 (so designated by Kellogg) ; the first specimen probably lost.

Type locality —Valley of the Gila and Colorado Rivers.

Range.—Central Arizona southward through Sonora, westward to southeastern California (Imperial County). Reported from Sonora: Guadelupe Cafion, Quitovaquito, Cajén Bonito Creek, Santa Ana, Puerto, Hermosillo, Guaymas, La Posa (10 miles northwest of Guay- mas), Alamos, Guirocoba.

40 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM BUFO WOODHOUSIT WOODHOUSIH Girard

Bufo dorsalis HALLOWELL, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 6, 1852, p. 181 (nec Bufo dorsalis Spix).

Bufo woodhousit GiraRD, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 86 (substitute name for B. dorsalis, preoccupied).—Ker.Ltoae, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 32, 72-74, fig. 16.

Bufo woodhousti woodhousit Smirn, Amer. Midl. Nat., vol. 15, 1934, pp. 449-457, pl. 17, figs. 22B, 23B.

Bufo frontosus Corn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 18, 1866, p. 301 (Territory of Arizona, near the parallel of 35°, and along the valley of the Colorado from Fort Mojave to Fort Yuma; type lost).

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 2531.

Type locality —‘New Mexico”=(San Francisco Mountain, Coco- nino County, Ariz.).

Range.—Montana and North Dakota southward through Kansas and Nevada to northwestern Mexico. Reported in Mexico from Baja California: Colorado River; Chihuahua: Rio Santa Marfa, Colonia Garcia, Colonia Judérez, Santa Rosalia; Sonora; Durango: Santiago Papasquiero.

BUFO COMPACTILIS Wiegmann

Bufo compactilis WimGMANN, Isis von Oken, vol. 26, 1833, pp. 661-662.— DickER- son, The frog book, 1906, pp. 102-104, figs. 93-98.—Kerttoae, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 32-38, 44-48, fig. 8.

Anaxyrus melancholicus TscHupi, Untersuchungen tiber die Fauna Peruana, Herp., 1845, p. 78, pl. 11, fig. 5.

Bufo speciosus GrRARD, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, pp. 85-87 (Valley of the Rfo Bravo [Rio Grande del Norte] and not uncommon in the province of New Leon [Nuevo Leén]; three cotypes, U. 8S. N. M. Nos. 2611, 2608, 2610).

Bufo anomalus GUnruer, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, 1858 (1859), p. 57 (Mexico; Brit. Mus. No. 58. 9. 6. 12).

Bufo levifrons Broccut, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 1, 1877, pp. 187-188 (Mexique; type lost).

Bufo Mexicanus Broccuti, Bull. Soc. Philom., ser. 7, vol. 3, 1879, pp. 23-24 (Mexique; type lost).

Type —Mus. Nat. Berlin No. 3528.

Type locality —Mexico.

Range.—Southwestern Utah and Kansas to central Mexico in Jalisco, Distrito Federal, and Veracruz. Recorded from the states of Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leén, Tamaulipas, Durango, Zacatecas, Guanajuato, Michoacén, Jalisco, Veracruz, Distrito Federal, México, Puebla, and Oaxaca.

| ; :

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO Al BUFO COGNATUS Say

Bufo cognatus Say, in Long, Account of an expedition from Pittsburgh to the Rocky Mountains, vol. 2, 1823, p. 190.—Dicxmrson, The frog book, 1906, pp. 99-102, figs. 85-92, col. pl. 5, fig. 2—Krtuoae, U. 8S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 32, 41-44, fig. 7.

Bufo dipternus Copu, Amer. Nat., vol. 13, 1879, p. 4837 (Montana; types lost).

? Bufo terrestris Broccut, Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans |’Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 2, 1882, p. 77 (part).

Type.—Apparently lost.

Type locality—Arkansas River, Prowers County, Colo.

Range.—Montana and North Dakota southward to northern Baja California and southern San Luis Potosi. In Mexico reported from Chihuahua: Rio Santa Maria near Progreso, near Villa Ahumada, 3 miles east of Carmen, Colonia Judrez; Coahuila: Alamo de Parras, near La Cuchilla, 13 miles west of San Pedro; Durango: Villa Lerdo, 10 miles south of Gémez Palacio, Durango; San Luis Potosi: Moun- tains of Alvarez, 9 leagues southeast of San Luis Potosi (city); Baja California: Pilot Knob, and 7 miles east of Cerro Prieto.

BUFO CALIFORNICUS Camp

Bufo cognatus californicus Camp, Univ. California Publ. Zool., vol. 12, 1915, pp. 331-334. Bufo californicus Myxrs, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 43, 1930, pp. 73-77.

Type—Mus, Vert. Zool. No. 4364.

Type locality—Santa Paula, 800 feet elevation, Ventura County, Calif.

Range.—Coastal area of southern California southward in Baja California to northern Sierra San Pedro M rtir.

BUFO ANGUSTIPES Taylor and Smith

Bufo angustipes Taytor and Situ, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 553-555, fig. 59.

Type —U.S.N.M. No. 1165138. Type locality —La Esperanza, Chiapas, Mexico. Range.—Type locality.

BUFO HORRIBILIS Wiegmann

Bufo horribilis WrraMann, Isis von Oken, vol. 26, 1833, pp. 654-655.—TaYLoR and Smita, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 551-552. Bufo marinus Keuuoce, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 31-82, 53-57, fig. 11

(part).

Type.—Mus. Nat. Berlin Nos. 3478-81. Type locality.—Misantla and Veracruz, Mexico.

42, BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Range——Texas; south to eastern Coahuila and on the lowlands of the Atlantic coast, and from Mazatlén, Sinaloa, south on the Pacific coast. Recorded from the states of Campeche, Chiapas, Coahuila, Colima, Durango, Guerrero, Hidalgo, Jalisco, Michoacén, Morelos, Nayarit, Nuevo Leén, Oaxaca, Puebla, San Luis Potosi, Sinaloa, Sonora, Tabasco, Tamaulipas, Veracruz, and Yucatén.

BUFO DEBILIS Girard 26

Bufo debilis Grrarp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 87.— Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 24, 1936 (1938), pl. 518, p. 45, figs. 4-6.

Type.—(Cotypes) U.S.N.M. No. 2621 (8 specimens).

Type locality—lLower part of Rio Grande del Norte and in the Province of Tamaulipas, Mexico.

Range.—Central southern Texas and Tamaulipas. Reported from Tamaulipas: Matamoros; Nuevo Leén.

BUFO INSIDIOR Girard

Bufo insidior GirarD, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 88.— Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 24, 1936 (1938), pp. 513-514, pl. 45, figs. 7-9.

Type —U.S.N.M. No. 2622 (2 cotypes).

Type locality —Chihuahua, Mexico.

Range.—Southwestern Kansas south through western Texas and. southern New Mexico to northern central Mexico. In Mexico reported from Sonora; Chihuahua: Villa Ahumada, Rio Santa Marfa, and near Progreso; Coahuila: Miisquiz, Sierra de Santa Rosa, Her- manas, La Rosa, and ‘‘20 miles east of Torreon”; Zacatecas: Majoma, Villa de Cos, La Colorada, Zacatecas; Durango: Conejos.

BUFO KELLOGGI Taylor

Bufo kelloggi Tayuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 24, 1936 (1938), pp. 510-514, pl. 45, figs. 1-3.

Type —EHT-HMS No. 21. Type locality.—2 miles east of Mazatlan, Sinaloa, Mexico. Range.—Southern Sinaloa (Mazatlan) and Nayarit (Acaponeta).

BUFO SIMUS Schmidt

Bufo simus Scumipt, Denkschr. Akad. Wiss. Wien, math.-nat. Classe, vol. 14, 1858, pp. 254-255, pl. 3, fig. 22.—_Ketioae, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 34, 63-66, figs. 14, a, b (part).

Bufo intermedius GUNTHER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collec- tion of the British Museum, 1858 (1859), p. 140, pl. 9, fig. A (Andes of Ecuador; cotypes, Brit. Mus. Nos. 58. 9. 20. 3-6).

* It is possible that this and the following, insidior, are subspecies.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 43

Bufo occidentalis CamuRANo, Atti Accad. Sci. Torino, vol. 14, 1879, p. 887 (Mexico; Turin Mus.). , :

Bufo monksiae Corn, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 18, 1879, p. 263 (Guanajuato, Mexico; U.S.N.M. No. 9896).

Type.—(Cotypes) Zoological Museum, Krakow, Poland.

Type locality.—Chiriqui River in the vicinity of Bocas del Toro, Panama.

Range.—Discontinuous; Sinaloa and Veracruz southward to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec; Panama and northern South America. In Mexico recorded from the states of Chihuahua, Sinaloa, Colima, Zacatecas, Durango, Nayarit, Jalisco, Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Distrito Federal, Morelos, Tlaxcala, Puebla, Guerrero, Veracruz, and Oaxaca.

BUFO BOREAS HALOPHILUS Baird and Girard

Bufo halophila Bairp and Grrarp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 6, 1853, p. 301. Bufo boreas halophilus Camp, Univ. California Publ. Zool., vol. 17, 1917, p. 116.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 2589.

Type locality.—Benicia, Calif.

Range.—California, western Nevada and northern Baja California. Reported from Baja California: San Pedro Martir Mountains, La Grulla, 7,500 feet, Vallecitos, 8,000 feet, north end of Nachogiiero Valley and Ensenada.

BUFO CANALIFERUS Cope

Bufo canaliferus Corr, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 17, 1877, pp. 85-86.— Keutoce, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 34, 40-41, fig. 5.—Tayrtor and Smiru, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 557, pl. 21, fig. 1.

Type.—(Cotypes) U.S.N.M. Nos. 30315-24.

Type locality —‘‘West Tehuantepec,” Oaxaca, Mexico.

Range.—Pacific slopes of Oaxaca and Chiapas, and probably south- ward in Central America. Reported from Oaxaca: Chivela, Santa

Efigenia, Tapana, Tehuantepec; Chiapas: Cruz de Piedra, Colonia

Soconusco, La Esperanza, Rancho Las Gradas, Tonala, Tapachula.

BUFO GEMMIFER Taylor

Bufo gemmifer Tayuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 490- 492, pl. 53, figs. 3, 3a, 3b.

Type.—KHT-HMS No. 18509. Type locality. El Limoncito, near La Venta, Guerrero, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

BUFO MAZATLANENSIS Taylor

Bufo mazatlanensis Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 492-494 pl. 53, fig. 1, pl. 54.

44 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Type.—EHT-HMS No. 374.

Type locality.—2 miles east of Mazatlén, Sinaloa, Mexico.

Range.—Southern Sonora through Sinaloa, on Pacific slopes. Recorded from Sonora: Alamos, Guirocoba, Navajoa; Sinaloa: Mazatlan.

BUFO CRISTATUS Wiegmann

Bufo cristatus W1EGMANN, Isis von Oken, vol. 26, 1833, pp. 660-661.—KELLoae, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 33, 48-49, fig. 9, a, b—Taytor and Smitu, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 559, pl. 23, figs. 5, 6.

Bufo occipitalis CAMERANO, Atti Accad. Sci. Torono, vol. 14, 1879, pp. 889, 890 (Mexico; type lost).

Type.—Cotypes, Mus. Nat. Berlin Nos. 3523, 3524.

Type locality —Jalapa, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from central western Veracruz and Pacific slopes of Chiapas. Reported from Cuautlapan, Jalapa, San José de Gracia, and Potrero Viejo, Veracruz; Cruz de Piedra, Salto de Agua, and Colonia Soconusco, Chiapas.

BUFO NAYARITENSIS Taylor

Bufo nayaritensis Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 29, 1943, pp. 349-351, pl. 26, figs. 1, la.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 397.

Type locality —Tepic, Nayarit, Mexico.

Range.—Known from the type locality and possibly Acaponeta, Nayarit.

BUFO COCCIFER Cope

Bufo coccifer Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 18, 1866, pp. 130— 131.—Ke.uoae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 35, 41, fig. 6, a-b.— Tayior and Smit, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 558, pl. 22.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 6490.

Type locality.— Arriba, Costa Rica.

Range.—Pacific slopes, Guerrero to Costa Rica. Reported in Mexico from Oazaca: Juchitén, Tehuantepec, Cacoprieto; Guerrero: Agua del Obispo.

BUFO VALLICEPS Wiegmann

Bufo valliceps W1EGMANN, Isis von Oken, vol. 26, 1833, pp. 657-659.— DicKERson, The frog book, 1906, pp. 108-110, figs. 112-115, col. pl. 5, fig. 3—Ketuoae, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 35, 68-72, fig. 15.—Tay tor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1989 (1940), pl. 53, fig. 2—Taytor and Smrru, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 559-561, pl. 24, figs. 1-6.

Bufo trachypus W1nGMANN, Isis von Oken, vol. 26, 1833, pp. 657-658 (same types as for the preceding).

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 45

Bufo granulosus Batrp and Grrarp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 6 1852, p. 173 (mec Bufo granulosus Spix; Indianola to San Antonio, Tex.; type, U.S.N.M. No. 2595). ;

Bufo nebulifer Grrarp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 87 (substitute for the preceding).

Bufo sternosignatus (part) GUnruEr, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, 1858 (1859), pp. 68-69, pl. 5, fig. C (Cér- doba, Mexico, and Venezuela; two Mexican cotypes, Brit. Mus. Nos, 56.3.- 17.25, 56.9.6.13, name restricted to Venezuela cotype).

Type.—Five cotypes, Mus. Nat. Berlin Nos. 3525-27, 3532.

Type locality —Mexico.

Range.—Texas, Louisiana, and eastern Coahuila south to Costa Rica, in lowlands of Gulf drainage, and up to 3,000 feet in Hidalgo; not on Pacific coast. Known in Mexico from the states of Campeche, Chiapas, Coahuila, Hidalgo, Nuevo Leén, Oaxaca, Quintana Roo, San Luis Potosi, Tabasco, Tamaulipas, Veracruz, and Yucatan.

BUFO MARMOREUS Wiegmann

Bufo marmoreus WiEGMANN, Isis von Oken, vol. 26, 1833, p. 66.—KeELLoae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 34, 58-60, fig. 12.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 29, 1943, pl. 26, figs. la, 2—Taytor and Sirs, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 555-556, pl. 28, figs. 1, 2.

Bufo argillaceus Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 20, 1868 (cotypes, U.S.N.M. Nos. 27768-27764; ‘Colima, Mex.’’).

Bufo lateralis WERNER, Zool. Anz., vol. 17, 1894, p. 156 (type, Nat. Mus. Vienna No. 115-1929; Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico).

? Bufo eiteli Aut, Sitzb. Ges. Nat. Freunde, 1927, pp. 111-112 (Berlin Mus.; Puerto México, Veracruz).

Type.—Three cotypes, Mus. Nat. Berlin Nos. 3529-31.

Type locality.—Veracruz, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Mazatlan, Sinaloa, to Chiapas on Pacific slopes, and Vera- cruz south to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec on Atlantic drainage. Reported from Colima: Colima; Jalisco: Jamay; Guerrero: Acapulco, Tierra Colorada, Papayo, Chilpancingo (other records in Guerrero may apply to Bufo perplerus Taylor); Oaraca: Tehuantepec, Chivela, Santo Domingo, Tapana, Escurana (15 kilometers west of Tehuan- tepec); Sinaloa: Mazatlin, Rosario; Veracruz: Veracruz, Puerto México, Veracruz.

BUFO PERPLEXUS Taylor Bufo perplecus Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 29, 1943, pp. 347-349, Din2ihsssad | 2:

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 707. Type locality —Balsas River near Mexcala, Guerrero, Mexico. Range.—Pacific slopes from Guerrero to Chiapas. Reported from Morelos: Cuernavaca, near Huajintlén, 5 miles west of Alpuyeca, 757435—48——4

46 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Puente de Ixtla; Guerrero: El Naranjo, Tonolapam, Mexcala, vicinity of Chilpancingo; Oaraca: Tehuantepec, Escurana (15 kilometers west of Tehuantepec); Chiapas: Tonal§4.

BUFO PUNCTATUS Baird and Girard

Bufo punctatus Batrp and Grrarp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 6, 1852, p. 173.—Dticxerson, The frog book, 1906, pp. 110-112, figs. 116-120, col. pl. 5, fig. 1—Kertioee, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 33, 60-63,

fig. 13.

Bufo beldingi Yarrow, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 24, 1883, pp. 23, 163 (La Paz, Baja California; 10 cotypes, U.S. N. M. Nos. 12660, 12670).

? Bufo coccifer Mocquarp (nec Cope), Nouv. Arch. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, ser. 4, vol. 1, 1899, pp. 334-337 (Santa Rosalia, Baja California).

Type.—Cotypes, U.S.N.M. No. 2618, 3 specimens, lost.

Type locality—Rio San Pedro [Devils River], Val Verde County, ex.

Range.—Utah and Kansas southward to Guanajuato, Baja Cali- fornia, and Tamaulipas. Recorded in Mexico from the states of Tamaulipas, Coahuila, Nuevo Leén, Chihuahua, San Luis Potosi, Sinaloa, Sonora, Guanajuato, and Baja California.

Family LEPTODACTYLIDAE Berg Leptodactylidae Bere, Anal. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires, vol. 5, 1896, p. 161. KEY TO MEXICAN GENERA OF LEPTODACTYLIDAE

1. Small toadlike animal, lacking maxillary and vomerine teeth. Engystomops (p. 47)

Froglike or toadlike form, maxillary teeth present; vomerine teeth present

OMADSEN te ook one Oe oy ae eR ey a ee oe ee ee 2

2. Small to very small frogs; vomerine teeth absent normally (present occa- sionally in Syrrhophus latodactylus and Microbatrachylus lineatissimus)-.- 3 5

Larger forms, vomerine and maxillary teeth present___-_--------------

3. A ventral disk confined to the abdomen, not reaching femora; vocal sac present in males; testes and ovaries unpigmented_______------------ 4

Ventral disk terminating posteriorly on the femora; testes and ovaries

heavily pigmented; no vocal sac in males; very small species, 13-27 mm. Microbatrachylus (p. 538) -

4. An elongate, elevated, definitive, lumbar or lumboinguinal gland.

Tomodactylus (p. 47)

No elongate, elevated gland; gland when present diffuse, subcircular,

often not easily visible externally__..._._..------ Syrrhophus (p. 49) 5. Mesosternum forming a bony style; vomerine teeth in elongate transverse Series (Ee. bea es a RO ee) aa ete eee Leptodactylus (p. 55)

Mesosternum cartilaginous with a double, arrow-shaped, posterior termi- nation; ventral abdominal disks present, not reaching femora; testes and ovaries unpigmented (Eleutherodactylus calcitrans exception) ; inguinal gland if present indistinct_---_------ Eleutherodactylus (p. 57)

oft eae

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 47

Genus ENGYSTOMOPS Jiménez de la Espada

Engystomops JIMENEZ DE LA Espana, Anal. Soc. Espafia Hist. Nat., vol. 1, 1872, p. 86.—KeE.LoGe, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 77-78.

Microphryne PretERS, Monatsb. Akad. Wiss. Benin 1873, p. 616 (genotype Paludicola pustulosa Cope).

Genotype.—Engystomops petersi Jiménez de la Espada. Range.—Central Veracruz to Ecuador. Species.—Three, of which one occurs in Mexico.”

ENGYSTOMOPS PUSTULOSUS (Cope)

Paludicola pustulosa Copp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 16, 1864, p. 180.

Engystomops pustulosus BOULENGER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, ed. 2, 1882, p. 275.—Kzttoag, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 76-81, fig. 18.

Type.—U. 8. N. M. No. 4339 (now lost).

Type locality—New Granada on the River Truando, Colombia.

Range.—Both sides of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and on the Atlantic coast from central Veracruz southward into South America. Occurs in Veracruz: Tierra Colorada, near Potrero Viejo, Cafiada, 4 miles east of Encero, near San Gerénimo, near Jalapa, San Andrés Tuxtla; Tabasco: Tenosique; Campeche; Encarnacién; Oazaca: Santo Domingo, Tehuantepec, Cosolapa; Chiapas: Tonala.

Genus TOMODACTYLUS Giinther

Tomodactylus GUntuHER, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1900, p. 219.

Genotype.—Tomodactylus amulae Giinther.

Range.—The southern edge of the main Mexican plateau and the Oaxacan extension.

Species.—Five.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF TOMODACTYLUS

1. Tympanum large, its diameter three-fourths to four-fifths of eye diameter; two outer fingers with dilated disks, one and three-fourths to twice nar- rowest width of digit; lumbar gland rather low; maximum size 31 mm. macrotympanum (p. 48) Tympanum less than one-half diameter of eye_------------------------ 2 2. Tips of digits tapering, smaller than width of digit; diameter of tympanum one-fourth (or less) of eye diameter; lumbar gland high, distinct; maxi- MUPLMURIZG ove HOM = 2 ose --- os angustidigitorum (p. 48) itipsiot digits wider thanathe idigits:< 2 252220 2iee-_----2=2-=--====-- 3 27 This genus is sometimes combined with another, Eupemphix Steindachner, 1863 (Sitzb. Akad. Wiss. Wien, math.-naturw. Kl., vol. 48, p. 188; type, E. nattereri Steindachner, Cuyaba, Brazil), which in its limited sense contains four species.

48 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

3. Upper lip with white or silvery line or stripe; tympanum a little less than half eye; a red or orange spot on anterior part of thigh or extending to- proins maximum lengpihizo mnt eo eee oe eS ee albolabris (p. 48)

No white or silvery-nne’on uppertlips eh ee ee a a eee 4

4. Canthus rostralis rather sharp; tympanum about one-sixth size of orbit.

amulae (p. 48) Canthus rostralis indistinct or rounding; markings, width of digit tips, ventral granulation, and tympanum, variable (a composite species). nitidus (p. 48) TOMODACTYLUS MACROTYMPANUM Taylor

Tomodactylus macrotympanum Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 496-499, pl. 55, figs. 2, 2a, 2b.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 6838. Type locality.—La Placita, south of Jacala, Hidalgo, Mexico. Range.—Hidalgo, eastern San Luis Potosi.

TOMODACTYLUS ANGUSTIDIGITORUM Taylor

Tomodactylus angustidigitorum Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 494-496, pl. 55, figs. 1, la, 1b.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 18640. Type locality.— Quiroga, Michoacdin, Mexico, elevation 6,880 feet. Range.—Michoacén, west México and Distrito Federal. Speci- mens are known from Michoacdn: west of Zacapti, 4 miles east of Carapa, Cerro de Tecolote; México: San Martin; Distrito Federal, near Tlalpam. TOMODACTYLUS ALBOLABRIS Taylor

Tomodactylus albolabris Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 29, 1943, pp. 351-353. Type—EHT-HMS No. 29568. Type locality—Agua del Obispo, Guerrero (Kilometer 351). Range.—Guerrero. Recorded from Agua del Obispo, and 9 kilo- meters south of Mazatlan, in Guerrero.

TOMODACTYLUS AMULAE Ginther

Tomodactylus amulae Gtnruer, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1900, pp. 219-220, pl. 64, fig. C.

Type.—Brit. Mus. No. 1901.12.19.9-12.

Type locality —Amula, Guerrero, Mexico.

Range.—Guerrero and Morelos. Known in Guerrero: Amula, near Omilteme; ? Morelos: near Tres Cumbres.

TOMODACTYLUS NITIDUS (Peters)

Liuperus nitidus Prrers, Monatsb. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1869, pp. 878-879. Tomodactylus nitidus Keuitoca, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 120-123.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 49

Type-—Mus. Nat. Berlin No. 6669.

Type locality.—State of Puebla (probably near Matamoros), Mexico.

Range.—Highlands of western Veracruz, Puebla, Morelos, Guerrero, and Oaxaca.

Genus SYRRHOPHUS Cope

Syrrhophus Corz, Amer. Nat., vol. 12, 1878, p. 253.

Malachylodes Corr, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 18, 1879, p. 264 (genotype Malachylodes guttilatus Cope).

Syrrhopus BouLENGER, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1888, pt. 2, p. 206 (emendation of Syrrhophus Cope).

Syrrhaphus GUnTHER, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1900, p. 215 (emendation of Syrrhophus Cope).

Genotype.—Syrrhophus marnockii Cope.

Range.—Southern Texas and Colima southward presumably to Pert.

Species.—Twenty-two are described, of which 12 occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF SYRRHOPHUS

Pnowoopalmar tubercles, outer absent... ..-..-=---<=---=----=s=----=--= 2 ‘Lnrec palmar tuberclesssouter presents ———- = —-— = ae ee ee 5

2. None of the digits widened at tips or only minutely so; purplish or brownish with red spots; 22.5 mm_________----- rubrimaculata (p. 50) Outer digits of hand and foot widened at tip.-_--------------------- 3

3. Digits rather sharply truncate at tip; interorbital width twice width of eyelid; sides as well as dorsum and venter smooth; yellowish brown or brownish gray with a broken dark lateral mark and dark spots on

Dac keeeNe Minas ene ee ates ee OLE Se eee modestus (p. 50) Digit tips not sharply truncate but somewhat rounded, the terminal pads better developed; sides areolate; dorsum variable; venter smooth..-- 4

4. Diameter of tympanum (vertical) a little more than half eye; the lower rim distinctly elevated, the upper part of rim hidden; choanae not concealed; skin smooth above; 31 mm_---_------------ pipilans (p. 50)

Diameter of tympanum about one-third eye, the lower rim not notice- ably raised; skin of back with flattened pustules; light lavender above with a nebulous pattern; white or cream below; 25 mm_ nebulosus (p. 51)

5. Digits not or but very slightly widened at tip_----------------------- 6 Digit tips definitely widened (1% to more than 2}4 narrowest digital

CFIeT IN) werent de PRR a os ha ee ee a ae ae eae 8

6. Venter and dorsum shining smooth; larger forms--_------------------ i.

Venter more or less roughened, granular or areolate; a vestige of web between toes; smaller form; eyelid width, 1% in interorbital width; heel to posterior part of eye; above vinaceous-drab to brownish drab with sharply defined, blue-black spots; femur barred with rufous; PMTs, Shel Perce 2 a guttilatus (p. 51)

7. No vestige of web on toes; parotoid apparently absent; tympanum sub- circular, more than half eye diameter, width of eyelid f our-fifths inter- orbital width; heel to the tympanum (in adult) ; sides somewhat areo- late; ash gray, with dark flecks above; 33 mm_-_--------- smithi (p. 51)

50 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

A vestige of web between toes; the diameter of tympanum one-third to two-thirds eye diameter; parotoid present; heel to anterior part of eye; eyelid 1% in interorbital width; dark lavender or purple with larger light cream or yellow spots or reticulations; femur not barred; 0mm. Fo Le ee oe Se eo re ee leprus (p. 51)

8. All digits very wide, the widest 2% times (or more) greatest width of digit; tips sharply truncate; tympanum two-thirds to three-fourths diameter of eye; head wider than body; back pustular or tubercular; vomerine teeth present or absent; yellowish or light lavender above

with deep brown spots or reticulations; 38.2 mm.___ latodactylus (p. 51)

None of terminal pads of digits more than twice width of digit; vomerine teeth not present; head not noticeably wider than body_____--__-_-- 9

9. Abdominal region at least partly granular or areolate; dorsum tubercu- lar..or granular’ 2 25 CUR RRw i i Wao AO ee ee 10 Ventral abdominal region shining smooth___________-___------_---- 11

10. Choanae small; vestige of web between toes; outer metatarsal tubercle almost as large as inner; mulberry or lavender speckled, below yellow-

ishvor fleshit;2245) mies Se ee ee ee cystignathoides (p. 52) Choanae very large; no web vestige; outer metatarsal tubercle about one third inner; yellow-brown or fawn stippled with brown; 20 mm.

verruculatus (p. 52) 11. Tympanum diameter about one-half diameter of eye; an abdominal disk more or less distinct; tubercles under forearm; outer metatarsal tubercle nearly as large as inner; dorsal skin granular or tubercular; indefinite grayish olive, with indefinite lighter and darker markings;

Ds ey TMNT Se ee ree ee ele eee gee ee campi (p. 52) Tympanum two-thirds diameter of eye; skin of dorsum smooth, the sides areolate; no abdominal fold or disk (?); dark bluish gray marked

with black spots, white below; 23.5 mm___-_______-- verrucipes (p. 52)

SYRRHOPHUS RUBRIMACULATA Taylor and Smith Syrrhophus rubrimaculata Taytor and Situ, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95,

1945, pp. 583-585.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 114070.

Type locality—La Esperanza (near Escuintla), Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Chiapas; recorded from La Esperanza (near Escuintla) and Rancho Las Gradas.

SYRRHOPHUS MODESTUS Taylor Syrrhophus modestus TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 304-306, pl. 29.

Type.-—KHT-HMS No. 3756. Type locality —-Hacienda Paso del Rio, Colima, Mexico. Range.—Known from the type locality.

SYRRHOPHUS PIPILANS Taylor

Syrrhophus pipilans Tayutor, Proce. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 53, 1940, pp. 95-97, pl. 1.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 51

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 6843.

Type locality.—9 miles south of Mazatlin, Guerrero, Mexico.

Range.—Pacific slopes, Guerrero and Oaxaca. Specimens are known from Guerrero: Agua del Obispo, 30 kilometers north of Acapulco; Oaxaca: Cerro Arenal (near Tehuantepec).

SYRRHOPHUS NEBULOSUS Taylor

Syrrhophus nebulosus Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 29, 1943, pp. 353-355, pl. 27, figs. 3-5.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 3774.

Type locality Near Tonald, Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Chiapas. Known only from the type locality, Tuxtla Gutiérrez and Tapachula, Chiapas; and ? Rodriguez Clara, Veracruz.

SYRRHOPHUS SMITHI Tayler

Syrrhophus smithi Taytor, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 89, 1940, pp. 43-45, pl. 1.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 108594. Type locality—15 miles west of Galeana, Nuevo Leén, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

SYRRHOPHUS LEPRUS Cope

Syrrhophus leprus Corr, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 18, 1879, pp. 268—269.— Ketxoee, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 124-125, 128.—Taytor and Smita, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 582.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 10040.

Type locality —Santa Efigenia, Oaxaca, Mexico. Range.—Atlantic slopes, southern Veracruz to Petén, Guatemala. Reported from Veracruz: Potrero Viejo; Oaraca: La Gloria, Santa

Efigenia; Guatemala: Piedras Negras (on Mexican border).

SYRRHOPHUS GUTTILATUS (Cope)

Malachylodes guttilatus Corr, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 18, 1879, pp. 264-265. Syrrhophus guttilatus Nirpen, Das Tierreich, Lief. 46, 1923, pp. 399-400.— Keuoce, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 125, 127-128.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 9888.

Type locality.—Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Mexico.

Range—San Luis Potosi and Guanajuato. The record for San Luis Potosi is “9 leagues S San Luis Potosi” (city).

SYRRHOPHUS LATODACTYLUS Taylor

Syrrhophus latedactylus Tayutor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 397-401, pl. 43, and text fig. 7.

52 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Type-—KHT-HMS No. 6807.

Type locality —Huasteca Cafion, 15 kilometers west of Monterrey, Nuevo Leén, Mexico.

Range.—Hidalgo, southern Nuevo Leén, eastern San Luis Potosi. Reported from Hidalgo: near La Placita (6-8 kilometers south of Jacala); San Luis Potost: 10 miles west of Naranjos; Nuevo Leon: 15 kilometers west of Monterrey, Sabinas Hidalgo.

SYRRHOPHUS CYSTIGNATHOIDES (Cope)

Phyllobates cystignathoides Corz, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 17, 1877, pp. 89-90.

Syrrhophus cystignathoides N1EpEN, Das Tierreich, Lief. 46, 1923, pp. 399, 401.— Keuioce, U. 8S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 126, 127.—Taytor and SmirH, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 582-583.

Type.—(Cotypes) U.S.N.M. Nos. 32402-32409.

Type locality.—Potrero, near Cérdoba, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Veracruz, and ? San Luis Potosi. Reported from Vera- cruz: Potrero, Metlac (near Cérdoba), Cuautlapan; San Lmis Potost: Huichihuayén (the latter is based upon a young specimen and not impossibly is referable to another species).

SYRRHOPHUS VERRUCULATUS (Peters)

Phyllobates verruculatus Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1870, p. 650. Syrrhophus verruculatus NieDEN, Das Tierreich, Lief. 46, 1923, pp. 399, 401.— Ke.ioace, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 125-126, 129.

Type.—Mus. Nat. Berlin, No. 6957.

Type locality Huanusco (=probably Huatusco), Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Puebla and Veracruz. Recorded from Puebla: Necaxa; Hidalgo: near Tianguistengo; Veracruz: (type locality).

SYRRHOPHUS CAMPI Stejneger

Syrrhophus campi StEJNEGER, Proc. Biol. Soe. Washington, vol. 28, 1915, pp. 131-132.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 52290.

Type locality —Brownsville, Tex.

Range.—Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leén, and eastern San Luis Potosi in Mexico; lower Rio Grande Valley in Texas in the United States. Reported or examined from Nuevo Leén: Monterrey; San Luis Potosi: 10 miles west of Naranjos; Tamaulipas: Matamoros.

SYRRHOPHUS VERRUCIPES Cope

Syrrhophus verrucipes Cops, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 22, 1885, p. 383.— Keuuioee, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1982, pp. 126-127, 128-129.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO

Type.—Lost (fide Kellogg).

53

Type locality—Near Zacualtipan, Hidalgo, Mexico (1,800 feet lower in rocky gorge of a stream near its junction with the San Miguel

River).

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

Genus MICROBATRACHYLUS Taylor Microbatrachylus Tartor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), p.

Genotype.—Eleutherodactyius hobartsmithi Taylor.

499.

Range.—Central Veracruz and Guerrero through Mexico probably

to Guatemala and perhaps to Nicaragua. Species.—Kight are known at present, all in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF MICROBATRACHYLUS

. White stripe, black-edged below, on upper jaw; dark median stripe limited

by irregular dorsal ridges; maximum size, ?, 18 mm___ albolabris (p

No white stripe on upper jaw, or dark median stripe__________________

. Tibiotarsal articulation to tip of snout or beyond; an outer palmar PRN TAC Le meee ee arene pe UN er cnet ect raat Se he a Tibiotarsal articulation to eye or at most halfway to nostril; an outer patmer tubercle-present, or absent... &-z-< =s-5 5.20 = Sb S23

. Minute vomerine teeth; seven more or less distinct dorsal and dorsolateral ridges; heel to beyond tip of snout; 20 mm______-_- lineatissimus (p.

No vomerine teeth; dorsal and dorsolateral ridges if present, indistinct, less than 7; heel to tip of snout; 18.1 mm-_-_-_---- oaxacae (p.

. Three palmar tubercles; no parotoid gland evident; outer metatarsal tu-

. 54) 2

3 4 54)

54)

bercle two-thirds size of inner; large species; 27 mm., 9_ montanus (p. 54)

Only tworpalmar tubercles; outer absent 202 22225. 2 oe. Pee Sas . Dorsal ridges absent; well-defined dorsolateral ridges, continuous or

broken, arising from corners of eyes, converging on end of rump; area

between, uniform light brown, cream-fawn or whitish___-_----------- No well-defined dorsolateral ridges limiting a uniform dorsal coloration _ - . Dorsal skin covered with fine tubercles; no evidence of a parotoid gland; tibiotarsal articulation to middle of eye; color fawn to light brown, uni- form, with an indistinct, V-shaped blackish mark on occiput; 15 mm.,

CpmLOuniriars D pine nER yd ya See as ae oot minimus (p.

Dorsal skin nearly smooth; a strongly defined parotoid; tibiotarsal artic- ulation halfway to nostril; color clay-white on back; no tubercles on

Gutemedge of tarsus; 14.2 mm., o'; 9 7.2 -22=.---_---=- imitator (p.

. An inverted V-shaped ridge and mark on shoulders; lip spotted black; a pair of inguinal black spots; no tubercles on outer edge of tarsus; tips of

digits widened; no parotoid; 16 mm., @; 19 mm., 9? --- pygmaeus (p.

Inverted V-shaped ridge and dark mark sometimes evident in males; no inguinal black spots; tubercles on outer edge of tarsus; tips of digits not or but minutely wider than digits; parotoid gland present; 15.1 mm., o;

5

54)

55)

55)

DOMME OF. eye A oer eee) oes tt tod: Axe hobartsmithi (p. 55)

54 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

MICROBATRACHYLUS ALBOLABRIS Taylor

Microbatrachylus albolabris Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 502-504, pl. 56, figs. A and B.—Taytor and Smiru, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 563-564.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 6407. f

Type locality —2 miles west of Cérdoba, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Coastal hills of Veracruz, Chiapas, Guerrero, and un- doubtedly Oaxaca. Recorded from Veracruz: Potrero Viejo, Cuaut- lapan; Chiapas: La Esperanza (near Escuintla), Colonia Hidalgo, Salto de Agua (Mount Ovando); Guerrero: Agua del Obispo, and 1% miles north of Mazatlin. No specimens yet known from Oaxaca.

MICROBATRACHYLUS LINEATISSIMUS Taylor

Microbatrachylus lineatissimus Taytor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 54, 1941, pp. 87-89.

Type -—KHT-HMS No. 24289. Type locality —Cerro San Felipe, Oaxaca, Mexico, elevation 7,000 to 8,000 feet. Range.—Known only from the type locality. MICROBATRACHYLUS OAXACAE Taylor

Microbatrachylus oaxacae TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 504-507.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 18197.

Type locality —Cerro San Felipe, near Oaxaca, Oaxaca.

Range.—Known only from the type locality, and Lachiguiri, Oaxaca. MICROBATRACHYLUS MONTANUS Taylor

Microbatrachylus montanus Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 67-69, pl. 6, figs. 2, 2a—2c.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 115507.

Type locality Mount Ovando, Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Chiapas in region about Mount Ovando. Reported from La Esperanza (near Escuintla), Las Nubes, and Salto de Agua (Mount Ovando in Chiapas).

MICROBATRACHYLUS MINIMUS Taylor

Microbatrachylus minimus Tayuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 507-508, pl. 56, figs. C, D—Taytor and Smit, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 562-568.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 6416.

Type locality —Agua del Obispo, Guerrero, Mexico (Kilometer 350).

Range.—Coastal hills of Guerrero, Veracruz, and Chiapas. Re- ported from Veracruz: Potrero Viejo, Cuautlapan; Chiapas: Salto de Agua (Mount Ovando); Guerrero: Agua del Obispo.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 55

MICROBATRACHYLUS IMITATOR Taylor

Microbatrachylus imitator Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 70-71, pl. 6, figs. 1, la, 1b, 1c.

Type-—U.S.N.M. No. 115508.

Type locality—La Esperanza (near Escuintla), Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality, and Colonia Hidalgo in Chiapas.

MICROBATRACHYLUS PYGMAEUS (Taylor) Eleutherodactylus pygmaeus TayuLor, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci., vol. 39, 1936 (19387), pp. 352-354, pl. 1, figs. 3, 4.

Microbatrachylus pygmaeus Tayuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940),

pp. 500-501.—Taytor and Smiru, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 565.

Type-—KHT-HMS No. 3691.

Type locality—One mile north of Rodriguez Clara, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Veracruz, eastern Oaxaca, Chiapas and Guerrero. Re- ported from Veracruz: Potrero Viejo, Cuautlapan; Oazaca: Matias Romero; Chiapas: La Esperanza (near Escuintla), Colonia Hidalgo, Colonia Soconusco, Las Nubes, Cerro Ovando, Finca Judrez, La Magnolia, Salto de Agua on Mount Ovando; Guerrero: Agua del Obispo and 12 miles south of Chilpancingo.

MICROBATRACHYLUS HOBARTSMITHI (Taylor)

Eleutherodactylus hobartsmitht Taytor, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci., vol. 39, 1936 (1937), pp. 355-357, pl. 1, figs. 5, 6.

Microbatrachylus hobartsmithit Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 501-502.

Type.—EHT-HMS No. 3688. Type locality —Near Uruapan, Michoacan, Mexico. Range.—Southwestern portion of the central plateau of Mexico. Recorded from Meézico: 10 miles west of Villa Victoria; Jalisco: 20 miles west of Guadalajara; Michoacdén: Mirador in Zimba National Forest. Genus LEPTODACTYLUS Fitzinger

Leptodactylus FitzincEer, Neue Classification der Reptilien, 1826, p. 38.

Genotype.—Leptodactylus typhonia Fitzinger= Rana typhonia (part) Daudin (nec Rana typhonius Linnaeus, 1758).

Range.—Southern Texas and Sonora to Argentina, the Antilles, and the islands of San Andrés and Providence.

Species —About 60 are known, 3 of which occur in Mexico.

56 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF LEPTODACTYLUS

1. A strongly defined ventral dermal disk; toes lacking lateral dermal fringes; males with a prominent shelflike projection on snout; skin smooth without horn-tipped tubercles scattered over body; males lacking black, horny spines on first finger; white below; a white stripe on lip__labialis (p. 56)

No strongly defined ventral dermal disk; toes with strong lateral dermal fringes; males with 2 heavy horny spines on first finger, and without shelf from snout; lip without a white stripe-_.....__.__-..___--___-_- 2

2. Posttympanic gland elongate, with a free-rounded posterior; these as well as axillary and postfemoral glands producing a horny excretion at least during a part of the year; digital spines of males closer together; smiailenng cet eset he ete Pee Ba Se occidentalis (p. 56)

Posttympanic gland ill defined; the axillary and postfemoral glands, if present, diffuse, all not forming horny excretions; digital spines more separated; larger species (composite) -_---__------- melanonotus (p. 57)

LEPTODACTYLUS LABIALIS (Cope)

Cystignathus labialis Corr, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 17, 1877, p. 90.

Leptodactylus labialis Broccut, Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans l Amér- ique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 1, 1881, p. 20, pl. 5, fig. 1—Gatexr, Carnegie Inst. Washington Publ. No. 457, 1936, p. 281.

Cystignathus fragilis Broccut, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 1, 1877, p. 182 (Tehuantepec, Mexico; Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 1952).

[Cystignathus] gracilis Corn, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 18, 1879, p. 269-270 (nec Cystignathus gracilis Duméril and Bibron).

Leptodactylus albilabris GintHeR, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1900, p. 213 (nec L. albilabris Giinther, 1859).—Kzrtuoae, U. §. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 82, 83-88 (part).

Type.—(Cotypes) U.S.N.M. Nos. 31300-31305.

Type locatity—‘ Probably a part of Sumichrast’s Mexican Collec- tion.”

Range.—Texas south to Nicaragua, Oaxaca, and Guerrero. In Mexico it occurs in Tamaulipas, Nuevo Ledén, Veracruz, Morelos, Guerrero, Oaxaca, Chiapas, Tabasco, Yucatan, and Campeche.

LEPTODACTYLUS OCCIDENTALIS Taylor 28

Leptodactylus occidentalis TayLor, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci., vol. 39, 1936 (1937), pp. 347-352, pl. 1, figs. 1, 2, 7.

Type.—_EHT-HMS No. 3322. Type locality.—Tepic, Nayarit, Mexico. Range.—Sonora to Nayarit. Known from the type locality, Ma- zatlin, Sinaloa, and Alamos, Sonora. #8 Validity questioned by Bogert and Oliver, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 83, 1945, pp. 342-343, who synonymize it with L. melanonotus. The latter species needs careful revision. We are certain of the dis- tinctness of occidentalis among Mexican populations and accordingly list it here. The other populations of

melanonotus appear extremely heterogeneous, and, of course, comparisons of any one population, however distinct, with all others, cannot be very impressive, as Bogert and Oliver have observed.

| | |

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 57

LEPTODACTYLUS MELANONOTUS (Hallowell)

Cystignathus melanonotus HALLOWELL, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 12, 1860, p. 485. ;

Leptodactylus melanonotus Broccut, Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 1, 1881, p. 20.—KE.Loag, U. S. Nat Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 82-83, 88-89.—Gaiaz, Carnegie Inst. Washington Publ. No. 457, 1936, p. 291 (tadpole)—Bocgrrt and Outrver, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 83, 1945, pp. 342-348.

? Cystignathus microtis Corn, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 18, 1879, p. 265 (Guanajuato, Mexico; U.S.N.M. No. 9906).

Cystignathus perlaevis Corr, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 18, 1879, pp. 269-270 (Japana [—Tapana—Tapanatepec] Oaxaca; U.S.N.M. No. 10041).

Leptodactylus caliginosus GUNTHER, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1900, p. 214 (nec L. caliginosus Girard).

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 6264.

Tupe locality —Nicaragua.

Range.—Southern Sonora and San Luis Potosi southward along both coasts to Costa Rica. Recorded in Mexico from the states of Sonora, Sinaloa, Michoacan, Colima, Guanajuato (erroneously), Nay- arit, Guerrero, Veracruz, San Luis Potosi, Campeche, Yucatan, Tabasco, Oaxaca, Chiapas, and Jalisco.

vol.

Genus ELEUTHERODACTYLUS Duméril and Bibron

Eleutherodactylus Dum&RiL and Brsron, Erpétologie générale, vol. 8, 1841, p. 620. Epirhexis Corn, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, new ser., vol. 6, 1866, p. 96 (genotype Batrachyla longipes Baird).

Genotype.—EHleutherodactylus martinicensis (=Hylodes martinicen- sis) Tschudi.

Range.—Southern Texas and Sonora to Brazil and Peru, the Antil- les.

Syecies.—About 225, of which 28 occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF ELEUTHERODACTYLUS

bo

1. Arboreal forms with tips of digits strongly dilated____-_-._----------- Terrestrial forms for the most part, digits not or very moderately dilated;

none of digit tips showing an emargination_-______-_-------------- 8 2. Two or more of the outer digitai disks with a median terminal notch.__ 3 Outer digital disks without trace of a median terminal notch_-------- a 3. Vocal sac absent in males; tympanum of males about two-thirds diam- eter of eye; upper part of tympanum not blackish__-_-__------------- 4 Vocal sac present in males; tympanum of males less than half length of eye; upper part of tympanum usually blackish____---------------- 5

4, Tibiotarsal articulation (heel) to much beyond tip of snout; tympanum brownish with a lighter center; a tarsal fold present; vomerine teeth reach forward to a line between middle of choanae; 50 mm-_. alfredi (p. 60) Tibiotarsal articulation to nostril; no tarsal fold present; vomerine teeth completelv behind level of choanae; 42.5 mm__------ conspicuus (p. 60)

58

5.

10.

Lie

BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Heel to anterior edge of eye; disks of three outer fingers and toes rather strongly emarginated, usually a distinct inguinal black spot; usually two or more dark diagonal spots or lines on sides, separated by cream

TINGS.) 52) MAM ee a ee ee, a ee a spatulatus (p.

Heel-to snout. tip; or,beyonds 2 32s. a oe ee ee

. Heel reaching much beyond tip of snout; dorsum light, sides darker;

canthus rostralis distinct; a median elevated area on occiput and in- terorbital region; toes less dilated at tip; emargination of outer digital disks not pronounced; no diagonal lines on sides; tarsal fold indicated

by one or two small tubercles; 25 mm______________~- decoratus (p.

Heel reaching tip of snout; gray markings on a lighter background; sides not darker than dorsum; a symmetrical mark indicated on shoulders; elevated area on head absent or faintly indicated; canthus rounded or wanting; tarsal fold indicated by an elongate tubercle; 28.5 mm.

hidalgoensis (p. . Toes short, hylalike, but without a cartilage between last two phalanges;

a pair of narrow dorsolateral ridges; no large distinct black spots on

backer 20 nmin we: Pes ao ee See eee Oe ee eee ene batrachylus (p.

Toes apparently longer, not especially hylalike; the disks less widened; no dorsolateral ridges; a triangular mark on occiput; other dark marks

omback: S8rmm- 42g: ices bo apres i ee ee aye ne 2 longipes (p.

No trace of an inner tarsal fold; vomerine teeth present but weak (or perhaps occasionally absent in mexicanus).—.__---2—----__-_=-.__.— A tarsal fold or tarsal tubercle present (absent or indistinct in matudai, in which the edge of the tarsus is thickened but not elevated)___________-

. An inguinal gland present, rather distinct; vocal sacs in males absent

(except in occidentalis); toes very slightly dilated, disks with trans- verse groove present or absent, visible if slightly dehydrated; super- numerary tubercles absent on foot (except in occidentalis), but present, larger orvsmatiler, on-hande': 22 o> Se ee ok eee ee Vocal sacs present, the toes blunt, slightly swollen at tip; large super- numerary tubercles present on soles and palms, 8 or 9 on former, 5 or 6 on latter; no inguinal gland evident; an intertympanic fold usually DICSON G2 22 2 SA ek an Se First finger longer than second; inner metatarsal tubercle compressed, very large, about equal to length of first toe; outer tubercle about one-fifth of inner; some rather indistinct supernumerary tubercles on sole; no outer palmar tubercle; vomerine teeth well developed; male with vocal sac; gonadal membranes white; heel to nostril; heels over-

Revs AD nas ee agg hs ees hae Seine wiaewep ee ae occidentalis (p.

First finger shorter than (rarely equal to) second; inner metatarsal tubercle not compressed; vocal sac absent__.-__..._....--.-1-__.1_-

Heels not touching when legs are folded; heel to eye; inner metatarsal tubercle very large, broad oval-conical, very little shorter than first toe; outer tubercle one-fifth of inner; supernumerary tubercles obsolete on sole, present on palm; small outer palmar tubercle present, touching median; vomerine teeth small, weak; gonadal membranes white; skin above minutely granular; abdomen coarsely granular; ventral disk not reaching femur; no tubercles on outer part of tarsus; 42 mm.

calcitrans (p.

Heels overlapping when legs are folded; belly smooth_______.________-

61)

61)

61) 61)

61) 9

18

10

13

62)

11

62) 12

12.

13.

15.

16.

£7.

18.

19.

20.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO

Outer metatarsal tubercle one-third or more of inner; a few tubercles on outer edge of tarsus; inner metatarsal tubercle smaller and more elon- gate-oval than that of preceding species; large, outer palmar tubercle partly fused to median; digits very slightly dilated at tips, without transverse grooves; vomerine teeth reduced or absent; some variable dorsal ridges, the skin usually granular; vomerine teeth reduced (or occasionally absent); testicular membranes white; 40 mm.

mexicanus (p.

No tubercles on tarsus; tips of digits widened into small disks with trans- verse grooves; heel much beyond tip of snout; heels overlapping much when legs are folded; vomerine teeth small, weak; inner metatarsal tubercle oval, rather small, less than three-fifths length of inner toe; outer palmar tubercle fused to median; ventral disk distinct; gonadal membranes black, inguinal gland yellowish (perhaps referable to Micro- Gainchyius) mittee ho eo obo Lee seer sold eee saltator (p

Heavy toadlike forms with or without a tarsal fold; a strongly defined VemunslaGis Kkaea eee ee See oS ee Saeco e peas eee see

Smaller, slender froglike forms, lacking a tarsal fold; the head as wide as body; ventral disk present but not strongly defined; more or less areo- late, rough or striated; heel to between eye and nostril__------------

A sharp-edged tarsal fold; a small web between the toes; head very wide; a small outer metatarsal tubercle; a large protuberant inner; 74 mm.

laticeps (p.

No trace of a tarsal fold; no trace of webbing between toes___--------- Limbs short; heel to tympanum; heels widely separated when legs are folded (7 mm.); skin above minutely corrugated, without tubercles; outer metatarsal tubercle three-quarters of inner; tympanum about three-fifths of eye diameter; eyelid greater than interorbital distance;

7 SU Peerage pee SS en aaa eee cactorum (p.

Limbs longer; heel to eye; heels touch or overlap a little when limbs are folded; eyelid less than interorbital space_-__----------------------- Tympanum two-thirds to four-fifths diameter of eye; dorsal surface NiMmoOothe POU amM=—— ==. -------+--------==------= latrans (p. Tympanum scarcely one-half diameter of eye; dorsal surface rough,

pranuiate sO mam 22-02) 2-2 =~ - se 5 aa- --=--Se- ee augusti (p.

An intratympanic fold; skin smoother, median palmar tubercle narrowed, elongate; limbs strongly barred with double white lines; 44 mm.

bolivari (p.

No intratympanic fold; supernumerary tubercles on hand very large; skin rougher, tubercular; median palmar tubercle not strongly nar- rowed; hind limbs not barred with double white lines; 43 mm.

tarahumaraensis (p.

MaduntinetciarsnitGlder 6 2402 2-3 £2 2b Sono ben Sao eae A tubercle present on tarsus instead of a fold_----------------------- A mere vestige of a web between toes; edges of canthus rostralis sharp; a pair of sinuous dorsal ridges from eye to rump, nearest together at middle of body; tips of toes scarcely dilated; no distinct tarsal fold;

Materia oe eee ec a nas matudai (p.

A small distinct web present between toes; edges of canthus not elevated_ A vocal sac present in males; tubercles in occipital region tending to form a W-shaped pattern; toe disks rounder, wider than fingers; first and sec- ond fingers subequal; toes one-third webbed; a slight, narrow, elongate

tarsal fold extends half length of tarsus; 57.5 mm_-_------- vocalis (p.

Vocal sae wanting in males__--------------------------------"----"

59

62)

. 63)

14

17

63)

15

63) 16 63)

63)

64)

64) 19 23

64)

21

60 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

21. Heel reaches much beyond tip of snout__-----.----------.---2.----- 22 Heel reaches tip of snout; toes about one-fourth webbed; an elevated tarsal fold about two-thirds length of tarsus; first finger longer than

second; (72 mim se sa by ee ee Ee ee rugulosus (p. 65) 22. Very large species; tarsal fold low, runs halfway to heel; first and second fingers about equal; tympanum three-fifths eye in female; canthus

rosiralis: distinct} 93:nmmi_es.430 ora. Tei ee ee natator (p. 65) Smaller species; tarsal fold greatly elevated, forming a free fringe, four- fifths length of tarsus; first finger longer than second; toes between one-

third and one-half webbed; 51 mm_-______-------------- avocalis (p. 65)

23. A white, black-edged stripe on upper jaw; 37 mm____-______ beatae (p. 65) Normally no white, black-edged stripe on upper lip (rarely present in

PONUStUS) Hilal Bole Lee SRE, isa aE seed OEY a ey eet eee 24

24. A pair of dorsolateral lines from corners of eye converging somewhat on rump, enclosing a uniform fawn-colored area; a pair of black dots on

OCciput 3 Ome eee eee Se ee dorsoconcolor (p. 66) Net, the above,patterns = 2.022 S05 ose eee ee eee ee 25 25. A pair of dorsal ridges forming an hourglass pattern, me area between, and somewhat overlapping the ridges, deep purple; or 4 to 6 ridges, a pair reaching tip efssnout soo ames ss see sae See eee venustus (p. 66) Pattern:notiasiabove! aus she mi Laue Maree ye uleyt teresa ee ies Dee 26

26. Dorsolateral lines from corners of eyes cross on the shoulders forming

an X-shaped pattern; a pair of black dots in middle of back; almost uniform clay to cream-white above; 27 mm_______-- macdougalli (p. 66) Not the above patterns me scar a te Seep eek fap eee eer 2

27. Similar to above but the ridges coming closer together where they meet two

tubercles, then continue back rather narrowly separated; very variable

in color but usually loreal black stripe and an angular spot above tym- PORTE ES EN os anes ep eh hed ly San ney Sa rhodopis (p. 66)

Not the above pattern; ridges arising more medially than eye corner and

not coming so close together on shoulders, extending back a variable distance; variable color pattern; 38 mm____-.------------ dunni (p. 67)

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS ALFREDI (Boulenger)

? Hylodes conspicillatus Broccui, Mission scientifique au. Mexique et dans V Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 2, 1882, p. 59 (nec Hylodes conspicil- latus Gunther, 1858).

Hylodes alfredi BouLENGER, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1898, pp. 480-481, pl. 39, five

Eleutherodactylus alfredi Kmiuoce, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 94-95, 99-100.—TayYtor and Smiru, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 566,

Type.—(Cotypes) Brit. Mus. Nos. 98.2.19.1 and 98.4.7.1.

Type locality —Atoyac, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Central eastern Veracruz. Reported from Orizaba, Atoyac, and Cuautlapan in Veracruz.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS CONSPICUUS Taylor and Smith

Eleutherodactylus conspicuus TayLor and Smitn, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 567-569, fig. 60A.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 61

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 116509.

Type locality.—Piedras Negras, Guatemala, practically on Mexico- Guatemala border.

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS SPATULATUS Smith

Eleutherodactylus spatulatus Situ, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 52, 1939, pp. 187-190, pl. 2, figs. 4, 5—Tayzor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, p. 304, pl. 27, figs. 6, 7, 11.

Type.—U.S.N.M. field No. 3787 of Hobart M. Smith, now U.S. N.M. No. 106027.

Type locality—Cuautlapan, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS DECORATUS Taylor

Eleutherodactylus decoratus Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 301-303, pl. 25, figs. 1-4, pl. 27, fig. 9.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 28720.

Type locality.—Near Banderilla, 6 miles west of Jalapa, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from La Joya and Banderilla, Veracruz.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS HIDALGOENSIS Taylor

Eleutherodactylus hidalgoensis TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 299-301, pl. 25, figs. 5-8, pl. 27, fig. 10.

Type—EHT-HMS No. 24454.

Type locality—About 4 miles north of Tianguistengo, Hidalgo, Mexico.

Range.—Eastern Hidalgo, and central Veracruz. Known only from the type locality, and Tequeyutepec, Veracruz.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS BATRACHYLUS Taylor

Eleutherodactylus longipes BARBouR (nec Baird), Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 8, 1923, pp. 81-83.

Eleutherodactylus batrachylus TayLor, Proc. New England Zool. Club, vol. 18, 1940, pp. 13-16, pls. 1-2.

Type.—Mus. Comp. Zool. No. 9308. Type locality—Miquihuana, Tamaulipas, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS LONGIPES (Baird)

Batrachyla longipes Batrp, Report on the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, vol. 2, Reptiles, 1859, p. 35, pl. 37, figs. 1-3 (no description). Eleutherodactylus longipes Keuioac, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 95,

107 (part). 757435485

62 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Type.—Formerly in U.S. National Museum; now lost (fide Kellogg). Type locality Mexico, the exact locality doubtful. Range.—Unknown.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS OCCIDENTALIS Taylor

Borborocoetes mexicanus BOULENGER, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1898, pp. 477, 481, pl. 39, fig. 2, 2a [not Leuiperus mexicanus= Eleutherodactylus mexicanus (Brocchi)].

Eleutherodactylus occidentalis Tayutor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 54, 1941, pp. 91-92.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, p. 117, pl. 4, fig. 1. -

Type.—(Cotypes) Brit. Mus. No. 92.2.8.66-67.

Type locality Hacienda el Florencio, Zacatecas, Mexico.

Range.—Southwestern edge of the central Mexican plateau. Speci- mens have been examined or have been reported from Sinaloa: Plomosas; Columa: Queseria, Paso del Rio; Zacatecas: Hacienda el Florencio; Jalisco: ‘Piedras Negras,’ Agua Azul, Rosario, 11 miles west of Guadalajara, Nevado de Colima (8,000 feet), Magdalena; Nayarit: Cerro San Juan; Michoacdén, near Uruapan.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS CALCITRANS (Giinther)

Hylodes calcitrans GUNTHER, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1900, p. 230, pl. 67, fig. B.

Eleutherodactylus calcitrans Taytor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 54, 1941, p. 983.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, p. 117, pl. 5, fig. 2.

Type.—Brit. Mus. No. 1901.12.19.25-43.

Type locality —Omilteme, Guerrero, and Jalisco, Mexico (restricted to Omilteme, Guerrero).

Range.—Guerrero. Probably distributed through the Sierra Madre del Sur (the Jalisco specimen is probably referable to another species).

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS MEXICANUS (Brocchi)

Leuiperus (sic)mexicanus Broccui, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 1, 1879, p. 484.

Eleutherodactylus mexicanus Ke.tuoce, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 98-99, 108-112 (part).—Taytor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 54, 1941, pp. 93-94.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, p. 73, pl. 8, figs. 2, 2a—2c.

Type —Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris?

Type locality— Mexico.

Range.—Oaxaca and ? Veracruz. Recorded from Cerro San Felipe (10,000 feet elevation), Cosolapa, La Parada (7,800 feet), mountains west of Oaxaca (9,400 feet), ? Tehuantepec, Totontepec, Lachiguiri, Cerro de las Flores, in the state of Oaxaca; ? Pan de Olla (near Tezuit- lan), Veracruz.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 63 ELEUTHERODACTYLUS SALTATOR Taylor

Eleutherodactylus saltator Taytor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 54, 1941, pp; 89-91; Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, p. 117, pl. 4, fig. 2,

Type.—KHT-HMS No. 24301.

Type locality.—Omilteme, Guerrero, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality. Probably distributed through the higher parts of the Sierra Madre del Sur.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS LATICEPS (Duméril)

Hylodes laticeps Dumf&rin, Ann. Sci. Nat. Paris, ser. 3, zool., vol. 19, 1853, p. 178.—DvuMERIL, Bipgon, and Dumé&ri1, Erpétologie générale: vol. 9, 1854 p. 408, Atlas, pl. 99, figs. 1-4.

Eleutherodactylus laticeps Kutuoce, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 93 106-107.

Type-—Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 509 (No. 1547). Type locality Yucatén, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS CACTORUM Taylor

Eleutherodactylus cactorum Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 391-394, text fig. 2.

Type—EHT-HMS No. 6383.

Type locality —Kailometer 226, 20 miles northwest of Tehuacdn, Puebla, Mexico.

Range.—Eastern Puebla (Upper Balsan Province).

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS LATRANS (Cope)

Lithodytes latrans Corn, U. 8S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 17, 1880, p. 25; U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 34, 1889, pp. 316-317, fig. 80.

Eleutherodactylus latrans SrrsNEGER and Barsour, Checklist of North American amphibians and reptiles, ed. 1, 1917, p. 34.

Type—.? (Cotypes) U.S.N.M. Nos. 10058, 10529, 10751-—53.

Type locality —Helotes, Bexar County, Tex.

Range.—Texas; northern Mexico to San Luis Potosi. Known in Mexico from 10 miles west of Naranjos, San Luis Potosi (KHHT-HMS Collection), and Cuatro Ciénegas, Coahuila.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS AUGUSTI (Dugés)

Hylodes augusti Ducks, in Brocchi, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 3, 1879, pp. 21-22.

Eleutherodactylus augusti Kutuoce, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 106, 1932, pp. 93-94, 100-104.—Smrrn and Necker, Anal. Esc. Nac. Cienc. Biol., vol. 3, 1944, pp. 201-203, pl. 1, fig. 1—Tayzor and Smiru, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95. 1945, pp. 574-575, pl. 24, figs. 7, 8.

64. BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Type.—Alfredo Dugés Museum, Guanajuato, Guanajuato (skele- ton).

Type locality —Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Mexico.

Range.—The western edge and southern part of the central Mexican plateau, and the Sierra Madre del Sur in Guerrero. Specimens are known or have been reported from Nayarit: Cerro San Juan; Durango: Ventanas (“from a mine 1,000 feet deep!’’) ; Guanajuato: Guanajuato, 4 miles west of Acémbaro, Tupdtaro; Zacatecas: Zacatecas; Jalisco: La Laguna (6,900 feet), near Magdalena; Morelos: 10 miles northeast of Cuernavaca; Guerrero: Agua del Obispo; Michoacdén: Lake Patzcuaro

(near Quiroga), Uruapan; Oazaca: Mixtequilla Mountains, Cerro Guengola. ELEUTHERODACTYLUS BOLIVARI Taylor

Eleutherodactylus bolivart TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 298— 299, p. 26, figs. 1-4.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 29564. Type localhity.—Ixtapan del Oro, México, Mexico. Range.—Known from only the type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS TARAHUMARAENSIS Taylor Eleutherodactylus tarahumaraensis TayLor, Copeia, Dec. 27, 1940, pp. 250-253, fig. 1.

? Eleutherodactylus augusti BocerT and OLivEeR (nec Dugés), Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 83, 1945, pp. 405-406 (part).2®

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 23008.

Type locality —Mojarachic, Chihuahua, Mexico; elevation 6,900 feet.

Range.—Known definitely only from the type locality and (?) 2 miles east of Guirocoba, Sonora; sight records for Nayarit (Ixtlin) and adjacent Jalisco (Magdalena) may possibly belong here.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS MATUDAI Taylor

Eleutherodactylus matudai Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 154-157, pl. 11.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 110626. Type locality Mount Ovando, Chiapas, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS VOCALIS Taylor

Eleutherodactylus vocalis TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 401-405, pl. 44, and text fig. 8.

29 It is impossible to accept the idea expressed by Bogert and Oliver that tarahumaraensis and augusti are synonymous. These two species are the most widely different of the entire group of Eleutherodactylus to which they belong.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 65

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 6390.

Type locality.—Hacienda El Sabino, Uruapan, Michoacén, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS NATATOR Taylor

Eleutherodactylus natator TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 394-397, pl. 39, fig. 2, and pl. 40.

Type.-—KHT-HMS No. 6373.

Type locality.—Tlilapam (—Cuautlapan), Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Western Veracruz, northeastern Oaxaca, and probably northeastern Puebla. Recorded or examined from Cuautlapan, Met- lac, and Fortin, Veracruz, and Camotlain, Oazaca.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS AVOCALIS Taylor and Smith

Eleutherodactylus avocalis Taytor and Smiru, Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 580-581.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 116885. Type locality —Tres Cruces, near Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the vicinity of the type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS RUGULOSUS (Cope)

Liyla rugulosa Corx, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 11, 1869, pp. 160-161.

? Hylodes berkenbuschii PrErERS, Monatsb. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1869, pp. 879-880 (probably near Matamoros, Puebla, Mexico; Berlin Mus. No. 6666).

Eleutherodactylus rugulosus KmLuoace, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 95-96, 116-117.—Taytor and Smira, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 578- 579, pl. 23, figs. 3, 4.

Type.—Cotypes, U.S.N.M. Nos. 29971, 29972.

Type locality.—Pacific region of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Mexico.

Range.—Eastern Puebla and Oaxaca southward to El Salvador. Reported in Mexico from Chiapas: Colonia Hidalgo, Finca Judrez, La Magnolia, Rancho Las Gradas, Cruz de Piedra, Colonia Soconusco, La Esperanza (near Escuintla), Salto de Agua, San Juanita, Tonala, Tumbala (4,000 feet); Guerrero: Agua del Obispo; Oaxaca: Pluma, Tehuantepec; Puebla. The published Veracruz references may belong to Hleutherodactylus natator.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS BEATAE (Boulenger)

Hylodes beatae Boutencsr, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 7, vol. 12, 1903, pp. 552- 553.

Syrrhophus mystaceus BaRBour, Proc. Biol. Soc, Washington, vol. 35, 1922, p. 112 (type locality, Cerro de los Estrapajos, Veracruz, Mexico; Mus. Comp. Zool. No. 8241).

Eleutherodactylus beatae Ketuoae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 92-93, 104—105.—Tay or and Smitu, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 572- 573, figs. 60G, 61A.

66 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Type.—Cotypes, Brit. Mus. Nos. 1903.9.30.236; 1903.9.30.237.

Type locality—tLa Perla, near Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico, 6,000 feet elevation.

Range.—Central eastern Veracruz and Pacific Chiapas. Reported from Cuautlapan, Tequeyutepec, Cerro de los Estrapajos (west of Jalapa), La Perla (near Orizaba), Veracruz; La Esperanza, Chiapas.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS DORSOCONCOLOR Taylor

Eleutherodactylus dorsoconcolor TayLtor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 152-154, pl. 10.—Taytor and Smiru, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 574, fig. 61B.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 110619. Type locality—Tequeyutepec, Veracruz, Mexico. Range.—Veracruz. Known only from type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS VENUSTUS (Giinther)

Hylodes venustus GUNTHER, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1900, p. 234, pl. 68, fig. C.

Eleutherodactylus venusius Kmeuuoce, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 96-97, 117-118.—Taytor and Smiru, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 573— 574, fig. 61C—D.

Type.—Brit. Mus. No. 1901.12.19.37.

Type locality.—Jalapa, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Western Veracruz and Chiapas. Reported from Veracruz: Tequeyutepec, Minatitlin, and Jalapa; Chiapas: La Esperanza (near Kscuintla), Salto de Agua (Mount Ovando), Colonia Soconusco.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS MACDOUGALLI Taylor

Eleutherodactylus macdougalli Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 71-73, pl. 7, figs. 1, la-le.

Type—EHT-HMS No. 27482.

Type locality —La Gloria, Oaxaca, Mexico (Atlantic slopes, north of Niltepec, 4,500 feet elevation).

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS RHODOPIS (Cope)

Lithodytes rhodopis Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 18, 1866, p. 323.

Eleutherodactylus rhodopis Nosur, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 38, 1918, p. 327, pl. 16, fig. 1—Kzxrtuoce, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 97-98, 112-115.—Taytior and Smrru, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 576— 578.

Hylodes sallaei GiNTHER, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1868, p. 487, pl. 38, fig. 3 (Mexico; Brit. Mus. No. 57.7.31.27).

? Hylodes plicatus GUN1HER, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1900, p. 228, pl. 66, fig. B (Jalapa, Veracruz, Mexico; Brit. Mus. No. 1901.12.19.38).

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 67

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 16558 (lectotype).

Type locality—Orizaba and Cérdoba, Veracruz; restricted to vicinity of Orizaba.

Range.—San Luis Potosi through Central America to ?Brazil (fide Miranda-Ribeiro). Reported in Mexico from San Luis Potosi: Chapulhuacén; Veracruz: Potrero Viejo, San Juan de Gracia, Cuautla- pan; Chiapas: San Juanito (near Palenque), La Esperanza (near Escuintla), Colonia Soconusco, Tonalé, Las Nubes, Chicharras, Salto de Agua, Las Gradas, Cruz de Piedra, Finca Juarez; Oaxaca: Matias Romero; Tabasco: La Venta.

ELEUTHERODACTYLUS DUNNI Barbour

Eleutherodactylus dunnit Barsour, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 35, 1922, pp. 111-112.—Kertioae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 69, 105-106.— Taytor and Smirn, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 570, 572, fig. 61 E-H.

Type.—Mus. Comp. Zool. No. 8242. Type locality.—Cerro de los Estropajos, west of Jalapa, Veracruz,

Mexico.

Range.—Western Veracruz and eastern Puebla. Reported from

Veracruz: Tequeyutepec, Cuautlapan, Xico, and Cerro de los Es-

tropajos; Puebla: Huauchinango.

Family HYLIDAE Giinther

Hylidae GintuER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, 1858 (1859), p. 96.

KEY TO MEXICAN GENERA OF HYLIDAE

1. Terminal phalanges more or less T-shaped; very small green frogs, the color quickly fading; transparent on venter so internal organs may be

SCCn we SMS PCClestasame a ono Se oe Centrolenella (p. 68) Terminal phalanges more or less claw-shaped; not transparent on ventral

BULIACC Meer ie ih yaewe ails Fat ook ee ee oe cease 2

Za inorheag co-ossiied with cranium. 2. _ 22-22 a 3

Skin on head not co-ossified with cranial bones; head not forming casque. 6

olleadea-bony casque witha lateral shelf2./---.-.=----=-.__---.----.- 4

Head not in form of a bony casque; no palatine or parasphenoid teeth_._ 5

4. Palatine teeth present forming a curved row behind choanae; para- sphenoid teeth present, forming a single median row; lateral shelf

NAC stem BDC CICN ie sate oe Soe ee Se a eee oe et Diaglena (p. 69) Palatine teeth absent; parasphenoid teeth present, small; lateral shelf HAREM MEPS DECIOSE. = il! Maxie aT ES 2 oL ease Triprion (p. 70)

5. A series of high, conical, curved, bony spines surrounded by glands border occipital region, and are continued (much shortened) anteriorly along the borders of skull bones; 1 species_----------- Anotheca (p. 70)

No spines on skull; head tending to bend sharply forward, especially when preserved; 1 species .-.--..--=-22-==222-=2=5- Pternohyla (p. 70)

68 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

6. Pupil vertical; first finger opposable to other three; pollex bone forms a lateral projection on first finger, but without an exposed spine; 3

BPCCIOS H.-A Se DR ee Sy see acre pens Cee Agalychnis (p. 71) Pupil honzgomtal. . 22 soo 50s eae See 2 ae he ea en eee 7

7. First finger with a free rudiment of pollex, and with a free exposed spine; 2 species! Weel ICks Sees eee AE ee: TS Plectrohyla (p. 73) First finger without a free rudiment of pollex and without spine_______- 8

8. A pair of external vocal sacs behind angles of jaws; parotoid spread over back» skingthick*ya"species 23. - 5 swe to eee Acrodytes (p. 74) No pair of vocal sacs behind jaw angles; parotoids absent or indistinct__ 9 9. A pair of subgular vocal sacs in males; 1 species_____--_- Smilisca (p. 75)

None or a single subgular vocal sac

10. No large ventrolateral gland present; individual horny nuptial rugosities on-first finger-of male, smallbor absent... 222-22 5.5552 ee ee 11

A large ventrolateral gland present; nuptial rugosities on male, relatively very large, and reduced in area and numbers; 1 species. Ptychohyla (p. 91)

11. Vomerine teeth absent; vocal sac present or absent; a broad fold of skin

along side to groin; head wide and flat; 2 species__.______ Hylella (p. 76) Vomerine teeth present (absent in H. picta, in which case there is no

lateral: fol dtot skim) <select pert Na er 12

12. Tips of digits not dilated; small terrestrial forms; 1 species_._._._ Acris (p. 77)

Tips of digits widened; arboreal and terrestrial forms; 37 species. Hyla (p. 77)

Genus CENTROCLENELLA Noble Centrolenella None, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 42, 1920, p. 441.

Genotype.—Centrolenella antioquiensis Noble. Range.—Guerrero to Ecuador. Species.—Five, of which two occur in Mexico.”

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF CENTROLENELLA

1. Tibiotarsal articulation reaching several millimeters beyond tip of snout; upperparts smooth; head broad; no fleshy folds on thighs near anus; iris of eye, golden; choanae very large; a cream spot on eyelid; heels overlapping when legs are folded at right angles; 24 mm. fleischmanni (p. 68) Dorsal surface of body and limbs covered with minute rugosities; forearm and toes distinctly broader than preceding, and hand larger; body somewhat shorter and thicker proportionally; iris of eye dark black; heel reaches nostril; no cream spot on eyelid; heels barely touching when legs are folded at right angles to body; maximum size, 23 mm. viridissima (p. 69)

CENTROLENELLA FLEISCHMANNI (Boettger)

Hylella fleischmanni BorttcEr, Bericht. Senck. Nat. Ges., 1893, p. 251. Centrolenella fleischmanni Noxsux, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 37, 1925, pp. 66, 69.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, p. 74. 80 Some authors combine these with Centrolene Jiménez de la Espada, 1872 (Anal. Soc. Esp. Hist. Nat.

vol. 1, p. 87; type C. geckoideum Jiménez de la Espada, Rio Napo, Ecuador), comprised of three species with humeral hooks in males and sometimes in females.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 69

Type.—Senckenberg Mus.

Type locality —San José, Costa Rica.

Range.—Chiapas to Costa Rica. Known in Mexico only from Salto de Agua, Mount Ovando, Chiapas.

CENTROLENELLA VIRIDISSIMA Taylor

Centrolenella viridissima TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 75-77, pl. 9, figs. 2, 2a, 2b.

Type.—EHT-HMS No. 27725. Type locality—Agua del Obispo, Guerrero, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality.

Genus DIAGLENA Cope

Diaglena Corr, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 32, 1887, p. 12.— Tartor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 57-58.

Genotype.—Triprion spatulatus Gtinther.

Range—Pacific coast from southern Sinaloa to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.

Species.—Two.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF DIAGLENA

1. Body skin smooth; canthal ridges unite much behind nostrils forming a ridge that continues to tip of snout; head and body rather slender; uniform green above; 86 mm__--_-------------------- spatulata (p. 69)

Skin above finely granular; canthal ridges unite far forward, not forming a prominent nasal ridge that extends to tip of snout; head broader and longer proportionally; heavily mottled with brown; 98 mm.

reticulata (p. 69) DIAGLENA RETICULATA Taylor

Diaglena reticulata TayYuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 60-61, pl. 4, figs. 1, la—1c; pl. 5, fig. 1.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 115500.

Type locality —Cerro Arenal, Oaxaca, Mexico.

Range.—Tehuantepec region of Oaxaca. Specimens examined or reported from Oazaca: Cerro Arenal, Chivela, San Antonio.

DIAGLENA SPATULATA (Giinther)

Triprion spatulatus GUNTHER, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 5, vol. 10, 1882, p. 279.

Diaglena spatulata Corn, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 32, 1887, p. 12.— KELLoeG, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 131-132, 137-138.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 58-60, pl. 4, figs. 2, 2a-2c; pl. 5, fig. 2.

Type.—(Cotypes) Brit. Mus. Nos. 82.11.13.1; 82.12.5.11-12.

Type locality Presidio de Mazatlan, Sinaloa, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality and vicinity. Re- corded from Sinaloa: Presidio (50 mi. from Mazatlin’’), and “Ve- nodio” (=? Venadillo).

70 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Genus TRIPRION Cope

Pharyngodon Corn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 17, 1865, p. 193 (genotype Pharyngodon petasatus Cope; preoccupied by Pharyngodon Diesing, 1860).

Triprion Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 18, 1866, p. 127.

Genotype.—Pharyngodon petasatus Cope. Range.—Northern Yucatan. Species.—One.

TRIPRION PETASATUS (Cope)

Pharyngodon petasatus Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 17, 1865, pp. 193-194.

Triprion petasatus Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 18, 1866, p. 127.—Kxuioae, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 132, 138-139.—Garen, Carnegie Inst. Washington Publ. No. 457, 1936, pp. 291-292.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 12287. Type locality —Vicinity of Mérida, Yucatén, Mexico. Range.—Yucatén. Reported from Mérida, Chichen Itz4, Santa: Elena Cenote. Genus ANOTHECA Smith

Anotheca Smiru, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 52, 1939, pp. 190-191, pl. 1, figs. 1-3, and pl. 2, fig. 6.

Genotype.—Anotheca coronata (Stejneger). Range.—Central Veracruz, Mexico. Species.—One.

ANOTHECA CORONATA (Stejneger)

Opisthodelphys ovifera GUNTHER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the col- lection of the British Museum, 1858 (1859), p. 117 (Cérdoba, Veracruz, Mexico) (nec Notodelphys ovifera Lichtenstein and Weinland).

Gastrotheca coronata STEINEGER, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 41, 1911, pp. 287- 288.—KeEtuoae, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 181, 183-135.

Anotheca coronata Smitu, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 52, 1939, pp. 190- 191, pl. 1, figs. 1-3, and pl. 2, fig. 6—Taytor and Sarita, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 601-602, figs. 60B-C.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 48279. Type locality —Palomo, Valle de Orosi, Cartago, Costa Rica. Range.—Southern Veracruz to Costa Rica. Specimens are known or recorded from Veracruz: Cuautlapan, Cérdoba, and San Juan de Gracia. Genus PTERNOHYLA Boulenger

Pternohyla Boutencer, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 5, vol. 10, 1882, p. 326. Genotype.—Pternohyla fodiens Boulenger.

Range.—Western central Mexico. Species.—One.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 71

PTERNOHYLA FODIENS Boulenger

Pternohyla fodiens BouLENGER, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 5, vol. 10, 1882, pp. 326-327, figs.—Gtnruer, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batra- chia, 1901, p. 292, pl. 74, fig. B—Krtuioae, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 131, 1385-137.

Hyla rudis Mocquarp, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 9, vol. 1, 1899, pp. 163-164, pl. 1, fig. 3 (Guadalajara and Jalisco in Mexico; Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 373a).

Type.—Brit. Mus. No. 1882.11.27.8.

Type locality —Presidio 50 miles from Mazatlan, Sinaloa, Mexico.

Range.—Sonora to Colima. Specimens have been examined or re- ported from Sonora: Noria; Jalisco: 3 miles east of Autlén; near Colo- titlan, Cerro de Cal, El] Fuerte (near Ocotlan), Guadalajara, Hacienda Santa Maria Magdalena, Jamay, Magdalena, Guadalajara; Nayarit: Acaponeta, Tepic; Sinaloa: Mazatlan, Presidio de Mazatlain, Rosario (250 feet altitude); Colima: Colima, Queseria, Buena Vista.

Genus AGALYCHNIS Cope Agalychnis Corn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 16, 1864, p. 181.

Genotype —Hyla callidryas Cope. Range.—Central Veracruz and Guerrero to Ecuador. Species.—Six, three of which occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF AGALYCHNIS

1. Fingers strongly webbed (one-half to two-thirds); toes three-fourths to fully webbed; digital disks much wider than digits; green above (with a few small cream spots present or absent) ; ventral and concealed surfaces BRA COMES UML Seto ee Scr meee = ae a eee moreletii (p. 71) Fingers webbed one-half or less, toes two-thirds or less__---------------- 2 2. Fingers very slightly webbed; toes about one-third webbed; terminal toe pads searcely wider than digits; green above, white or yellowish cream below and on concealed surfaces; numerous discrete white spots low on sides (occasionally on back); eyes not red; 107 mm__-_--- dacnicolor (p. 72) Fingers about one-third, toes one-third webbed or slightly more; terminal pads distinctly wider than digits; a series of dark (or green) quadrangular marks low on side, separated by diagonal cream lines; eye red; body green above, yellowish or white below; 55 mm_--_------- callidryas (p. 72)

AGALYCHNIS MORELETII (A. Duméril)

Hyla moreletii A. Domérm, Ann. Sci. Nat. Paris, ser. 3, zool., vol. 19, 1853, p. 169.

Agalychnis moreletii Corn, Nat. Hist. Rev., 1860, p. 110.—Taytor and SMITH, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 599-601, pl. 31.

Phyllomedusa moreletii Knuiuoce, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 142-148, 146-147, figs. 19a, 20a, b.

Hyla holochlora Sauvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1860 (1861), pp. 460-461, pl. 32, fig. 2 (Cobin, Guatemala; Brit. Mus. No. 641.26.142).

we BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Type —Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 428 (parchment label 767).

Type locality —Coban, Verapaz, Guatemala.

Range.—Atlantic slopes from central Veracruz and Pacific slopes from the Isthmus of Tehuantepec southward to Panama. Reported in Mexico from Veracruz: Cuautlapan, north of Orizaba, Volcano of Tuxtia, Cérdoba, Berta (near Coatzacoalcos); Chiapas: Finca Juarez; Campeche: Tuxpefia Camp; Yucatdn: 6% miles south of Chichen Itz4; Tabasco: 'Tepeaca; Oaxaca: Mirador (Hacienda near San Miguel).

AGALYCHNIS DACNICOLOR (Cope)

Phyllomedusa dacnicolor Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 16, 1864, p. 181.—Kerttoce, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 142, 143-144. Agalychnis dacnicolor Corn, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, ser. 2, vol. 6, 1866, p. 86.—Tayuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 40-42, pl. 2, fig. 2, pl. 3, fig. 2 (tadpole).—Taytor and Smita, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus.,

vol. 95, 1945, p. 599, pl. 28, fig. 1.

Type.—¥ormerly in U.S. National Museum; now lost (fide Kellogg).

Type locality —Near Colima, Colima, Mexico.

Range.—Pacific slopes from southern Sonora to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. Specimens examined or reported from Sonora: Alamos, Guirocoba; Sinaloa: Mazatlan, Presidio (‘50 miles from Mazatlan’’), San Francisquito, Rosario, San Blas; Michoacdn: Cicio; Nayarit: Acaponeta, Santiago, Rosamorada, Tepic; Colima: Colima, 2 miles from Colima, east of Lo de Villa, Paso del Rio, Queseria, Man- zanillo, Tecoman, Villa Alvarez, Santiago; Guerrero: Acapulco, Ometepec (200 feet altitude), near Garrapata, 1 mile north of Organos, Rio Balsas, Kilometer 240 (north of Mexcala), Ocotillo, San Luis Allende, Tierra Colorada; Morelos: Cuernavaca, near Huajintlan; Oaxaca: Tehuantepec.

AGALYCHNIS CALLIDRYAS (Cope)

Hyla callidryas Corn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 14, 1862, p. 359. Agalychnis callidryas Copr, Nat. Hist. Rev., 1865, p. 110.—Gar1en, Carnegie Inst. Washington Publ. No. 457, 1936, p. 292.

Phyllomedusa helenae KetLoae (nec Cope), U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1982, pp. 142, 145.

Type. - Unknown.

?Type locality —Cérdoba, Veracruz, México.

Range-——Central Veracruz south to Guatemala. Reported or examined from Veracruz: Tierra Colorada, Berta; Puebla: Tezuitlan; Tabasco: La Venta, Santo Tomas; Yucatdén: Chichen Itza.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 73

Genus PLECTROHYLA Brocchi *!

Plectrohyla Broccut, Bull. Soc. Philom, Paris, ser. 7, vol. 1, 1877, p. 93.—Harr- wee, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool., Univ. Michigan, No. 437, 1941, p. 1.

Cauphias Broccnt, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 1, 1877, p. 129 (type same as for Plectrohyla).

Genotype.—Plectrohyla guatemalensis Brocchi. Range.—Chiapas and Guatemala. Species.—Five, of which two occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF PLECTROHYLA

1, Snout terminating in a sharp point, the canthus with a sharp edge; nostrils not so far forward as lip; skin very pustular, rough, in males; toes webbed to near terminal pads on third and fifth toes, leaving two joints free on fourth; tympanum more or less visible; tarsal fold not a free DADE BIZ AON Sooo son old dos cee SI ae sagorum (p. 73) Snout blunt, truncate, the region about nostrils swollen, elevated; nostrils at extreme anterior part of snout, anterior to or as far forward as edge of upper lip; tarsal fold forming a long free fiexible flap; toes webbed to terminal disk except on fourth, which has distal joint nearly free; tym- panum almost or completely hidden by thick pustulate skin; known VASAT SIZE se OLIN 2 cman tee SS ke matudai (p. 73)

PLECTROHYLA MATUDAI Hartweg

Plectrohyla matudai Hartwee, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 4387, 1941, pp. 5-10.—-Taytor and Smita, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 596-597, fig. 60D, pl. 29.

Plectrohyla ‘Form a” Harrwese and Orton, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 488, 1941, pp. 2-5, figs. 1-2.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 39-40 (on tadpoles).

Type.—Univ. Michigan Mus. Zool. No. 88863.

Type locality—Mount Ovando, District of Soconusco, Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality and vicinity.

PLECTROHYLA SAGORUM Hartweg

Plectrohyla sagorum Hartwea, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 437, 1941, pp. 2-5, pl. 1, figs. 1, 2, 3—Taytor and Smits, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 597-598, fig. 60H, pl. 30.

Plectrohyla ‘Form 6” Hartwee and Orton, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 438, 1941, pp. 5-6 (tadpoles).

Type.—Univ. Michigan Mus. Zool. No. 88862. Type locality —Mount Ovando, District of Soconusco, Chiapas, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality and vicinity. 31 The name Boana Gray is apparently the earliest name for Central and South American frogs with a rudimentary pollex. This antedates Hypsiboas, which has been used for the group. The name Plectrohyla Brocchi is tentatively retained, since there seems to be a possible generic difference in the characters of the

spine on the pollex and the vomerine teeth between the northern forms and those in southern Central America and South America, which are referable to Boana.

74 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Genus ACRODYTES Fitzinger

Acrodytes Firzincer, Systema reptilium, 1843, p. 30.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, pp. 62-63.

Scytopis Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 14, 1862, p. 355 (geno- type Scytopis hebes Cope= Hyla venulosa Daudin).

Genotype.—Hyla venulosa Daudin=Rana venulosa Laurenti, 1768, Synopsin reptilium, p. 31 (“Indiis’’).

Range.—Southern Tamaulipas and Sinaloa to Brazil.

Species.—Three Mexican and at least one and probably other extra- limital species.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF ACRODYTES

1. Lacking a dorsal pattern of black blotches or dorsolateral stripes; large pustules on back with or without a black tip; eye large, greater than its

distance to nostril; Chiapas; 70 mm_.___.__-__-__---_-- modesta (p. 74) A dorsal pattern of a pair of indefinite dorsal stripes and blotches or of blotches alone; eye less than or equal to its distance from nostril___-__-_ 2

2. Anterior blotches separated from posterior by a broad band of ground color; venter immaculate; parotoids not strongly thickened; Guerrero; OS hmm Biowls 5. oh So a ee Se inflata (p. 74) A pair of broad, dark, irregular stripes on back, with a light lateral stripe bordering them; parotoids thickened, making skin thick and leathery; digital disks distinctly smaller than in the preceding; San Luis Potosi to Chiapas. ] SU 2) SEs See OE ee ee eee spilomma (p. 75)

ACRODYTES MODESTA Taylor and Smith

Acrodytes modestus TayLoR and Smit, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 594-596, pl. 27, fig. 2, pl. 28, figs. 2, 3.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 115013.

Type locality.—Cruz de Piedra, near Acacoyagua, Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Pacific drainage of Chiapas. Reported from Cruz de Piedra, La Esperanza (near Escuintla), and Colonia Soconusco.

ACRODYTES INFLATA Taylor Acrodytes inflatus TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, pp. 64-69, pl. 9.

Type.-—EHT-HMS No. 17890.

Type locality.—Near La Venta, Guerrero, Mexico.

Range.—The Pacific coast in Guerrero and possibly north to Mazatlin, Sinaloa (it is possible that the following records of Hyla venulosa may refer to this form: Sinaloa: Presidio [Boulenger]; Colima: Colima [Oliver]; Nayarit: Santa Teresa [Kellogg]).

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 75

ACRODYTES SPILOMMA (Cope)

Hyla lichenosa GbntHER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, 1858, pp. 102-103, pl. 8, fig. C (part only: the cotypes from “Veracruz,” “Cérdoba,” and “Mexico,” seven specimens, all in Brit. Mus.; name restricted by Boulenger, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia s. Ecaudata in the collection of the British Museum, 1882, p. 364, to the other cotypes, from ‘South America,” “Amazons,” and “America” 22),

Hyla spilomma Corr, Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., vol. 17, 1877, p. 86.—Taytor and Smita, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, pp. 593-594, pl. 27, fig. 1.

Hyla nigropunctata Bou.EnGcer, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, ed. 2, 1882, p. 366 (cotypes, Brit. Mus. Nos. 81.10.31.20, 59.9.20.2, Jalapa, Veracruz).

Hyla venulosa Keiuoae (nec Laurenti), U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 154— 155, 176-179, figs. 19c, 20d.

Type.—Lost. (Fide Kellogg.)

Type locality.—Cosomaloapam, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—From Tamaulipas to Chiapas and perhaps Central Amer- ica. The species has been reported (as Hyla venulosa) from Tamauli- pas: Tampico; San Luis Potosi: Rio Coy (near Pujal), Tamuzunchale; Veracruz: San Juan de la Punta, Cuautlapan, Tezonapa, Misantla, Jalapa, Veracruz, Cérdoba, Panuco, Cerro de Gallo, Tierra Colorada; Campeche: Champotén, Tres Brazos, Becén; Chiapas: Cruz de Piedra (near Acacoyagua); Tabasco: Frontera; Oaxaca: Tuxtepec; Yucatdn: Chichen Itz.

Genus SMILISCA Cope

Smilisca Corn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 17, 1865, p. 194.

Genotype.—Smilisca daulinia Cope=Hyla baudinii Duméril and

Bibron.** Range.—Southern Texas and Sonora to Honduras. Species.—One, with an indefinite number of subspecies.

SMILISCA BAUDINIT BAUDINII (Duméril and Bibron)

Hyla baudiniti Dumérit and Brsron, Erpétoiogie générale, vol. 8, 1841, pp. 564- 565.—Keuioae, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 155, 160-163, figs. le,

19c, 20c.

32 Kellogg (loc. cit.) mentions and describes the Mexican types and indicates that these were the only ones, following an ambiguity in Boulenger’s treatment, which (op. cit., p. 366) clearly designates the Mexican specimens “types” of Giinther’s lichenosa. Boulenger obviously did not imply that these were the only “types” (he did not select a single specimen as ‘“‘the’’ type), and in fact indicated that there were others by quoting ‘‘Hyla lichenosa, part” in the synonymy of both Hyla venulosa and Hyla nigropunctata, and by allo- cating Giinther’s name with venulosa while naming certain ones of the cotypes as nigropunctata, Unfor- tunately he failed to designate clearly the types of lichenosa which he referred to venulosa, although some may be listed. To avoid further ambiguity we hereby designate as lectotype the adult male from the “Amazons,” which is listed by Giinther as a cotype (op. cit., p. 102) and may be specimen | listed by Boulenger (op. cit., p. 365).

% Pecularities in the skull of this species, combined with the paired vocal sacs, cause us to consider this form as a representative of a genus apart from Hyla.

76 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Smilisca baudinit Dickerson, The frog book, 1906, pp. 151-152, pl. 57, figs. 178— 183.

Hyla baudiniit baudinit SrrsinEGER and Barrovr, Checklist of North American amphibians and reptiles, ed. 2, 1923, p. 29.

Hyla vanvlietii Batrp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 61 (Brownsville, Tex.; U.S.N.M. No. 3239, lost).

Smilisca daulinia Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 17, 1865, p. 65, footnote (= Hyla baudinit).

H.(yla) muricolor Cops, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 14, 1862, p. 359 (Mirador, Veracruz; U.S.N.M. No. 25097).

Type.—Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 401 (No. 4798).

Type locality.—Mexico.

Range.—Southern Texas and Sonora south along lowlands to Hon- duras. Reported in Mexico from Distrito Federal and the states of Campeche, Chiapas, Colima, Guerrero, Hidalgo, Jalisco, Nayarit, Nuevo Leén, Oaxaca, Puebla, Quintana Roo, San Luis Potosf, Sinaloa, Sonora, Tabasco, Tamaulipas, Veracruz, and Yucatan.

Genus HYLELLA Reinhardt and Liitken

Hylella RetnHARD? and LUrren, Vid. Medd. Nat. Foren. Kigbenhavn, 1861, pt. 1, 1862, p. 199.

Exerodonta Broccut, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 3, 1879, p. 20 (Exerodonta sumichrasti Brocchi).

Genotype.—Hylella tenera (herewith designated). Range.—Morelos and Oaxaca to Paraguay and Brazil. Species.—Nine, two of which occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF HYLELLA

1. A vocal sac present; chin strongly granular; undersurface of arms with irregular granules; pads on digit tips large___.__.__-------- azteca (p. 77) Vocal sac absent; chin not or but very slightly granular; undersurface of arm smooth; an elevation usually present on vomers (rarely with teeth); digital pads smaller. =: oso ae eee ae eee sumichrasti (p. 76)

HYLELLA SUMICHRASTI (Brocchi)

Exerodonta sumichrasti Broccut, Bull. Soe. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 3, 1879, p. 20.

Hylella platycephala Corr, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 18, 1879, pp. 267-268 (Tapana [=Tapanatepec], Oaxaca, Mexico; U.S.N.M. No. 10037, five cotypes).

Hylella sumichrasti BoULENGER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Ecaudata in the collection of the British Museum, ed. 2, 1882, p. 366.—Kertuoce, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1982, pp. 180, 181-182.

Type.—Lost, presumably (fide Kellogg).

Type locality —Santa Efigenia, Oaxaca, Mexico.

Range.—Semi-arid Pacific slopes of Oaxaca at the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. Known from Oazaca: Santa Efigenia, Japana (=Tapa-

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO ve

natepec), south of Chasumba, between Huamelula, Zapotitlin (1,900 feet elevation) and Llano Ocotol, Cerro Arenal, Tres Cruces, Lachi- guiri, Portillo los Nanches (7 leagues northwest of Tehuantepec), “Tehuantepec,’’ La Concepcién, Rio Grande, 12% miles north of Niltepec (the report from Colima: Cualata, by Kellogg, is based on a rather shriveled specimen which apparently belongs to another species). HYLELLA AZTECA Taylor

Hylella azteca Tayuor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 56, 1943, pp. 49-52.

Type —EHT-HMS No. 17525. Type locality —Tepoztlan, Morelos, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality; probably occurs in adja-

cent Puebla.*4 Genus ACRIS Duméril and Bibron

Acris Dumf&r1u and Bisron, Erpétologie générale, vol. 8, 1841, p. 506.

Genotype —Rana gryllus LeConte. Range.—Connecticut to Utah and south to the Gulf and to central Coahuila.

Species.—Two, one in Mexico. ACRIS CREPITANS Baird

Acris crepitans Bairp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 59.— Duwn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 90, 1938, pp. 153-154.

Type.— None known.

Type locality —Northern States generally.

Range.—‘ Connecticut to the Canadian northwest, and to Georgia, Louisiana and Texas; from sea level to 2000 ft.’ In Mexico, central Coahuila (Musquiz).

Genus HYLA Laurenti Hyla LAvRENTI, Synopsin reptilium, 1768, p. 32. Hyliola Mocquarp, Nouv. Arch. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, ser. 4, vol. 1, 1899, p. 337 (Hyliola regilla Mocquard= Hyla regilla Baird and Girard).

Genotype.—Hyla viridis Laurenti.

Range.—World-wide, excluding Arctic and sub-Arctic regions, and most of Africa.

Species.—Approximately 350, about 180 of these American, of which 37 are Mexican.

34Sight record, specimen lost, Hobart M. Smith.

757435—48—_6

78 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF HYLA

1. A dark stripe (absent in cérdenasz) from tip of snout to eye, and from eye diagonal to point on side of body, and usually bordered by light color or stripe above or below or both; body usually green in life with or without dark spots on back; terminal toe disks small with never more than a vestige of web between fingers; apparently largely terrestrial (euphorbiacea, an exception, is apparently largely arboreal). eximia group... 2 No dark stripe from tip of snout to eye and from eye diagonally to a point low on sides of body (sometimes indicated in phaeota, a large speciesathe body, notwereen). 22s 4 aoe. See ee ee ee 8 2. Skin above strongly granular or pustulate; Baja California; 42 mm. regilla (p. 82) Skin jsmooth-or/minutely: corrugated: =~ 2 2 22-2 ee ee 3 3. Posterior and to a lesser extent anterior region of femur and groin with blackish or brownish reticulation enclosing rounded or irregular yellow- cream spots; Veracruz, Puebla, and Oaxaca; 37mm_ euphorbiacea (p. 82) Posterior and anterior region of thigh with equally distributed pigmenta-

‘10, WitbOUL spots and reticulations=..- 222. sea ee eee 4

4. Tibiotarsal articulation to eye or a little beyond, but not to nostril______ 5 Tibiotarsal articulation (heel) to nostril or tip of snout; head less wide;

terrestrialsforms:-disks*smaller2— meee se le sen ee ee ee ee a

5. Diameter of eye greater than length of snout; eyelid width greater than interorbital width; snout bluntly rounded; uniform green without lateral marks on snout and behind eye; Puebla; 39 mm__ c&rdenasi (p. 83)

Diameter of eye distinctly less than length of snout____-_.._________-_- 6 6. Snout oval; a distinct light-edged dark band on head and side; eyelid less than interorbital width; widespread on the Mexican plateau; 35 mm. eximia (p. 83) Snout blunt; head wider; tibiotarsal articulation to between eye and nostril; head wide; eyelid 1% times interorbital distance; color olive- gray and black, the lateral stripe dim on head and body, not light edged; arboreal; digital disks rather large; Guerrero; 41 mm. arboricola (p. 83)

7. Larger; green with well-defined, light-edged, dark stripe on side of head and body; dark spots on dorsum edged with silvery white; front side of tibia blackish bordered by a white line, continued on foot; Veracruz to Morelos in high mountains; 50 mm_______________- lafrentzi (p. 84)

Somewhat smaller; with less distinct stripe on body; color green (rarely olive, gray, or brown); dorsal spots not edged with light color; anterior edge of tibia with brown spots; posterior edge of tibia without white line: Chihvahuss-42 ina oe oe ee ee wrightorum (p. 84)

8. Entire side of head, and more or less the side of body, darker than, and contrasting more or less with, dorsal coloration; lighter dorsal color terminating at a point near nostril (never extending to lip); pigment forming elaborate star-shaped flecks; whitish part of dorsal coloration appears under lens as extremely minute, closely approximated circles; occasionally (in specimens captured at night) no very strong differenti- ation between the dorsal and lateral coloration, but under lens, pig- ment seen to be in larger flecks on sides_____-_ loquax group____-___- 9

Side of head and body not darker than dorsal coloration, usually lighter, with or without light spots or dark spots or both____----- 16

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO

ov emura(thigh) vimmacilates is! ooo wo Be Oren EE atid Pe Femur with at least some pigment____._..._._________.-__-______-_-

10. Dorsum whitish with a triangular brown spot on occiput, connected or not with another blotch or blotches on back; stripe on side of

head and from eye more or less continued to groin; distal subarticular tubercle of fourth finger double; fingers one-half or more webbed; vo-

merine teeth present; 27 mm__....___.-__.-__-=__. ebraccata (p.

No triangular dark spot on head or back; a pair of brown lines often visible on anterior one-half or two-thirds of back; limbs frequently barred with darker; toes one-third (or slightly less) webbed; the dark stripe from tip of snout to groin, bordered above with a lighter

BULIPe Or MOU; Zo mee Hose Ee oe es Cee robertmertensi (p.

11. Dark pigment confined to dorsal side of femur; vomerine teeth present_ Pigment on dorsal and posterior parts of femur appearing as a sparse Deppernge sth ee ea AE Ee eee

12. A larger species, with a conspicuous axillary web; posterior surface of thigh red or orange (which fades, leaving no trace); fingers much

more than one-half webbed; distal tubercle of fourth finger single;

an indistinct tarsal fold; a vocal sac in males; no canthus rostralis;

ADIT: epee ee pa i TS Kok os Perey Seine loquax (p.

Smaller species with an irregular dark brown or vinaceous pattern on back; sometimes the shoulder spot has an X-shape; fingers one- fourth or less webbed; pigment on femur may extend length of dorsal

surface of femur or only part way across_________-- underwoodi (p.

13. A conspicuous axillary web; hand half or more webbed; outer tubercle of fourth finger single; uniform or indefinitely spotted above; no distinct tarsal fold; canthus distinct; vomerine teeth invariably present; tympanum wider than its distance from eye; vocal sac INieMalewe oo. TNMs eee oe Se eee eee rickardsi (p.

Axillary web. Sught, OF absent ie c= ashe pei yore eos ae.

14. Hand with only slight vestige of web; vomerine teeth variable or

OSE TUM see eeereer eee ee See a 3 eres che eae ee ee Hand half or more webbed; no vocal sac in male; tympanum nar- rower than its distance from eye, less than half diameter of eye; heel to between eye and nostril; ventral surface of tarsus and posterior surface of femur pigmented; 43.5 mm_____..______- rozellae (p.

15. A broad dorsolateral pinkish-white stripe from eye to near groin; vomerine teeth absent (rarely present but if so, small, inconspicuous) ; tympanum a little more than one-third eye; canthus angular; heel

to between eye and tip of snout; 25 mm_______________-_ picta (p.

No broad dorsolateral stripe; sometimes a very narrow line without pigment between dorsal and lateral coloration; vomerine teeth usually present in adults, often absent in young; tympanum about one-half of eye; canthus absent; heel to anterior part of eye; 30

TUT ee ee SEL PS Oe ae eh ee ore ace ea ao Samat Bal smithi (p.

16. Skin leathery, thickly covered with a glandular layer (parotoid?), not confined on back; under lens very numerous, minute, oily-yellow (somewhat whitish) points visible in skin; no web or only a vestige between fingers; a heavy supratympanic fold; nuptial callosities of first finger of males covered with black, horny spines (also present on second and third fingers); anal flap usually elongate, bringing anus to near lower level of femora; medium large to large (crassa has not been examined, but very probably all these characters obtain in that © TeTA een ae als ae ee A le yey eal Ss bistincta group-_-_-__-

wo

10 11

84)

84) 12

13

84)

85)

85) 14

15

86)

85)

85)

80

ie

18.

19.

20.

21.

22.

23.

24,

25.

26.

BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Skin not thick and leathery; a few larger forms but mostly small arboreal (some bromeliad) species, the chief exception being the medium-sized arenicolor, which is largely a rock-loving form rather than arboreal. The lot contains representatives of several ‘‘groups”’

Tympanum concealed; canthus absent or rounded_________________-_

Tympanum visible, the upper edge concealed under the thick supra- tympanic fold; canthus rostralis distinet___._............_..._.____-

Toes fully or almost fully webbed to disks____..._...._........______--

Toes three-fourths webbed; spinules of nuptial callosities larger than in other species of this group; some white flecks in anal and posterior femoral -regions,.49: mmbs.4 cies st dee Set pachyderma (p.

A vocal sac present in males; no outer metatarsal tubercle; no dorsolateral fold; 55 mm. (nuptial spines present?)__.___________ crassa (p.

Vocal sac absent; a thick dorsolateral fold to middle of body; an outer metatarsal tubercle; 55 mm__.-.--__.-..____ - robustofemora (p.

Sides with brown reticulation enclosing round white or cream spots; venter yellow, unpigmented; skin generally smooth; tympanum about one-third eye; toes about one-half webbed; 65 mm__ bistincta (p.

Sides without reticulations or round light spots; venter cloudy, gray or gray black; toes two-thirds to three-quarters webbed; tympanum about one-half eye diameter; 50 mm____________ robertsorum (p.

Tympanum hidden; legs distinctly barred; no outer metatarsal tubercle_

Tympanum more or less distinct; if covered with skin its outline dis- cernible; outer metatarsal tubercle present___..._..._._.._..________-

Snout truncate; choanae very large, four or more times size of vomerine tooth group; no pollex rudiment; eyelid narrower than interorbital distance; subarticular tubercles of feet all single; anal region dark with light spot above; dark spots on back: skin minutely corrugated; heeluttostiproL snout; 24: mmo 225 2 ee ee pinorum (p.

Choanae small; an indistinct pollex rudiment; eyelid equals interorbital distance; some subarticular tubercles of feet double; one very large dark area from head to rump narrowed on neck; anal region light; 25

RAAT pote} saeetr ied orth cae oe hye “Ae Lie. Sea leonard-schultzei (p.

Tympanum large, its diameter equal to distinctly more than half the diameter'of eyessuet 3h. 6s4 02 a te See Be ay ete Tympanum small, diameter one-half (or less) of eye____._._.._._______- Posterior part of thigh strongly reticulated in brown and yellow; tym- panum light; a strong fold from eye along sides; mere vestige of web between fingers; tarsal fold present; very elongate inner metatarsal tubercle present; heel to eye; 48 mm_____________-_ beltrani (p.

- Posterior part of thigh brown or black-brown enclosing very small, lighter, p g 91S

rounded spots; a narrow white line on upper lip; moderately distinct tarsal fold; fingers one-fourth or less webbed; heel to tip of snout; 65 MOTIVES ES EE SRLS Te Ac Saleen phaeota (p. Width of eyelid distinctly greater than interorbital distance; an inverted V-shaped fold about anal opening; tympanum smail, less than one-third eye; tarsal fold represented by a few flat unconnected tubercles; canthus sharp; heel to eye; foot three-fourths webbed; fingers with a distinct vestige of web (one-fifth or less)__._.________ forbesi (p. Width of an eyelid less than interorbital distance.______.__-_2--____-_ No trace of web between outer fingers___...____________-__-_-___- Outer finger one-fifth to one-half webbed (or a little more)___________-_

21 18

20 19

86) 86)

86)

87)

87)

22

23

87)

87)

24 25

87)

88)

oe lg leah iy, iN na alae

27

28

29.

él.

32.

33.

34,

35.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO

- No trace of a tarsal fold, or a ridge, or row of tubercles under forearm; no canthus; tympanum nearly one-half eye diameter; heel to eye; vocal

Bac Mpresent;! SO mmsske) oie aul sue hori staufferi (p. OUR Sa LOL Matera MRE See aos Sree eae aaledd2

- No supernumerary tubercles on foot; vomerine teeth at anterior level of choanae; heel to between eye and tip of snout; canthus angular; tongue\*one-third* free; 37 -mm_ ==. 2... 2-2 Se _ Se plicata (p Some supernumerary tubercles on foot; vomerine teeth at posterior level of choanae; skin strongly pustular; canthus absent; tongue one-fourth free behind; toes about half webbed; 45 mm________ arenicolor (p No trace of tarsal fold; no, or only an indistinct trace of a row of tubercles (or fold) under forearm; eye red in life; heel to a point between eye and nostril; lip with a narrow cream line or elongate white spots; tympanum one-third or less diameter of eye; 26mm__ erythromma (p AV AIS INChMtATsalRnOld= sie eee eek ain oven he adie Sees. . Very light colored pigment in delicate scattered flecks, not starshaped; bodies flattened; tympani directed rather upward; row of tubercles under forearm more or less distinct (bromeliad frogs)___._________- Darker, heavier pigmentation; brownish, gray, olive, or green, with or withoutwdorsaly dark. spetshe so 31 nese Tite! bo Srey ob ee ee Heel to eye; toes two-thirds or more webbed; tympanum about one-half eye; fingers one-third webbed; eyelid two-thirds of interorbital width;

neadvasswideras body > s0rmme 922 eee eee eee melanomma (p.

Heel to point between eye and nostril; toes about four-fifths webbed; fingers one-half webbed; tympanum slightly more than one-third eye;

iheadmpbroader tnans body; sommes 5222s dendroscarta (p.

Legs and arms distinctly barred; head wider than body_-_---.------- Legs not barred with darker color; olive or green in life.____.________-- Heel to middle of eye; finger disks nearly as large as tympanum; tym- panum equal to or slightly more than half of eye; a tarsal fold; canthus rostralis rounded; chin spotted; no dorsal spots; (? no vocal sac); 30 ETT eee ee a Mens OP YI cP ES 2 eR SP a, A eee taeniopus (p. No vocal sac; sharp distinct tarsal fold; snout very truncate; canthus distinct; skin relatively smooth, but minutely corrugated; heel to a point in front of eye; finger disks distinctly larger than tympanum; tympanum distinctly less than half eye; distinct dorsal spots; chin SPOGtEC ar oO tn TUE eee Okra ate aee TE eer eee bromeliana (p. Anal flap elongated; the opening near level of under surface of femur; white stripe above anus; two conspicuous white-topped tubercles, on each side of lower part of anus; row of distinct white tubercles under forearm; a strong tarsal fold, thickest posteriorly; few light flecks on sides; a white line or series of white flecks on posterior edge of tarsus, SENET Amerie ae ca foe a ae Eore hes ere an hazelae (p. Anal flap short; opening near middle or upper level of femora_--------- Enlarged tubercles at lower level of anus; teeth brownish; more or less of a skinfold in groin; choanae circular; vomerine teeth small; anal tuber- cles white; a white transverse stripe above anus; deep green to yellow green in life; bromeliad frog; 24 mm-_-__---------- smaragdina (p. No conspicuously enlarged tubercles in anal region. -------------------

81

88) 28

. 88)

. 89)

. 89)

30

o2 89)

89) 33 34

89)

90)

90) 35

90)

82 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

36. Tongue not free behind, not distinctly notched; teeth brownish tipped; heel to between eye and nostril; usually green body color bordered by white; a curved white line above black area of the anus; anal tubercles numerous; very considerable sexual dimorphism in size; canthus rounded; male with black horny nuptial spines on first finger only; tympanum about one-fourth to one-third diameter of eye; female 45.mm.; male S5.mm = .- 8 hoo oe ee miotympanum (p. 90) Tongue free for about one-fourth length, distinctly notched; teeth not brown tipped; heel to eye; black nuptial spines on first finger only; back of head marked by a lateral depression on each side; female much larger than male; olive-gray or gray-brown; female 46 mm.; male Oo TOT aS be cy ne al ag pe tae aS eee arborescandens (p. 91)

HYLA REGILLA Baird and Girard

Hyla regilla Batrp and Girarp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 6, 1852, p. 174.

?Hyla curta Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 18, 1866, pp. 313-314 (Cape San Lucas, Baja California).

Hyla regilla laticeps Corr, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 34, 1889, pp. 356, 359-360 (Cape San Lucas, Baja California; U.S.N.M. No. 5308, eight cotypes).

Hyliola regilla Mocquarp, Nouv. Arch. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, ser. 4, vol. 1, 1899, pp. 338, 339-341.

Type.—Unknown.

Type locality —‘Sacramento River in Oregon and Puget Sound,” United States.

Range.—British Columbia through Baja California. Reported from the following localities in Baja California: Cape San Lucas, “Lapaz,” San Francisquito, Sierra Laguna, San Rafael Valley, San Pedro Martir Mountains, Rancho Santo Domingo, San Ignacio, Miraflores, San José del Cabo, Ensenada, Aguaito Springs, Cedros Island, La Grulla, Tecati (other numerous localities listed by Linsdale, Univ. California Publ. Zool., vol. 38, 1932, p. 353).

HYLA EUPHORBIACEA Giinther

Hyla euphorbiacea GiintuER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, 1858 (1859), pp. 109-110, pl. 10, fig. ec —Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 427-430.

Type.—(Cotypes) Brit. Mus. Nos. 1930.4.10.2; 57.10.28.51; 58.11.22.5; 1858.6.15.4-8 (four specimens and a skeleton, originally).

Type locality—Cérdoba, Veracruz; Cordilleras (of Mexico) and Mexico.

Range.—Central western Veracruz to Oaxaca. Specimens examined or reported from Veracruz: above Acultzingo, ? Cérdoba; Puebla: 8 miles northeast Tehuac4n, Pajaro Verde (near Acultzingo); Oaxaca: near Oaxaca.

ee ee

sie $F eee Wes Cais nt

Ee

a ae

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 83

HYLA CARDENASI Taylor

Hyla cérdenasi Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 430-432, pl» 47, fig. 2.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 84403.

Type locality —Puebla, Puebla, Mexico.

Range.—Central and western Puebla. A single young specimen has been reported from near Rio Frio, México.

HYLA EXIMIA Baird

Hyla eximia Bairv, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 61.— Kewuoee, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 153, 164-168 (part).—TaytLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 422-426, pl. 46, figs. 1-10, pl. 47, figs. 3-5.

Hyla gracilipes Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 17, 1865, p. 194 (Mirador, Veracruz; U.S.N.M. Nos. 15318-15321, four cotypes).—KELLoGa, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 153-154, 168-170 (part).

Type.—(Cotypes) U.S.N.M. No. 3248 (2 specimens).

Type locality —‘‘Valley of México,” Mexico.

Range.—Central and southern portions of the main Mexican plateau, southward from Durango and Zacatecas. Recorded from Puebla: 3 kilometers northeast of Cholula, Los Reyes, Puebla, Santa Catalina, 6 kilometers east of Amozoc, Tepeaca; Hidalgo: El Chico, Guerrero, Hacienda de Velasco, Mizquiahuala; Distrito Federal: México (city), San Juanico, Tlalpam, Tacubaya, Atzacualco; Morelos: Cuernavaca; ? Veracruz: Orizaba; Jalisco: Tlaquepaque, Jamay, Magdalena, Ocotlan, Tonalé, Agua Azul, Guadalajara; Michoacdn: Tupataro, Uruapan, Hacienda El Sabino, Patzcuaro, Sahuayo; Nayarit: Santa Teresa, Tepic; Guanajuato: Celaya, AcAmbaro, Silao, Guanajuato; México: Toluca, Chalco, Lerma, Rancho Guadelupe (42 kilometers northwest of Toluca), 3 kilometers south of Hacienda San Martin (near ZitAacuaro), San Juan Teotihuacan, Villa Victoria (20 kilometers west); Aguascalientes: 13-15 kilometers east of Aguascalientes ; Zacatecas: La Colorada; Durango: Coyotes, Ciudad, El Salto, between Pueblo Nuevo and Metate; ? San Luis Potosi: Mountains of Alvarez, Ebano.

HYLA ARBORICOLA Taylor

Hyla arboricola Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 27, 1941, pp. 118-119, pled, fig. a:

Type-—KHT-HMS No. 24556.

Type locality.—6 miles east of Omilteme, Guerrero, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from central Guerrero. Specimens have been examined from 2 miles north of Mazatlén and from Tixtla Lake (east

of Chilpancingo).

84 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

HYLA LAFRENTZI Mertens and Wolterstorff

Hyla lafrentzi Mertens and Wo.uterstorrr, Zool. Anz., vol. 84, 1929, pp. 235-241.—Tay.tor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 483-436, pl. 48, figs. 1-2.

Type.—Magdeburg Mus. No. 49/27.

Type locality.—Desierto de los Leones, 3,000 meters elev., Distrito Federal, Mexico.

Range.—Southern tip of the central Mexican plateau. Reported from Morelos: Zempoala Lakes; Hidalgo: Guerrero; El Chico National Park; Puebla: near Rio Frio, México (but in Puebla); Mézico: Llano Grande (5 miles west of Rio Frio); Veracruz: Las Vigas; Distrito Fed- eral: Desierto de los Leones; Tlaxcala: 13 km. northeast of Tlaxcala.

HYLA WRIGHTORUM Taylor

Hyla wrightorum Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 436-4389, pl. 47, fig. 1.

Type.—Univ. Mich. Mus. Zool. No. 79141.

Type locality.—Eleven miles south of Springerville, Apache County, Ariz.

Range.—Chihuahua, Arizona, and probably Sonora. Reported from Meadow Valley, Chihuahua.

HYLA EBRACCATA Cope

Hyla ebraccata Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 26, 1874, p. 69.— TAYLOR and Smit, Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 587, fig. 60H. Hyla leucophyllata Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, p. 30 (nec

Hyla leucophyllata Bereis).

Type.—In Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia?.

Type locality Nicaragua.

Range.—Central America and undoubtedly Chiapas. (Found at Piedras Negras, Guatemala, on the Guatemala-Chiapas boundary.)

HYLA ROBERTMERTENSI Taylor Hyla robertmertensi Taytor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 50, 1937, pp. 43-45, pl. 2, figs. 3-7.

Type.—KHT-HMS No. 2270.

Type locality Near Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Chiapas southward into Central America. Known from Tonal4, Asuncién, La Esperanza (near Hscuintla), Cruz de Piedra (near Acacoyagua) in Chiapas.

HYLA LOQUAX Gaige and Stuart

Hyla logquaz Gaicn and Sruart, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, No. 281, 1934, pp. 1-38.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 85

Type.—Univ. Michigan Mus. Zool. No. 75446.

Type locality.—Ixpue Aguada, north of La Libertad, El Petén, Guatemala.

Range.—Northern Guatemala and Campeche. Reported from Campeche: Tres Brazos and Encarnacién; Guatemala: Piedras Negras (near the Chiapas border).

H¥YLA UNDERWOODI Boulenger Hyla microcephala BouLENGER, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1898, p. 481, pl. 39, fig. 3 (non Cope, 1886). Hyla underwoodi Boutencer, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 7, vol. 3, 1899, p. 277. Hyla phlebodes Keiuoae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 155, 172-173.

Type.—In British Museum.

Type locality.— Bebedero, Costa Rica.

Range.—Costa Rica north to central Veracruz and central Guerrero. Specimens examined or reported from Guerrero: El Treinta; Chiapas: Palenque; Veracruz: Potrero Viejo; Yucatdén: Chichen Itz4; Campeche: Tres Brazos, Encarnacién, and Balchacaj.

HYLA RICKARDSI Taylor 3

Hyla rickardst Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1988 (1939), pp. 385- 388, pl. 41, figs. 1-8.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 5947.

Type locality.— Near Potrero Viejo, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Central western Veracruz. Reported from near Encero, Palma Sola, and Potrero Viejo in Veracruz.

HYLA PICTA Giinther *

Hylella picta GintuErR, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1901, pp. 286-287, pl. 73, fig. e—Kzertioae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 180-181.

Type.—Brit. Mus. No. 1901.12.19, 100.

Type locality —Jalapa, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Eastern San Luis Potosi south to Tabasco. Reported or known from Veracruz: Cuautlapan, Orizaba, Jalapa, 2 miles west of Veracruz, Tlalpam, Potrero Viejo, Tierra Colorada; San Luis Potosi: Valles; Tabasco: Frontera.

HYLA SMITHI Boulenger

Hyla nana Ginruer, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1901, pp. 263-264, pl. 73, fig. A (nec Hyla nana Boulenger 1899; Cuernavaca, Morelos; Brit. Mus. No. 1901.12.19.76-82).

35 There is a possibility that this is a synonym of Hyla godmani Giinther; see Hyla miotympanum.

86 This small species formerly associated with Hylella is, we believe, a small toothless Hyla, closely re- lated to underwoodi, ebraccata, and robertmertensi.

86 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Hyla smithi BouLENGER, Zool. Rec., vol. 38, 1902, Rept. Batr., p. 33.—Taytor, Trans. Kans Acad. Sci., vol. 39, 1936 (1937), pp. 357-359, pl. 2, figs. 1-5.— OuivER, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan No. 360, 1937, p. 6, pl. 1.

Type. —Brit. Mus. No. 1901.12.19.76-82.

Type locality—Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.

FRange.—Pacific coast from Sinaloa to Guerrero and Morelos. Specimens examined or reported from Nayarit: Tepic; Colima: Que- seria, Tecoman, Paso del Rio, Rio Armeria; Morelos: Puente de Ixtla, Huajintlin, Cuernavaca; Sinaloa: 2 miles east of Mazatlan; Guer- rero: Agua del Obispo, Garrapata, Tierra Colorada, Xochitempa (near Chilapa), Mazatlan; Michoacdén: Apatzingén, Hacienda El Sabino.

HYLA ROZELLAE Taylor

Hyla rozellae Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 78-79, pl. 9, figs. 1, la—1c.

Type.-—U.S.N.M. No. 115039.

Type locality —Salto de Agua, Mount Ovando, Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality and vicinity. Re- ported from Finca Judrez, Las Nubes, and Salto de Agua in Chiapas.

HYLA CRASSA (Brocchi)

Cauphias crassus Broccui, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 1, 1877, p. 130; Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans l’Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 2, 1882, p. 64, pl. 12, fig. 4——Kertioae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 118-120 (part).

Hyla crassa BouLENGER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, ed. 2, 1882, p. 396.

Type.—Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 509 B (6331). Type locality —Mexico. Range.—Unknown.

HYLA ROBUSTOFEMORA Taylor?”

Hyla robustofemora Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 389-398, figs. 3, 4.

Type—EKHT-HMS No. 16314.

Type locality—Cerro San Felipe, about 10 miles northeast of Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico, 7,000-8,000 feet elevation.

Range.—Known only from the type locality.

HYLA PACHYDERMA Taylor

Hyla pachyderma Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 308-310, pl. 27, figs. 1-3.—Taytor and Smitn, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 588, pl. 25.

37 This form is not Plectrohyla crassa Brocchi, as has been suggested by Stuart. Among other differences a vocal sac is present in crassa, absent in robustofemora.

i ! |

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 87

Type— U.S. N. M. No. 115029. Type locality—Pan de Olla, south of Tezuitlan, Veracruz, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

HYLA BISTINCTA Cope

Hyla bistincta Copz, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., vol. 17, July 20, 1877, p. 87.— Kertioee, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 151, 163-164.—Taytor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 50, 1937, pp. 50-54, pl. 3, figs. 1, 2.

Type. —U.S. N. M. No. 32361.

Type locality —‘‘ Most probably Veracruz, Mexico.”

Range.—The southern edge of the Mexican plateau. Specimens examined or reported from Veracruz: Near Lake San Bernardino, above Acultzingo; Puebla: P&jaro Verde (near Acultzingo, Vera- cruz); Morelos: near Cuernavaca; México: 12 miles west of Villa Victoria; Michoacén: Uruapan; Oazraca: Cerro San Felipe; Hidalgo: Zacualtipaén.

HYLA ROBERTSORUM Taylor

Hyla robertsorum Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 393-396, figs. 5-6; Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, p. 310, pl. 27, fig. 4.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 16264. Type locality —El1 Chico Parque Nacional, Hidalgo, Mexico. Range.—Hidalgo. Known from the type locality and near Zacual-

tipin, Hidalgo. HYLA PINORUM Taylor

Hyla pinorum Tayuor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 50, 1937, pp. 46-48, pls2, tis. 2.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 5972.

Type locality—Agua del Obispo (Kilometers 350-351, México- Acapulco highway), Guerrero, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from type locality.

HYLA LEONARD-SCHULTZEI Ahl Hyla leonard-schulizei Aut, Zool. Anz., vol. 106, 1934, pp. 185-186.

Type.—Zool. Mus. Univ. Berlin.

Type locality —Malinaltepec, Guerrero, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality. HYLA BELTRANI Taylor

Hyla beltrani Tayior, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 306-308, pl. 26, figs. 5-8.

Type -—EHT-HMS No. 29563. Type locality —Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality.

88 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

HYLA PHAEOTA Cope

Hyla phaeota Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 14, 1862, pp. 358-359.— Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 80-81, pl. 8, figs. 1, la—lc.—TayY or and Smits, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 589, p. 26.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 4347.

Type locality —Turbo, Colombia.

Range.—Guatemala and undoubtedly Chiapas, south to Colombia (found at Piedras Negras, Guatemala, virtually on the Chiapas-

Guatemala border). \ HYLA FORBESI Taylor

Hyla forbest Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 19389 (1940), pp. 513-515, pl. 58, figs. 1, la, 1b.

Type EKHT-HMS No. 22276. Type locality —3 miles southwest of Acultzingo, Veracruz, Mexico. Range.— Known only from the type locality.

HYLA STAUFFERI Cope

Hyla staufferi Copr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 17, 1865, p. 195.— Keuioece, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 152, 173-174. Hyla culex Gaien, Carnegie Inst. Washington Publ. No. 457, 1936, p. 293.

Type.—U.S.N.M. 15317.

Type locality—Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Tamaulipas, San Luis Potosi, Veracruz, Oaxaca, Guerrero, and Chiapas to Central America. Specimens have been examined or reported as follows: Veracruz: Tierra Colorada, 4 miles east of Encero, near Potrero, Orizaba, Motzorongo, Potrero Viejo, San Juan de la Punta, Cuautlapan, Palma Sola, Presidio; San Luis Potost: Tamazunchale, Valles; Tamaulipas: near Ciudad Juarez; Chiapas: Tonalé, Asunciédn, San Ricardo, Palenque, Cruz de Piedra (near Acacoyagua) ; Guerrero: 1 mile north of Organos; Tabasco: Tenosique; Oaxaca: Tehuantepec, Tapana; ? Jalisco: Guadalajara (very doubt- ful) ; Campeche: Tuxpefia Camp, Champotén, Encarnacién, Balchacaj.

HYLA PLICATA Brocchi

Hyla plicata Broccut, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 7, vol. 1, 1877, pp. 126-127; Mission scientifique au Mexique et dans ]’Amérique centrale, pt. 3, sect. 2, livr. 1, 1881, pp. 35-36, pl. 12, fig. 1—Kzertuioae, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 151-152, 173.

Type.—Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 380a (No. 6317). Type locality —M exico. Range.—Unknown.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 89

HYLA ARENICOLOR Cope

Hyla affinis Barrp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 61 (pre- occupied by Hyla affinis Spix 1824).

Hyla arenicolor Corn, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, ser. 2, vol. 6, 1866, p. 84 (substitute for the preceding)—Kernuoaa, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 152-153, 156-159.

Hyla copii BoutenceEr, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 5, vol. 20, 1887, p. 53 (El Paso, Tex.; Brit. Mus.).

Hyliola digueti Mocquarp, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 9, vol. 1, 1899, pp. 165- 166, pl. 1, fig. 4 (territory Tepic [= Nayarit], Mexico; Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris).

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 11410, four cotypes.

Type locality —Northern Sonora, Mexico.

Range.—Northern Baja California to southern Texas and south to Guerrero. Reported in Mexico from Distrito Federal, and the states of Baja California, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, Guanajuato, Guerrero, Hidalgo, Jalisco, México, Michoacén, Morelos, Nayarit, San Luis Potosi, Sinaloa, Sonora, and Zacatecas.

HYLA ERYTHROMMA Taylor

Hyla eryihromma Tayuor, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 50, 1937, pp. 48-50, pl. 2, fig. 1; Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 511-512.

Type-—EKHT-HMS No. 5976. Type locality—Agua del Obispo (Kilometers 350-351), Mexico- Acapulco highway), Guerrero, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality. HYLA MELANOMMA Taylor

Hyla melanomma Tayuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 508-510, pl. 57, figs. 1, la, 1b.

Type —EHT-HMS No. 21578. Type locality.—7 miles east of Chilpancingo, Guerrero, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality.

HYLA DENDROSCARTA Taylor

Hyla dendroscarta Tayor, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 89, 1940, pp. 45-47, pls. 2-3.

Type—U.S.N.M. No. 108679. Type locality —Cuautlapan, Veracruz, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

HYLA TAENIOPUS Giinther

Hyla taeniopus Ginruer, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1901, pp. 269-270, pl. 72, fig. i—Kerxioce, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 156, 175-176.

90 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Type.—(Cotypes) Brit. Mus. Nat. Hist. Nos. 1901.12.19.86 and 1901.12.19.87.

Type locality Jalapa, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from the type locality.*

HYLA BROMELIANA Taylor * Hyla bromeliana Taytor, Copeia, July 12, 1939, pp. 98-100, fig. 1.

Type.-—KHT-HMS No. 16630. Type locality Near Tianguistengo, Hidalgo, Mexico. Range.—Known only from type locality.

HYLA HAZELAE Taylor

Hyla hazelae Tayitor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 385-389, figs: 1.2:

Type-—EKHT-HMS No. 16263.

Type locality—Cerro San Felipe, 10 miles northeast of Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico.

Range.—Known from the type locality only.

HYLA SMARAGDINA Taylor

Hyla smaragdina Taytor, Copeia, Mar. 30, 1940, pp. 18-20, fig. 1.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 17534.

Type locality—Mountains at eastern end of Lake Chapala, 6 kilometers east of Cojumatlan, Michoacan, Mexico.

Range.—Known only from type locality.

HYLA MIOTYMPANUM Cope

Hyla miotympanum Corr, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 15, 1863, p. 47.—Ketioae, U. §. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 155-156, 170-172, fig. 19d.

Hyla microtis Perers, Monatsb. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1869, pp. 880-881 (probably Matamoros, Puebla; Berl. Mus. No. 6657, two cotypes).

Hyla godmani GintuErR, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1901, pp. 275-276, pl. 72, fig. e (Misantla and Jalapa, Veracruz; Brit. Mus. Nos. 1901.12.19.88—96).*°

Type—Cotypes, U.S.N.M. No. 6311 (now lost). Type locality —Near Jalapa and Mirador, Veracruz, Mexico. Range.—Central Nuevo Leén to Oaxaca and (?) Chiapas. Vera-

38 A specimen reported from Morelos, Guatemala, by Atkinson, Ohio Nat., vol. 7, 1907, p. 152, doubtlessly belongs to another species.

89 There is a possibility that this species is the same as Hyla taeniopus Cope. Dunn, however, who ex- amined the types of that species, reported that he did not believe they were Hyla beudinii but that it was difficult to decide. Since Hyla bromeliana shows not the slightest resemblance to Ayla baudinii, the proba- bility of its synonymy with taeniopus is remote.

40 Except for the testimony of E. R. Dunn and R. Kellogg (U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 170-171), we would regard H. godmani as a good species with H. rickardsi a synonym.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 91

cruz: Near Jalapa, Banderilla, Orizaba, San Andrés (8,000 feet), Mirador ? Veracruz, Misantla, Fortin, Cuautlapan, Potrero, Jico, Orizaba, Acultzingo; ? Guerrero: Malinaltepec (Ahl); Hidalgo: Zacu- altipan, Tianguistengo; Nuevo Ledén: Pablillo, 20 miles south of Monterrey; San Luis Potosi: Tamazunchale, Valles; Puebla: Pajaro Verde near Acultzingo, Necaxa, San Diego (near Tehuacan); Oaxaca: Tehuantepec, Cerro San Felipe; Chiapas (no locality given).

HYLA ARBORESCANDENS Taylor

Hyla arborescandens Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 388-391, text fig. 1; Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), p. 511.

_ Type—EHT-HMS No. 3135.

Type locality——Three miles southwest of Acultzingo, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range.—Tlaxcala and central Veracruz to central Oaxaca. Re- ported from Tlaxcala: Apizaco; Veracruz: above Acultzingo, Pan de Olla (near Tezuitlan); Puebla: Pajaro Verde (near Acultzingo, Veracruz); Oaxaca: Cerro San Felipe.

Genus PTYCHOHYLA Taylor Piychohyla Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, p. 41.

Genotype-—Ptychohyla adipoventris Taylor. Range.—Guerrero. Species.—One.

PTYCHOHYLA ADIPOVENTRIS Taylor

Ptychohyla adipoventris Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 30, 1944, pp. 41-45.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 21592. Type locality Agua del Obispo, Guerrero, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

Suborder DIPLASIOCOELA Nicholls

Diplasiocoela NicHouts, Proc. Linn. Soe. London, vol. 128, 1915-1916 (1916), Deion.

KEY TO MEXICAN FAMILIES OF DIPLASIOCOELA

1. Head very narrow; mouth small; no vomerine teeth; a transverse skin fold on head, behind eyes; tympanum indistinct or invisible. Microhylidae (p. 91)

Head not narrowed; mouth large; vomerine teeth present; no transverse foldion, head; tympanum distinet_.....2----2-4--- 2-22 Ranidae (p. 96)

Family MICROHYLIDAE Parker

Microhylidae ParKxer, Monograph of the frogs of the family Microhylidae, 1934, pp. 9, 19.

92 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Subfamily MICROHYLINAE Noble Microhylinae Noss, The biology of the Amphibia, 1931, p. 537.

KEY TO MEXICAN GENERA OF MICROHYLINAE

1. Toes united by at least a vestigial web; precoracoids present; fingers free, not dilated atitipszece: eas ate SW ee ee ae ee Hypopachus (p. 94) Toes free without or with but a trace of a vestigial web at base; finger tips swollen or widened perceptibly; no precoracoids; coracoids united bya simple ‘cartilageias Bessa kA Soe eA APE Microhyla (p. 92)

Genus MICROHYLA Tschudi

Microhyla Tscuup1, Mém. Soc. Sci. Nat. Neuch&tel, vol. 2, 1838 (1839), pp. 28, 71.—ParxeER, Monograph of the frogs of the family Microhylidae, 1934, pp. 123-151.

Gastrophryne FiTzINGER, Systema reptilium, 1843, p. 33 (genotype Hngystoma rugosum Duméril, Bibron, and Duméril= Engysioma cardinense Holbrook).

Genotype.—“‘Hylaplesia achatina’”’ Boie, nomen nudum (= Microhyla achatina Tschudi.)

Range.—Southwestern Asia, Malayan Islands, and the southeastern quarter of the United States south to Brazil.

Species.—About 13 forms in the Americas, and 15 Old World forms are known; 5 occur in Mexico.

KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF MICROHYLA

te" Avsingle metatarsal tubercless2 2222 ssc ose os oce cece eee eee eee 2, ‘Twormetatarsal tubercles 22.00 ole eee ots Se eee eee 4

2. Toes swollen at tips but not wider than digit; ventral surface of limbs and abdomenjimmaculates.4i0u 0552 See ae ee 3

Toes flattened at tips, perceptibly wider than the digit; ventral surface of chin and throat, underside of limbs and side of head and body brownish, with lighter flecks; central part of abdomen white with some brown

reviculation2 = oc se oe soos oe eee a an ee elegans (p. 93)

3. Head narrow; trace of a black stripe or row of black spots from behind eye to a point on side; foot slender, small_____--_- mazatlanensis (p. 92)

Head wider; no trace of black stripe behind eye; foot wider, the toes a little longer proportionately, larger_.__.__._.------------ olivacea (p. 93)

4. A hair-fine line from tip of snout to anus; a similar line from anus along posterior surface of leg to foot; smaller________----- usta gadovii (p. 94)

No hair-fine line on back or posterior surface of leg; larger_._ usta usta (p. 93)

MICROHYLA MAZATLANENSIS Taytor

Microhyla mazatlanensis TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 29, 19438, pp. 355-357.

Type—EHT-HMS No. 1236. Type locality —2 miles east of Mazatlan, Sinaloa, Mexico. Range.—Known only from the type locality.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 93

MICROHYLA OLIVACEA (Hallowell)

Engystoma olivaceum HatuowE.L, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 8, 1856 (1857), p. 252.

Gastrophryne olivacea Smiru, Copeia, Dec. 27, 1933, p. 217.

Microhyla olivacea PARKER, Monograph of the frogs of the family Microhylidae, 1934, pp. 126, 144.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 529-531 (part).

Type—Not known.

Type locality —‘“‘Kansas and Nebraska,’’ probably Kansas.

Range.—Central United States from Kansas south to Coahuila, Chihuahua, and Durango. Recorded or known from Coahuila: 2 to 3 miles east of Torreén, Muisquiz; Chihuahua: Rio Santa Maria; - Durango: 5 miles north of Conejos; Sonora: Noria.

MICROHYLA ELEGANS (Boulenger)

Engystoma elegans BOULENGER, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the col- lection of the British Museum, ed. 2, 1882, p. 162.

Gastrophryne elegans Ke.utoaa, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 183, 187.

Microhyla elegans Parker, Monograph of the frogs of the family Microhylidae, 1934, p. 144.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 528-529.

Type.—Brit. Mus. Nat. Hist. No. 56.3.17.27.

Type locality —Cérdoba, Veracruz, Mexico.

Range—Southern Veracruz to Petén, Guatemala, in lowlands. Known from Veracruz: Cérdoba, Presidio; Campeche: Tres Brazos; also from Piedras Negras, Guatemala, on the Chiapas border.

MICROHYLA USTA USTA (Cope)

Engystoma rugosum (non Duméril and Bibron) GuntTHErR, Catalogue of the Batrachia Salientia in the collection of the British Museum, 1858 (1859),

p. 52. Engystoma ustum Corn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 18, 1866, p. 131. Gastrophryne usta Ke.uoce, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 183, 187-188

(part). Microhyla usta PaArKer, Monograph of the frogs of the family Microhylidae,

1934, pp. 148-149 (part). Microhyla usta usta Taytor and Smiru, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945,

pp. 602-603, pl. 32, figs. 1—4. Engystoma mexicanum Prters, Monatsb. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1869, p. 181 (state of Puebla, probably Matamoros, Mexico; Berl. Mus. ?).

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 24965.

Type locality ——Guadalaxara (=Guadalajara), Jalisco, Mexico.

Range.—Sinaloa and central Veracruz southward to near the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. Reported or known from Veracruz: Palma Sola, Potrero Viejo, near Cafiada, 4 miles east of Encero, Tierra Colorada, Rodriguez Clara, Cuautlapan, Escamilla; Guerrero: 1 mile north of Organos, 2 miles north of Xaltinanguis near El Treinta; Colima:

757435487

94. BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Queseria, Paso del Rio, Tecom4n, Santiago; Guanajuato: Buenavista; Jalisco: Guadalajara; Sinaloa: Venadillo. Probably most of the reports for the state of Oaxaca are referable to Microhyla usta gadovii; that for Valles, San Luis Potosi, is based on a young Hypopachus

CUNEUS CUNEUS. MICROHYLA USTA GADOVII (Boulenger)

Eupemphiz gadomi Boutencsr, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 7, vol. 12, Nov. 1903, p. 552.

Microhyla usta Parker, Monograph of the frogs of the family Microhylidae, 1934, pp. 148-149 (part).

Mierohyla usta gadovit TaytLor and Smiru, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 95, 1945, p. 603, pl. 32, figs. 5-10.

Type.—(Cotypes) Brit. Mus. Nos. 1903.9.30.259-261.

Type locality —San Mateo del Mar, Oaxaca, Mexico.

Range.—Oaxaca and Chiapas. Specimens are known from Oazaca: Tehuantepec (city); Chiapas: La Esperanza (near Escuintla), Acacoy- agua, Colonia Soconusco, Las Gradas, Tonalé, Tapachula.

Genus HYPOPACHUS Keferstein Hypopachus KerersteEin, Nachr. Ges. Gottingen, No. 18, 1867, p. 351.

Genotype.—Hypopachus seebachii Keferstein (=Engystoma variolo- sum Cope). Range.—Southern Texas to Brazil, Paraguay, and Bolivia. Species.—About 15 species and subspecies, 7 of which occur in Mexico. KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF HYPOPACHUS

1. Width of head 3 times in snout-to-vent length (slightly more or less); sides of head and body dark brown, contrasting with dorsal color; ventral surface reticulated with brown enclosing cream spots; 50 mm.

caprimimus (p. 95)

Width of head in snout-to-vent length 3% to 4 times______.-__-_-_--- 2 2. ° Venter white’or cream without markings. ©- 201. 22222222252 22 eee 3 Venter reticulated with) brown. i2scie2: S22)... ee ee 4

3. Scattered black spots on sides and groin; spot on femora; a light stripe from eye to jaw angle; foot one-third to two-thirds webbed; 41 mm. maculatus (p. 95) No distinctive black spots on sides or groin; no light stripe from eye to jaw angle; foot less than one-third webbed; large gland on breast and anterior abdominal region of males usually moderately distinct;

BAST Se es Se ee EAD AU ARO vate a ee ees alboventer (p. 95)

4. Venter colored with reticulations of brown and cream, the cream not forming ‘round white spots. £287 7=U_ Saye ee oe 5 Venter reticulated with brown enclosing round cream spots____-_------ 6

5. Reticulation very light, often scarcely discernible; in some specimens a hair fine median cream line from snout to vent; a series of dark spots on dorsolateral line below which sides are lighter than back; 41 mm. cuneus cuneus (p. 95)

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 95

Sides of head and body deep black reticulated with cream ; groin and lumbar region spotted; venter very strongly reticulated with black mnevcream 4s Mims. 22 28 So cuneus nigroreticulatus (p. 96)

6. Small, the sides brown with white flecks contrasting with the dorsal coloration; an irregular dark line from occiput to groin; color above grayish to eray-brown;/36 mm. 52.2... ovis (p. 96)

Large, sides not dark brown in contrast to lighter dorsum but usually lighter; occasionally a few dorsolateral dark spots, and the diagonal lines sometimes indicated by a few dark spots; 50 mm__ oxyrrhinus (p. 96)

HYPOPACHUS CAPRIMIMUS Taylor Hypopachus caprimimus ‘TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940)

pp. 526-528, pl. 61, 63, fig. 1, la; Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 47-48, pl. 2, fig. 1, pl. 3, fig. 7 (tadpole).

Type-—EKHT-HMS No. 18149.

Type locality —Agua del Obispo, Guerrero, Mexico.

Range.—Guerrero. Reported from Balsas River at Mexcala, Gar- rapatas, Organos, Mazatlan, near Palo Blanco, Buena Vista, El

Limoncito. HYPOPACHUS MACULATUS Taylor

Hypopachus maculatus Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 524-526, pl. 62, figs. E, F, pl. 63, figs. 2, 2a.

Type—EHT-HMS No. 1023.

Type locality —Near San Ricardo, Chiapas, Mexico.

Range.—Chiapas Plateau. Known only from the type locality and Asuncién, Chiapas.

HYPOPACHUS ALBOVENTER Taylor

Hypopachus alboventer Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 522-524, pl. 60, pl. 63, figs. 3, 3a; Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 48-49, pl. 1, fig. 3, pl. 3, fig. 6 (tadpole).

Type —EKHT-HMS No. 19615.

Type locality —Eight miles east of Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.

Range.——Morelos. Known from the type locality and near Hua- jintl4n, Morelos (Kilometer 133).

HYPOPACHUS CUNEUS CUNEUS Cope

Hypopachus cuneus Corr, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 34, 1889, pp. 388-389, fig. 98. Hypopachus cuneus cuneus Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, No. 15, 1939 (1940), pp. 516-518, pl. 62, fig. A, pl. 63, figs. 7, 7a.

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 15676.

Type locality —San Diego, Nueces County, Texas.

Range.—Southern Texas; Tamaulipas and Veracruz. Specimens reported or known from Tamaulipas: Hacienda La Clementina (4 miles west of Forlén); San Luis Potost: Valles; Veracruz: Encero.

96 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

HYPOPACHUS CUNEUS NIGRORETICULATUS Taylor

Hypopachus cuneus nigroreticulatus TayLor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp. 518-520, pl. 59.

Hypopachus inguinalis Gaicr (nec Cope), Carnegie Inst. Washington Publ. No. 457, 1936, p. 294 (tadpole).

Type -—EHT-HMS No. 12605.

Type locality —Encarnacién, Campeche, Mexico.

Range.—The Yucatin Peninsula. Recorded in Mexico from the states of Yucatén: Mérida, Chichen itz4; Campeche: Encarnacién, Tuxpefia Camp, Champotén, Pital, Tres Brazos, Balakbal.

HYPOPACHUS OVIS Taylor

Hypopachus ovis TayLtor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 26, 1939 (1940), pp 520-522, pl. 62, fig. B.

Type—EHT-HMS No. 1050.

Type locality —Tepic, Nayarit, Mexico.

Range.—Nayarit to Colima. Known from Nayarit: Tepic; Jalisco: near Chapala, near Magdalena; Colima: near Queseria.

HYPOPACHUS OXYRRHINUS Boulenger

Hypopachus oxyrrhinus BouLENGER, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 5, vol. 11, 1883, p. 344.

Hypopachus variolosus KrLuoaa (nec Cope), U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 182-183, 184-185.

Type.—Cotypes, Brit. Mus. Nos. 82.12.5.8; 83.4.5.3.

Type locality.—Presidio, near Mazatlin, Sinaloa, Mexico.

Range.—Sinaloa, south to Jalisco and Michoacén. Reported from Sinaloa: Presidio; Jalisco: Agua Delgada, Ocotlén, Guadalajara; Michoacén: San Salvador, Buena Vista, Cofradia.

Family RANIDAE Bonaparte

Ranidae Bonaparte, Giorn. Accad. Sci. Lett. ed Arti, Roma, vol. 49, 1831, pp. 65, 75. Subfamily RANINAE Noble

Raninae Norte, The biology of the Amphibia, 1931, p. 518.

Genus RANA Linnaeus

Rana Linnatus, Systema naturae, ed. 10, vol. 1, 1758, p. 210. Pohlia StTEINDACHNER, Reise Novara, vol. 1, Amphibia, 1867, p. 15 (genotype Pohlia palmipes Steindachner= Rana palmipes Spix).

Genotype.—(Rana) temporaria Linnaeus. Range.—Eurasia south to Madagascar and Australia, and Canada to Brazil.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 97

Species.—Approximately 400, about 25 American, of which 9 are

Mexican. KEY TO MEXICAN SPECIES OF RANA

Pere sctorsolateral, glandular fold.2 cit. 445 yee) Sah bee oc te Se se oe ie 2 Nosdorsolateral glandular foldo- 2-908 ee 8

2. Legs long; tibiotarsal articulation (heel) reaching tip or beyond the RED OF ‘SnOUbs= +2 [oe ee ee eee ee ee 3

Legs short, the heel reaching to a point between tympanum and snout SGN ee eee Daa Se Ree a el he as EE EE ee 5 3. Heels overlap strongly (several millimeters) when legs are folded___. 4

Heels touch when legs are folded; a fold behind tympanum; skin with- out ridges but with small, rounded, pearly-tipped pustules and tuber- cles of varying sizes, making skin rough to touch; subarticular tuber- cles moderately large, rather elongate, compressed; toes swollen at GUTS eee UI Loyame vue Lo Ke Clichy deca) enn a ee eee pustulosa (p. 98) 4, Glandular fold narrow; skin without distinct pustules, smooth to touch; toes widened into flattened terminal disks, and fully webbed; no vocal sac; heel far beyond tip of snout; 91 mm__ sierramadrensis (p. 98) Glandular fold thick, widened; numerous longitudinal ridges or elon- gate pustules between folds; toes pointed, not dilated at tips, almost completely webbed; two external vocal saes in males, behind jaw

anoles (COMPpPOsite) coll oni =e eee eee ee pipiens (p. 98) aetiecl to between eye and.tip of snout......__--....--=-..--2)- === 6 ieeenot reaching DeVOUO CYC... 2-- a = ae ee Ne See ee eee ee 7

6. Heel to between eve and nostril; tympanum large, about %4 or more of eye diameter; positympanic fold obsolete; 2 small internal vocal sacs in male, the openings in floor of mouth very small; toes swollen at tips into small disks, almost fully webbed; skin shagreen above, with minute hard pearly-tipped tubercles; canthus distinct, sharp; 125 mm. palmipes (p. 98) Heel to nostril or between nostril and snout tip; skin fold on upper lip light colored; fore part of head smooth; remainder of dorsum and sides with small rounded papillae; first finger longer than second; canthus indis- tinct) baja Californias 114 mm_=<_.222-2+-25-5 aurora draytoni (p. 99) 7. Feet and hands rather small or moderate; subarticular tubercles minute; tips of toes minutely swollen; heel to tympanum or between tympanum and eye 41; first finger longer than second; longitudinal pustules or ridges between dorsolateral glandular folds; sides strongly studded with small equal-sized tubercles; belly unicolor usually; 116 mm. montezumae Baird (p. 99) Feet and hands large, first and second fingers equal or first shorter; tips of toes perceptibly larger than montezwmae, the subarticular tubercles small; no conspicuous tubercles between dorsolateral folds; heel to eye; belly reticulated, grayish or grayish black and yellow; 152 mm. megapoda (p. 100) 8. Diameter of tympanum two-fifths to one-half diameter of eye; tarsal fold present, distinct or indistinct; toes swollen into small disks; heels to or near to tip of snout; no outer metatarsal tubercle; no vocal sac or external vesiclesspbehind ears. 7o MMes-=2-5-—-- cee ae tarahumarae (p. 100)

41 In making this measurement the specimen must be straightened. If the back is slightly humped, the heel will reach farther forward and the variation will seem greater than actually obtains.

98 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Diameter of tympanum about equal diameter of eye in females, larger than eye in males; no tarsal fold; heel to tympanum or eye; a vocal sac but no external: vesicles; Z00.antna2¢22S4e ts i254 ee ew catesbeiana (p. 100)

RANA SIERRAMADRENSIS Taylor

Rana sierramadrensis 'Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 25, 1938 (1939), pp. 397-399, pl. 39, fig. 1.

Type-—EHT-HMS No. 3963 B.

Type locality —Agua del Obispo, Guerrero, Mexico (Kilometers 350-351 on Mexico-Acapulco Highway).

Range.—Known from type locality and vicinity.

RANA PIPIENS Schreber

Rana pipiens ScureBER, Der Naturforscher, Halle, vol. 18, 1872, p. 185, pl. 4.—Keruioae, U. 8. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1982, pp. 192-193, 203-213, figs. la, 24.

? Rana forreri BOULENGER, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 5, vol. 11, 1888, p. 343 (Presidio, Sinaloa, Mexico; Brit. Mus. No. 1882.12.5.7).

Rana trilobata Moceuarp, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, ser. 9, vol. 1, 1899, pp. 158-159, pl. 1, fig. 1 (Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico; Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris No. 169a).

Rana omiltemana GUntTHER, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Reptilia and Batrachia, 1900, p. 200, pl. 61, fig. A (Omilteme, Guerrero, Mexico; Brit. Mus. Nos. 1895.7.15.31-85).

Type.—None.

Type locality Raccoon, Gloucester County, N. J.

Range.—North America south to Nicaragua. On plateau and lowlands of Mexico, recorded for every state and territory except Quintana Roo.

RANA PUSTULOSA Boulenger

Rana pustulosa BOULENGER, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser 5, vol. 11, 1883, p. 343.— Keutoaa, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 193-194, 2183-214.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 4446, pl. 1, fig. 1, pl. 3, fig. 4 (tadpole).

Type.—Brit. Mus. No. 1883.4.16.42.

Type locality —Ventanas, Durango, Mexico.

Range.—Slope of the plateau, Sonora to Guerrero. Reported from Sonora: Guirocoba; Durango: Ventanas; Colima: Queseria; Morelos: 5 miles south of Cuernavaca, near Huajintlén; Guerrero: 12 miles south of Chilpancingo, near Palo Blanco.

RANA PALMIPES Spix

Rana palmipes Srerx, Animalia nova, sive species novae testudinum et ranarum quas in itinere per Brasiliam..., 1824, p. 5, pl. 5, fig. 1—Kzutuioae, U. 8S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 194-195, 200-202.

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 99

Type.—Not known.

Type locality— Amazon River, Brazil.

Fange.—Southern Veracruz and the Isthmus of Tehuantepec south to South America; Morelos. Reported or known from Veracruz: Alvarado, Jalapa, Tlacotalpam, La Laja Creek near Cuatotolapam, Lake Catemaco, Perez, near San Juan de Gracia, Potrero Viejo, San Andrés Tuxtla, Matacabresto; Morelos: Cuernavaca; Campeche: Tres Brazos; Oaxaca: mountains near Santo Domingo (1,000 feet elevation); Tehuantepec (city); Chiapas: Palenque, Mount Ovando, Finca Judérez, mountains near Tonalé, Asuncién; Tabasco: Tenosique.

RANA AURORA DRAYTONI Baird and Girard

Rana draytont Barrp aud Girarp, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 6 1852, p. 174. Rana aurora draytoni Camp, Univ. California Publ. Zool., vol. 17, 1917, p. 123.

,

Type.—U.S.N.M. No. 11497.

Type locality—San Francisco and the Columbia River.

Range.—Central California to northern Baja California. Re- ported in Baja California from “San Tomas,” Valladares, La Grulla, Rancho San Antonio, San José (2,500 feet), San Ramén, mountains of Baja California up to 4,000 feet elevation.

RANA MONTEZUMAE Baird

Rana montezumae BairpD, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, 1854, p. 61; Report on the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, vol. 2, Reptiles, 1859, p. 27, pl. 36, figs. 1-6.—Kzr.tuioce, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 191-192, 197-199.—Taytor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 46-47, pl. 3, figs. 1, 5 (tadpole).

Rana adirita TrRoscHeEL, in Mueller, Reisen in den Vereinigten Staaten, Canada und Mexico, vol. 3, 1865, p. 616 (Mexico; types unknown).

(Rana montezumae) concolor Corn, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 32, 1887, p. 20 (Guana- juato; lectotype U.S.N.M. No. 81101).

Type.—U.8. N. M. No. 3344 (fide Kellogg).

Type locality—City of México, Distrito Federal, Mexico.

Range.—The southern tip of the central Mexican plateau. Speci- mens are known or have been reported from Distrito Federal: México (city), Xochimilco, Lake Texcoco, north of Guadalupe; México: Chalco, Santa Magdalena, Zumpango, 10 miles northwest of Toluca, Lerma; Aguascalientes: 8 miles south of Aguascalientes; Michoacdén: Tupataro, Sahuayo, 5 miles northwest of Maravatio; Puebla: Atlixco, Puebla, Chiguahuapan (Alatristi); Querétaro: San Juan del Rio; Jalisco: Ocotl4n, Teocaltiche, near Chapala; Hidalgo: Actopain, La Mora; Guanajuato: Acambaro, Lagos, Guanajuato, Santa Rosa (9,500 feet altitude); 3 miles north of Leén, 7 miles west of Silao, 3 miles east of Santa Rosa. Other records are from Veracruz: Mirador, vicinity

100 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

of Orizaba; Oaxaca: Tehuantepec; and Tabasco: no specific locality. For geographic reasons we consider the records from the latter three states unacceptable.

RANA MEGAPODA Taylor

Rana megapoda TaYuor, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., vol. 28, 1942, pp. 310-318, pl. 28.

Type.-—EKHT-HMS No. 3280. Type locality —Near Chapala, Jalisco, Mexico. Range.—Jalisco, around Lake Chapala.

RANA TARAHUMARAE Boulenger

Rana tarahumarae BouLeNcER, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 8, vol. 20, 1917, pp. 416-417.—Ketuoae, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 160, 1932, pp. 190-191, 214-215.

Type.—Brit. Mus. Nat. Hist. Nos. 1914.1.28.148—149 ; 1911.12.12.36— 39.

Type locality—tIoquiro (=Yoquivo) and Barranca del Cobre, Sierra Tarahumara, Chihuahua, Mexico.

Range.—Western Texas to Sonora and southward to Jalisco. In Mexico, known from Chihuahua: type localities, and Mojarachic, Chihuahua; Sonora: El Tigre Mountain below El Tigre mine; Jalisco: Oblatos.

RANA CATESBEIANA Shaw

Rana catesbeiana Suaw, Gen. Zool., vol. 3, pt. 1, 1802, p. 106, pl. 33.—Kr.ioee, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull 160, 1932, pp. 191, 195-197, figs. 21-23.

Type.—Probably no preserved type.

Type locality—North America (restricted to South Carolina).

Range.—In the United States, chiefly east of longitude 98° W., but introduced widely elsewhere; northern Mexico. Reported from Nuevo Leén: San Diego (near Cadereyta); Tamaulipas: Altamira. Expected in Sonora and elsewhere (introduced).

STATE LISTS

Compilation of state lists is beset with difficulties arising from incorrect or dubious identifications of material not now available for examination. In most vertebrate classes, casual records and descrip- tions frequently suffice to allocate correctly erroneously identified specimens, but in amphibians even lengthy descriptions are sometimes insufficient, if the proper comparisons are not made. More than in any other vertebrate class, amphibians are identified, with exceptions of course, on a comparative basis. Thus older workers, whose know]l- edge of the Mexican fauna was far more incomplete than that of present-day students, frequently could neither evaluate characters properly nor describe them so that the specimens could later be

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 101

identified satisfactorily. For this reason we have been unable to allocate some published records, and others only with some or consid- erable doubt. We have eliminated from these lists records we think preposterous, but have retained some that are possibly correct even though unlikely.

All political areas are represented by three or more records. Arranged according to the number of species known from each, the following sequence results:

Weraeruz...—=— 416 71 Singloatras...2210. = 21 Distrito Federal__. 14 Ga CAs 5. feel eters 53 Sonoratere-_ S22cee 20ceeCoahwilas 28 222. 13 Chiapas-— 6-4 47 Nay anitese—sss2 2 19 Dunancosses.. == 13 Guerrero___... =U). 42 Damaukipss = sees 19 Guanajuato_-______ 12 Puebla sq. steosites: 33 (Wabascoust.- sz 18 Hacatecasou. S22 10 idaleo naa -8 29 Colimasss. . 522 lanes hliaxcalaso i Seu 5 IMExiCOn Ss 452855 =~ 28 Chihuahua 222222 ie) Aguascalientes____- 4 San Luis Potosf__.. 27 Campeche-.---__-_-- 16. YQuerétaroll sess 3 Morelos... =.=. 25 Nuevo Leén____--_- 16 Quintana Roo-___-_- 3 aS COme foe thle 22 iucnianee oe eee 16

Michoacén_______- ‘21. ~=Baja California.__._ 15

Veracruz with 71 forms recorded possesses an extremely large proportion of the species of Mexico. This is due perhaps as much to relatively extensive collecting as to favorable environments; important also is the wide variety of niches in the state. Oaxaca with equally varied niches is not so well collected. It is of interest that these two states lead also in number of snake species represented, although the disparity between them is not so great for snakes. Arid or semiarid areas inhabited by many kinds of snakes have relatively few amphibians, as for instance in the case of Baja California. No state has been really well collected, and most have been very poorly investigated. Many additions are to be expected to the list as now constructed.

AGUASCALIENTES Bufo cognatus

Bufo californicus

Bufo boreas halophilus Bufo punctatus

Hyla regilla

Hyla arenicolor

BAJA CALIFORNIA Rana pipiens

Rana aurora draytoni

Scaphiopus multiplicatus Hyla eximia

Rana pipiens

Rana montezumae

Taricha klauberi

CAMPECHE Ensatina croceater Batrachoseps attenuatus leucopus Rhinophrynus dorsalis Aneides lugubris lugubris Bufo horribilis Scaphiopus couchii Bufo valliceps Scaphiopus hammondii Engystomops pustulosus

Bufo woodhousii woodhousii Leptodactylus labialis

102 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Leptodactylus melanonotus Agalychnis moreletii Acrodytes spilomma Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla loquax

Hyla underwoodi

Hyla staufferi

Microhyla elegans Hypopachus cuneus nigroreticulatus Rana pipiens

Rana palmipes

CHIAPAS

Dermophis mexicanus mexicanus Gymnopis multiplicata oaxacae Magnadigita nigroflavescens Bolitoglossa occidentalis Bolitoglossa flaviventris Bolitoglossa moreleti Bolitoglossa rufescens Chiropterotriton xolocalcae Rhinophrynus dorsalis

Bufo angustipes

Bufo horribilis

Bufo canaliferus

Bufo cristatus

Bufo valliceps

Bufo perplexus Engystomops pustulosus Syrrhophus rubrimaculatus Syrrhophus nebulosus Microbatrachylus albolabris Microbatrachylus montanus Microbatrachylus minimus Microbatrachylus imitator Microbatrachylus pygmaeus Leptodactylus labialis Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus matudai Eleutherodactylus rugulosus Eleutherodactylus beatae Eleutherodactylus venustus Eleutherodactylus rhodopis Centrolenella fleischmanni Agalychnis moreletii Plectrohyla sagorum Plectrohyla matudai Acrodytes modestus Acrodytes spilomma, Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla robertmertensi

Hyla underwoodi

Hyla rozellae

Hyla beltrani

Hyla staufferi

Hyla miotympanum? Microhyla usta gadovii Hypopachus maculatus Rana pipiens

Rana palmipes

CHIHUAHUA

Ambystoma rosaceum Ambystoma fluvinatum Ambystoma tigrinum subsp. Seaphiopus couchii Scaphiopus hammondii Bufo woodhousii woodhousii Bufo compactilis

Bufo cognatus

Bufo insidior

Bufo simus

Bufo punctatus Eleutherodactylus tarahumaraensis Hyla wrightorum

Hyla arenicolor

Microhyla olivacea

Rana pipiens

Rana tarahumarae

COAHUILA

Scaphiopus couchii Scaphiopus hammondii Bufo compactilis

Bufo cognatus

Bufo horribilis

Bufo insidior

Bufo valliceps

Bufo punctatus Eleutherodactylus latrans Acris crepitans

Hyla arenicolor Microhyla olivacea Rana pipiens

COLIMA

Batrachoseps attenuatus ? (Nevado de Colima) (possibly Jalisco)

Bufo horribilis

Bufo simus

Bufo marmoreus

Syrrhophus modestus

Leptodactylus melanonotus

EHleutherodactylus occidentalis

Pternohyla fodiens

Agalychnis dacnicolor

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 103

Acrodytes inflatus Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla smithi

Microhyla usta usta Hypopachus oxyrrhinus Hypopachus ovis

Rana pipiens

Rana pustulosa

DISTRITO FEDERAL

Siredon mexicanum Rhyacosiredon altamirani Ambystoma velasci Pseudoeurycea leprosa Chiropterotriton chiroptera Scaphiopus multiplicatus Bufo compactilis

Bufo simus

Tomodactylus angustidigitorum Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla eximia

Hyla lafrentzi

Hyla arenicolor

Rana montezumae

Rana pipiens

DURANGO

Scaphiopus multiplicatus Bufo woodhousii woodhousii Bufo compactilis

Bufo cognatus

Bufo horribilis

Bufo insidior

Bufo simus Eleutherodactylus augusti Hyla eximia

Hyla arenicolor Microhyla olivacea

Rana pipiens

Rana pustulosa

GUANAJUATO

Pseudoeurycea bellii Scaphiopus multiplicatus Bufo compactilis

Bufo simus

Bufo punctatus Syrrhophus guttilatus Eleutherodactylus augusti Hyla eximia

Hyla arenicolor Microhyla usta usta

Rana pipiens Rana montezumae

GUERRERO

Gymnopis multiplicata oaxacae Pseudoeurycea bellii Scaphiopus multiplicatus Bufo horribilis

Bufo simus

Bufo gemmifer

Bufo coccifer

Bufo marmoreus

Bufo perplexus Tomodactylus albolabris Tomodactylus amulae Tomodactylus nitidus Syrrhophus pipilans Microbatrachylus albolabris Microbatrachylus minimus Microbatrachylus pygmaeus Leptodactylus labialis Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus calcitrans Eleutherodactylus saltator Eleutherodactylus augusti Eleutherodactylus rugulosus Centrolenella viridissima Agalychnis dacnicolor Acrodytes inflatus

Smilisea baudinii baudinii Hyla arboricola

Hyla underwoodi

Hyla smithi

Hyla pinorum

Hyla leonard-schultzei

Hyla staufferi

Hyla arenicolor

Hyla erythromma

Hyla melanomma

Hyla miotympanum Ptychohyla adipoventris Microhyla usta usta Hypopachus caprimimus Rana sierramadrensis

Rana pipiens

Rana pustulosa

HIDALGO

Bolitoglossa platydactyla Pseudoeurycea bellii

Pseudoeurycea gigantea Pseudoeurycea cephalica rubrimembris Pseudoeurycea cephalica manni

104 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Chiropterotriton dimidiata Chiropterotriton chondrostega Chiropterotriton arborea Chiropterotriton multidentata Chiropterotriton mosaueri Chiropterotriton terrestris Bufo horribilis

Bufo simus

Bufo vailiceps

Tomodactylus macrotympanum Syrrhophus latodactylus Syrrhophus verruculatus Syrrhophus verrucipes Eleutherodactylus hidalgoensis Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla eximia

Hyla lafrentzi

Hyla bistincta

Hyla robertsorum

Hyla arenicolor

Hyla bromeliana

Hyla miotympanum

Rana pipiens

Rana montezumae

JALISCO

Pseudoeurycea bellii Scaphiopus multiplicatus Bufo compactilis

Bufo horribilis

Bufo simus

Bufo marmoreus Microbatrachylus hobartsmithi Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus occidentalis EHleutherodactylus augusti Pternohyla fodiens Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla eximia

Hyla staufferi

Hyla arenicolor

Microhyla usta usta Hypopachus ovis Hypopachus oxyrrhinus Rana pipiens

Rana montezumae

Rana megapoda

Rana tarahumarae

MEXICO

Siredon mexicanum Siredon lermaensis Rhyacosiredon rivularis

Rhyacosiredon leorae Rhyacosiredon altamirani Ambystoma velasci Ambystoma granulosum Ambystoma lacustris Ambystoma, schmidti Ambystoma bombypellum Pseudoeurycea bellii Pseudoeurycea altamontana Pseudoeurycea robertsi Pseudoeurycea leprosa, Pseudoeurycea cephalica cephalica Chiropterotriton chiroptera Scaphiopus multiplicatus

Bufo compactilis Tomodactylus angustidigitorum Microbatrachylus hobartsmithi Eleutherodactylus bolivari Hyla cdrdenasi

Hyla eximia

Hyla lafrentzi

Hyla bistincta

Hyla arenicolor

Rana pipiens

Rana montezumae

MICHOACAN

Bathysiredon dumerilii Ambystoma amblycephalum Ambystoma ordinarium Pseudoeurycea bellii

Bufo compactilis

Bufo horribilis

Tomodactylus angustidigitorum Microbatrachylus hobartsmithi Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus occidentalis Eleutherodactylus augusti Eleutherodactylus vocalis Agalychnis dacnicolor

Hyla eximia

Hyla smithi

Hyla bistincta

Hyla arenicolor

Hyla smaragdina

Hypopachus oxyrrhinus

Rana pipiens

Rana montezumae

MORELOS

Rhyacosiredon altamirani Rhyacosiredon zempoalaensis Pseudoeurycea bellii

CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 105

Pseudoeurycea altamontana Pseudoeurycea leprosa Pseudoeurycea cephalica cephalica Chiropterotriton chiroptera Bufo horribilis

Bufo simus

Bufo perplexus ?Tomodactylus amulae Tomodactylus nitidus Leptodactylus labialis Eleutherodactylus augusti Agalychnis dacnicolor Hylella azteca

Hyla eximia

Hyla lafrentzi

Hyla smithi

Hyla bistincta

Hyla arenicolor Hypopachus alboventer Rana pipiens

Rana pustulosa

Rana palmipes

NAYARIT

Pseudoeurycea bellii Scaphiopus couchii

Bufo horribilis

Bufo kelloggi

Bufo simus

Bufo nayaritensis Leptodactylus occidentalis Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus occidentalis Eleutherodactylus augusti Pternohyla fodiens Agalychnis dacnicolor Acrodytes inflatus

Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla eximia

Hyla smithi

Hyla arenicolor Hypopachus ovis

Rana pipiens

NUEVO LEON

Pseudoeurycea galeanae Scaphiopus couchii Scaphiopus hammondii Bufo compactilis

Bufo horribilis

Bufo debilis

Bufo valliceps

Bufo punctatus

Syrrhophus smithi Syrrhophus latodactylus Syrrohophus campi Leptodactylus labialis Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla miotympanum Rana pipiens

Rana catesbeiana

OAXACA

Dermophis mexicanus mexicanus Gymnopis multiplicata oaxacae Thorius pulmonaris

Thorius narisovalis Magnadigita macrinii Bolitoglossa platydactyla Bolitoglossa rufescens Pseudoeurycea bellii Pseudoeurycea unguidentis Pseudoeurycea smithi Pseudoeurycea cochranae Rhinophrynus dorsalis Scaphiopus multiplicatus Bufo compactilis

Bufo horribilis

Bufo simus

Bufo canaliferus

Bufo coccifer

Bufo valliceps

Bufo marmoreus

Bufo perplexus

Engystomops pustulosus Tomodactylus nitidus Syrrhophus pipilans Syrrhophus leprus Microbatrachylus lineatissimus Microbatrachylus oaxacae Microbatrachylus pygmaeus Leptodactylus labialis Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus mexicanus Eleutherodactylus augusti Eleutherodactylus natator Eleutherodactylus avocalis Eleutherodactylus rugulosus Eleutherodactylus macdougalli Eleutherodactylus rhodopis Diaglena reticulata Agalychnis moreletii Agalychnis dacnicolor Acrodytes spilomma

Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hylella sumichrasti

106 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Hyla euphorbiacea Hyla robustofemora Hyla bistincta

Hyla staufferi

Hyla hazelae

Hyla miotympanum Hyla arborescandens Microhyla usta gadovii Rana pipiens

Rana palmipes

PUEBLA

Rhyacosiredon leorae Ambystoma subsalsum Ambystoma velasci

Thorius dubitus

Thorius troglodytes Pseudoeurycea bellii Pseudoeurycea gigantea Pseudoeurycea gadovii Pseudoeurycea leprosa Pseudoeurycea melanomolga Pseudoeurycea cephalica cephalica Chiropterotriton chiroptera Scaphiopus multiplicatus Bufo compactilis

Bufo horribilis

Bufo simus

Tomodactylus nitidus Syrrhophus verruculatus Eleutherodactylus cactorum Eleutherodactylus rugulosus? Eleutherodactylus dunni Agalychnis callidryas Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hylella azteca

Hyla euphorbiacea

Hyla cdrdenasi

Hyla eximia

Hyla lafrentzi

Hyla bistincta

Hyla miotympanum

Hyla arborescandens

Rana, pipiens

Rana montezumae

QUERETARO

Pseudoeurycea, bellii Rana montezumae Rana pipiens

QUINTANA ROO

Rhinophrynus dorsalis Bufo valliceps Smilisca baudinii baudinii

SAN LUIS POTOSI

Diemictylus kallerti Bolitoglossa rufescens Bolitoglossa platydactyla Chiropterotriton multidentata Scaphiopus couchii Scaphiopus multiplicatus Bufo cognatus

Bufo horribilis

Bufo valliceps

Bufo punctatus Tomodactylus macrotympanum Syrrhophus guttilatus Syrrhophus latodactylus Syrrhophus cystignathoides? Syrrhophus campi Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus latrans Eleutherodactylus rhodopis Acrodytes spilomma Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla eximia

Hyla picta

Hyla staufferi

Hyla arenicolor

Hyla miotympanum Hypopachus cuneus cuneus Rana pipiens

SINALOA

Seaphiopus couchii

Bufo horribilis

Bufo kelloggi

Bufo simus

Bufo mazatlanensis

Bufo marmoreus

Bufo punctatus Leptodactylus occidentalis Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus occidentalis Diaglena spatulata Pternohyla fodiens Agalychnis dacnicolor Acrodytes inflatus? Smilisea baudinii baudinii Hyla smithi

Hyla arenicolor

-CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIA OF MEXICO 107

Microhyla mazatlanensis Microhyla usta usta Hypopachus oxyrrhinus Rana pipiens

SONORA

Scaphiopus couchii Scaphiopus hammondii Bufo alvarius

Bufo woodhousii woodhousii Bufo compactilis

Bufo horribilis

Bufo insidior

Bufo mazatlanensis

Bufo punctatus Leptodactylus occidentalis Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus tarahumaraensis Pternohyla fodiens Agalychnis dacnicolor Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla arenicolor

Microhyla olivacea

Rana pipiens

Rana pustulosa

Rana tarahumarae

TABASCO

Dermophis mexicanus mexicanus Bolitoglossa platydactyla ? Bolitoglossa rufescens Rhinophrynus dorsalis Bufo horribilis

Bufo valliceps Engystomops pustulosus Leptodactylus labialis Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus rhodopis Agalychnis moreletii Agalychnis callidryas Acrodytes spilomma Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla picta

Hyla staufferi

Rana pipiens

Rana palmipes

TAMAULIPAS

Siren intermedia nettingi Diemictylus meridionalis Rhinophrynus dorsalis Scaphiopus couchii

Scaphiopus hammondii Bufo compactilis

Bufo horribilis

Bufo debilis

Bufo valliceps

Bufo punctatus Syrrhophus campi Leptodactylus labialis Eleutherodactylus batrachylus Acrodytes spilomma Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla staufferi

Hypopachus cuneus cuneus Rana pipiens

Rana catesbeiana

TLAXCALA

Pseudoeurycea bellii Bufo simus

Hyla lafrentzi

Hyla arborescandens Rana pipiens

VERACRUZ

Dermophis mexicanus mexicanus Diemictylus kallerti

Thorius pennatulus

Thorius dubitus

Thorius troglodytes Parvimolge townsendi Oedipina lineola

Bolitoglossa rufescens Bolitoglossa platydactyla Pseudoeurycea gigantea Pseudoeurycea gadovii Pseudoeurycea melanomolga Pseudoeurycea leprosa Pseudoeurycea nigromaculata Pseudoeurycea cephalica cephalica Chiropterotriton lavae Chiropterotriton chiroptera Rhinophrynus dorsalis Scaphiopus multiplicatus Bufo compactilis

Bufo horribilis

Bufo simus

Bufo cristatus

Bufo valliceps

Bufo marmoreus Engystomops pustulosus Tomodactylus nitidus Syrrhophus nebulosus? Syrrhophus leprus

108 BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Syrrhophus cystignathoides Syrrhophus verruculatus Microbatrachylus albolabris Microbatrachylus minimus Microbatrachylus pygmaeus Leptodactylus labialis Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus alfredi * Eleutherodactylus spatulatus Eleutherodactylus decoratus Eleutherodactylus hidalgoensis Eleutherodactylus mexicanus Eleutherodactylus natator Eleutherodactylus beatae Eleutherodactylus dorsoconcolor Eleutherodactylus venustus Eleutherodactylus rhodopis Eleutherodactylus dunni Anotheca coronata Agalychnis moreletii Agalychnis callidryas Acrodytes spilomma Smilisca baudinii baudinii Hyla euphorbiacea

Hyla eximia

Hyla lafrentzi

Hyla underwoodi

Hyla rickardsi

Hyla picta

Hyla pachyderma

Hyla bistincta

Hyla forbesi

Hyla staufferi

Hyla dendroscarta

Hyla taeniopus

Hyla miotympanum

Hyla arborescandens

- Microhyla elegans

Microhyla usta usta Hypopachus cuneus cuneus Rana pipiens

Rana palmipes

YUCATAN

Dermophis mexicanus mexicanus Bolitoglossa yucatana Rhinophrynus dorsalis

Bufo horribilis

Bufo valliceps

Leptodactylus labialis Leptodactylus melanonotus Eleutherodactylus laticeps Triprion petasatus

Agalychnis moreletii

Agalychnis callidryas

Acrodytes spilomma

Smilisca baudinii baudinii

Hyla underwoodi

Hypopachus cuneus nigroreticulatus Rana pipiens

ZACATECAS

Scaphiopus couchii Scaphiopus multiplicatus

Bufo compactilis

Bufo insidior

Bufo simus

Eleutherodactylus occidentalis Eleutherodactylus augusti Hyla eximia

Hyla arenicolor

Rana pipiens

rN Er xe

achatina, Hylaplesia, 92. Microhyla, 92. Acris, 68, 77. crepitans, 77, 102. Acrodytes, 68, 74. inflata, 74. inflatus, 103, 105. modesta, 74. modestus, 74, 102. spilomma, 74, 75, 102, 105-108. adipoventris, Ptychohyla, 91, 103. adtrila, Rana, 99. affinis, Hyla, 89. Agalychnis, 68, 71. callidryas, 71, 72, 106-108. dacnicolor, 71, 72, 102-107. moreletii, 71, 102, 105, 107, 108. agua, Bufo, 37. alba, Siredon lichenoides, 7. albilabris, Leptodactylus, 56. albolabris, Microbatrachylus, 102, 103, 108. Tomodactylus, 48, 103. alboventer, Hypopachus, 94, 95, 105. alfredi, Eleutherodactylus, 57, 60, 108. Hylodes, 60. altamirani, Amblystoma, 8, 9. Rhyacosiredon, 8, 9, 103, 104. altamontana, Bolitoglossa, 28. Pseudoeurycea, 26, 28, 104, 105. altamontanus, Oedipus, 28. alvarius, Bufo, 37, 39, 107. amblycephala, Ambystoma, 13. eo eephalam, Ambystoma, 10, 13, Amblystoma altamirani, 8, 9. Ambystoma, 6, 10. amblycephala, 13. amblycephaium, 10, 138, 104. bombypella, 13. bombypellum, 10, 13, 104. fluvinatum, 6, 11, 14, 102. granulosum, 11, 12, 104. lacustris, 11, 12, 104. maculatum, 10. ordinaria, 13. ordinarium, 10, 13, 104. proserpina, 14. proserpine, 14. rosaceum, 6, 11, 13, 102. schmidti, 10, 13, 104. sp., 13. subsalsum, 11, 106.

53, 54,

757435—_48—_8

Ambystoma subviolacea, 10. tigrinum, 10, 11, 14. tigrinum mavortium, 10, 13. tigrinum proserpine, 11, 14. tigrinum subsp., 102 tigrinum velasci, 11, 12. velasci, 11, 108, 104, 106. Ambystomidae, 6. Ambystomoidea, 5, 6. Amphibia, 3. amulae, Tomodactylus, 47, 48, 103, 105. Ameides, 18, 20. lugubris, 20. lugubris lugubris, 20, 101. Anaxyrus, 37. melancholicus, 37, 40. angustidigitorum, 'Tomodactylus, 48, 103, 104. angustipes, Bufo, 37, 41, 102. anomalus, Bufo, 40. Dromoplectrus, 37. Anomocoela, 33, 34. Anotheea, 67, 70. coronata, 70, 108. antioquiensis, Centrolenella, 68. aquarum, Lusus, 8. arborea, Bolitoglossa, 32. Chiropterotriton, 31, 32, 104. arborescandens, Hyla, 82, 91, 106-108. arboricola, Hyla, 78, 83, 103. arenicolor, Hyla, 81, 89, 101-108. argillaceus, Bufo, 45. attenuata, Salamandrina, 19. attenuatus, Batrachoseps, 19, 20, 102. augusti, Eleutherodactylus, 59, 63, 64, 103-105, 108. augusti, Hylodes, 63. avocalis, Eleutherodactylus, 60, 65, 105. Axolotes, 7. geuttata, 7. maculata, 13. axolotl, Siredon, 7. azteca, Hylella, 76, 77, 105, 106.

47,

Bathysiredon, 6, 7. dumerilii, 7, 104.

Batrachoseps, 18, 19.

Batrachoseps attenuatus, 19, 20, 102. attenuatus leucopus, 19, 101. leucopus, 19.

Batrachyla longipes, 57, 61.

109

110

BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

batrachylus, Eleutherodactylus, 57, 61,| Bufo canaliferus, 38, 43, 102, 105. 10

ie baudinii, Hyla, 75, 76, 90. Hyla baudinii, 76. Smilisca, 76. Smilisca baudinii, 75, 102-108.

beatae, Eleutherodactylus, 60, 65, 102, 108

Hylodes, 65. beldingi, Bufo, 46. belli, Spelerpes, 26. bellii, Bolitoglossa, 26. Oedipus, 26. Pseudoeurycea, 25, re 103-107. beltrani, Hyla, 80, 87, 1 berkenbuschii, Hylodes, iS

bistincta, Hyla, 79, 80, 87, 104-106, 108.

Boana, 73. Bolitoglossa, 18, 22. altamontana, 28. arborea, 32. bellii, 26. cephalica rubrimembris, 30. chiroptera, 32. chondrostega, 31. cochranae, 28. dimidiata, 31. flaviventris, 23, 24, 102. gadovii, 27. galaenae, 29. gigantea, 27. lavae, 32. leprosa, 28. macrinii, 22. melanomolga, 27. mexicana, 22, 24, 26. moreleti, 23, 24, 102. multidentata, 32. nigroflavescens, 21, 22. nigromaculata, 29. occidentalis, 22, 23, 102. platydactyla, 23, 108, 105-107. rufescens, 22, 23, 102, 105-107. smithi, 28. terrestris, 33. townsendi, 20. unguidentis, 27. xolocalcae, 33. yucatana, 23, 25, 108. bolivari, Eleutherodactylus, 59, 64, 104. bombifrons, Scaphiopus, 35. bombypella, Ambystoma, 13.

bombypellum, Ambystoma, 10, 13, 104.

Borborocoetes mexicanus, 62. braziliensis, Gymnopis, 5. bromeliana, Hyla, 81, 90, 104. bufo, Rana, 37. Bufo, 37. agua, 37. alvarius, 37, 39, 107. angustipes, 37, 41, 102. anomalus, 40 argillaceus, 45. beldingi, 46.

boreas halophilus, 37, 38, 48, 101.

californicus, 37, 41, 101.

coccifer, 39, 44, 46, 103, 105. cognatus, 37, 41, 101-103, 106. cognatus californicus, 41. compactilis, 37, 40, 102-108. cristatus, 39, 44, 102, 107. debilis, 38, 42, 105, 107. dipternus, 41. dorsalis, 40. eiteli, 45. frontosus, 40. gemmifer, 38, 43, 103. granulosus, 45. halophila, 43. horribilis, 37, 41, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108. insidior, 38, 42, 102, 103, 107, 108. intermedius, 42. kelloggi, 38, 42, 105, 106. lateralis, 45. levifrons, 40. marinus, 41. marmoreus, 39, 45, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107. mazatlanensis, 38, 48, 106, 107. mexicanus, 40. monksiae, 43. nayaritenis, 39, 44, 105. nebulifer, 45. occidentalis, 43. occipitalis, 44. perplexus, 39, 45, 102, 103, 105. punctatus, 39, 46, 102, 103, 105- 107. simus, 38, 42, 102-108. speciosus, 40. sternosignatus, 45. terrestris, 41. trachypus, 44. valliceps, 39, 44, 101, 102, 104-108. vulgaris, 37. woodhousii, 40. woodhousii woodhousil, 37, 40, 101— 103, 107. Bufonidae, 36, 37. cactorum, Eleutherodactylus, 59, 63, 106. Caeciliidae, 3, 4. calcitrans, Eleutherodactylus, 46, 58, 62, 103. Hylodes, 62. californicus, Bufo, 37, 41, 101. Bufo cognatus, 41 caliginosus, Leptodactylus, 5 Bilis callidryas, Agalychnis, 71, 72, 106-108. Hyla, (OTP campi, Syrrhopbus, 50, 52, 106, 107. canaliferus, Bufo, 38, 43, 102, 105. caprimimus, Hypopachus, 94, 95, 103. carbonarius, Geotriton, 24. cfrdenasi, Hyla, 78, 83, 104, 106. carolinense, Engystoma, 92. catesbeiana, Rana, 98, 100, 105, 107. Caudata, 3, 5.

INDEX

Cauphias, 73. crassus, 86. Centrolene, 68. geckoideum, 68. Centrolenelia, 67, 68. antioquiensis, 68. fleischmanni, 68, 102. viridissima, 68, 69, 103. cephalica, Pseudoeurycea cphaliga; 26, 29, 104-107. cephalicus, Oedipus, 29. Spelerpes, 29. a aon Bolitoglossa, 32. hiropterotriton, 31, 32, 103-107. Chiropterotriton, 19, 30. arborea, 31, 32, 104. chiroptera, 31, 32 103-107. chondrostega, 30, 31, 104. dimidiata, 30, 31, 104. lavae, 31, 32, 107. mosaueri, 31, 32, 104. multidentata, 31, 32, 104, 106. terrestris, 31, 33, 104. xolocalcae, 31, 33, 102. chiropterus, Oedipus, 32. Spelerpes, 32. chondrostega, Bolitoglossa, 31. Chiropterotriton, 30, 31, 104. coccifer, Bufo, 39, 44, 46, 103, 105. cochranae, Bolitoglossa, 28. Pseudoeurycea, 26, 28, 105. cognatus, Bufo, 37, 41, 101-103, 106. compactilis, Bufo, 37, 40, 102-108. concolor, Rana montezumae, 99. conspicillatus, Hylodes, 60. conspicuus, Eleutherodactylus, 57, 60. copii, Hyla, 89. coronata, Anotheca, 70, 108. Gastrotheca, 70. goucne, Scaphiopus, 35, 101, 102, 105-

crassa, Hyla, 80, 86. Plectrohyla, 86. crassus, Cauphias, 86. crepitans, Acris, 77, 102. cristatus, Bufo, 39, 44, 102, 107. croceater, Ensatina, 19, 101. Plethodon, 19. culex, Hyla, 88. cuneus, Hypopachus, 95. Hypopachus cuneus, 107. curta, Hyla, 82. cystignathoides, Phyllobates, 52. Syrrhophus, 50, 52, 106, 108. Cystignathus fragilis, 56. gracilis, 56. labialis, 56. melanonotus, 57. microtis, 57. perlaevis, 57.

94, 95, 106,

dacnicolor, Agalychnis, 71, 72, 102- 107

Phyllomedusa, CRP

111

daulinia, Smilisca, 75, 76. debilis, Bufo, 38, 42, 105, 107. decoratus, Eleutherdactylus, Sond roar eatey Hyla, 81, 89, 108. Dermophis, 4 mexicana, 4, mexicanus, 4. ee mexicanus, 4, 102, 105, Desmognathidae, 16. Diaglena, 67, 69. reticulata, 69. spatulata, 69. Diemictylus, 14, 15. kallerti, 15, 107. meridionalis, 15, 107. miniatus meridionalis, 15. viridescens, 15. digueti, Hyliola, 89. dimidiata, Bolitoglossa, 31. Chiropterotriton, 30, 31, 104. Diplasiocoela, 33, 91. dipternus, Bufo, 41. Docidophrynae, 37. dorsalis, Bufo, 40. Rhinophrynus, 34, 101, 102, 106, 108

dorsalus, Rhinophryne, 34, 105. dorsoconcolor, Eleutherodactylus, 66, 08. draytoni, Rana, 99. Rana aurora, 97, 99, 101. Dromoplectrus, 37. anomalus, 37. dubitus, Thorius, 17, 106, 107. dugesii, Scaphiopus, 36. dumerilii, Bathysiredon, 7, 104. Siredon, hs dunni(i), Eleutherodactylus, 60, 67, 106, 108.

58, 61,

60,

ebraccata, Hyla, 79, 84, 85.

edulis, Gyrinus, 8.

eiteli, Bufo, 45.

elegans, Engystoma, 93. Gastrophryne, 93. Microhyla, 92, 93, 102, 108.

Eleutherodactylus, 2. 46, 57, 64. alfredi, 57, 60, 108. augusti, 59, 63, 64, 103-105, 108. avocalis, 60, 65, 105. batrachylus, 57, 61, 107. beatae, 60, 65, 102, 108. bolivari, 59, 64, 104. cactorum, 59, 63, 106. calcitrans, 46, 58, 62 , 103. conspicuus, 57, 60. decoratus, 58, 61, 108. dorsoconcolor, 60, 66, 108. dunni(i), 60, 67, 106, 108. hidalgoensis, 58, a 104, 108. hobartsmithi, 53, laticeps, 59. 63, ian latrans, 59, 63, 102, 106.

112

Eleutherodactylus longipes, 58, 61. macdougalli, 60, 66, 105 martinicensis, 57. matudai, 58, 59, 64, 102. mexicanus, 59, 62, 105. 108. natator, 60, 65, 105, 108. occidentalis, 58,

108

rhodopis, 60, 66, 102, 105-108. rugulosus, 60, 65, 102, "103, 105, 106. saltator, 59, 63, 103. spatulatus, 58, 61, 108. tarahumaraensis, 59, 64, 102, 107. venustus, 60, 66, 102, 108. vocalis, 59, 64, 104. Engystoma carolinense, 92. elegans, 93. mexicanum, 93. olivaceum, 93. rugosum, 92, 93. ustum, 93. variolosum, 94. Engystomops, 36, 46, 47. petersi, 47. pustulosus, 47, 101, 102, 105, 107. Ensatina, 18, 19. croceater, 19, 101. eschscholtzii, 19. Epirhexis, 57. erythromma, Hyla, 81, 89, 103. eschscholtzii, Ensatina, 19. Eupemphix, 47. gadovii, 94. nattereri, 47. euphorbiacea, Hyla, 78, 82, 106, 108. Exerodonta, 76 sumichrasti, 76.

eximia, Hyla, 78, 83, 101, 103-106, 108.

flaviventris, Bolitoglossa, 23, 24, 102. Oedipus, 24,

fleischmanni, Centrolenella, 68, 102. Hylella, 68.

fluvinatum, Ambystoma, 6, 11, 14, 102.

fodiens, Pternohyla, 70, 71, 102, 104, 106, 107.

forbesi, Hyla, 80, 88, 108.

forreri, Rana, 98.

fragilis, Cystignathus, 56.

frontosus, Bufo, 40.

gadovii, Bolitoglossa, 27. Eupemphix, 94. Microhyla usta, 92, 94, 102, 106. Oedipus, 27. Pseudoeurycea, 25, 27, 106, 107. galaenae, Bolitoglossa, 29. galeanae, Pseudoeurycea, 26, 29, 105. Gastrophryne, 92. elegans, 93. olivacea, 93. usta, 93. Gastrotheca coronata, 70. geckoideum, Centrolene, 68.

62, 102, 104, 105,

BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

gemmifer, Bufo, 38, 438, 103.

Geotriton carbonarius, "24, variegata, 23.

gibbicaudus, Spelerpes, 29.

gigantea, Bolitoglossa, 27. Pseudoeurycea, 25, 27, 103, 106,

giganteus, Oedipus, 27. glutinosus, Plethodon, 16. godmani, Hyla, 85, 90. gracilipes, Hyla, 83. gracilis, Cystignathus, 56. granulosum, Ambystoma, 11, 12, 104. granulosus, "Bufo, 45. Taricha, 14, eryllus, Rana, 77. guatemalensis, Plectrohyla, 73. guttata, Axolotes, % guttilatus, Malachylodes, 49, 51. Syrrhophus, 49, 51, 103, 106. Gymnophiona, 3. Gymnopis, 4, 5. braziliensis, 5. mexicanus mexicanus, +, multiplicata, 5.

multiplicata oaxacae, 5, 102, 103, 105.

pricei, 5. Gyrinus edulis, 8. mexicanus, 7.

halophila, Bufo, 438. halophilus, Bufo boreas, 37, 38, 43, 101. hammondii, Seaphiopus, 35, 36, 101, 102, 105, 107. Spea, 36. harlanii, Siredon, 13. hazelae, Hyla, 81, 90, 106. hebes, Scytopis, 74. helenae, Phyllomedusa, 72. hidalgoensis, Eleutherodactylus, 58, 61, 104, 108.

hobartsmithi, Eleutherodactylus, 53, 55.

Microbatrachylus, 53, 55, 104. holbrookii, Scaphiopus, 35. holochlora, Hyla, 71. horribilis, Bufo, 37, 41, 101-108. humboldtii, Siredon, 8.

Hyla, 68, 75, 77. affinis, 89. art ree cancers, 82, 91, 106, 107, 108.

arboricola, 78, 83, 103.

arenicolor, 81, 89, 101-108.

baudinii, 75, 76, 90.

baudinii baudinii, 76.

beltrani, 80, 87, 102.

bistincta, 79, 80, 87, 104-106, 108.

bromeliana, 81, 90, 104.

callidryas, 71, 72.

cdrdenasi, 78, 83, 104, 106.

copii, 89.

crassa, 80, 86.

culex, 88

curta, 82.

dendroscarta, 81, 89, 108.

ee ee te

INDEX

Hyla ebraccata, 79, 84, 85. erythromma, 81, 89, 103. euphorbiacea, 78, 82, 106, 108. eximia, 78, 83, 101, 103-106, 108. forbesi, 80, 88, 108. godmani, 85, 90. gracilipes, 83. hazelae, 81, 90, 106. holochlora, 71. lafrentzi, 78, 84, 103-108. leonard-schultzei, 80, 87, 103. leucophyllata, 84. lichenosa, 75. loquax, 78, 79, 84, 102. melanomma, 81, 89, 103. microcephala, 85. microtis, 90. ee yenpenum, 82, 85, 90, 102-106,

08.

moreletii, 71. muricolor, 76. nana, 86. nigropunctata, 75. pachyderma, 80, 86, 108. phaeota, 80, 88. phlebodes, 85. picta, 79, 85, 106-108. pinorum, 80, 87, 103. plicata, 81, 88. regilla, 77, 78, 82, 101. regilla laticeps, 82. richardsi, 79, 85, 90, 108. robertmertensi, 79, 84, 85, 102. robertsorum, 80, 87, 104. robustofemora, 80, 86, 106. rozellae, 79, 86, 102. rudis, 71. smaragdina, 81, 90, 104. smithi, 79, 85, 103-106. spilomma, 75. staufferi, 81, 88, 102-104, 106-108. taeniopus, 81, 89, 90, 108. underwoodi, 79, 85, 102, 103, 108. vanvlietii, 76. venulosa, 74, 75. viridis, 77. wrightorum, 78, 84, 102. Hylaplesia achatina, 92. Hylella, 68, 76, 85. azteca, 76, 77, 105, 106. fleischmanni, 68. picta, 85. platycephala, 76. sumichrasti, 76, 105. tenera, 76. Hylidae, 36, 67. Hyliola, 77. digueti, 89. regilla, 77. Hylodes alfredi, 60. augusti, 63. beatae, 65. berkenbuschii, 65.

113

Hylodes calcitrans, 62. conspicillatus, 60. laticeps, 63. martinicensis, 57. plicatus, 66. sallaei, 66. venustus, 66. Hypopachus, 92, 94. alboventer, 94, 95, 105. caprimimus, 94, 95, 103. cuneus, 95. cuneus cuneus, 94, 95, 106, 107. ome nigroreticulatus, 95, 96, 102,

maculatus, 94, 95, 102. ovis, 95, 96, 103-105. oxyrrhinus, 95, 96, 103, 104, 107. seebachii, 94. Hypsiboas, 73.

imitator, Microbatrachylus, 53, 55, 102. inflata, Acrodytes, 74. inflatus, Acrodytes, 103, 105.

infuscatus, Spelerpes (Oedipus), 21. insidior, Bufo, 38, 42, 102, 103, 107, 108.

intermedia, Siren. 6. intermedius, Bufo, 42.

kallerti, Diemictylus, 15, 107. Triturus, 15

kelloggi, Bufo, 38, 42, 105, 106.

klauberi, Taricha, 15, 101. Taricha torosa, 15. Triturus, 15. Triturus torosus, 15.

labialis, Cystignathus, 56. Leptodactylus, 56, 101-103, 4105, 107, 108. Lacerta maculata, 13. lacertina, Siren, 6. lacustris, Ambystoma, 11, 12, 104. lafrentzi, Hyla, 78, 84, 103-108. lateralis, Bufo, 45. laticeps, Eleutherodactylus, 59, 63, 108. Hyla regilla, 82. Hylodes, 63. Spelerpes, 29, 30. latodactylus, Syrrhophus, 46, 50, 51, 104, 106. latrans, Eleutherodactylus, 59, 63, 102,

106.

Lithodytes, 63. lavae, Bolitoglossa, 32.

Chiropterotriton, 31, 32, 107. leonard-schultzei, Hyla, 80,"87, 103. leorae, Rhyacosiredon, 8, 9, 104, 106. leprosa, Bolitoglossa, 28.

Pseudoeurycea, 26, 28, 103-107. leprosus, Oedipus, 28.

Spelerpes, 28. leprus, Syrrhophus, 50, 51, 105, 107.

114

Leptodactylidae, 36, 46. Leptodactylus, 46, 55. albilabris, 56. caliginosus, 57. labialis, 56, 101-103, 105, 107, 108. Leptodactylus melanonotus, 56, 57, 102— 108

occidentalis, 56, 106, 107. typhonia, 55. lermaensis, Siredon, 7, 8, 104. leucophyllata, Hyla, 84. leucopus, Batrachoseps, 19. ; Batrachoseps attenuatus, 19,101. Leuiperus mexicanus, 62. levifrons, Bufo, 40. lichenoides, Siredon, 10. lichenosa, Hyla, 75. lineatissimus, Microbatrachylus, 46, 53, 54, 105. lineola, Oedipina, 21, 107. lineolus, Oedipina, 21. Oedipus, 21. Spelerpes, 21. Lithodytes latrans, 63. rhodopis, 66. Liuperus nitidus, 48. Liyla rugulosa, 65. longipes, Batrachila, 57, 61. Hleutherodactylus, 58, 61. loquax, Hyla, 78, 79, 84, 102. ludricus, Piscis, 8. lugubris, Aneides, 20. Aneides lugubris, 20, 101. Salamandra, 20. Lusus aquarum, 8.

macdougalli, Eleutherodactylus, 60, 66, 105.

macrinii, Bolitoglossa, 22. Magnadigita, 21, 22, 105. Oedipus, 22. macrotympanum, Tomodactylus, 47, 48, 104, 106. maculata, Axolotes, 13. Lacerta, 13. maculatum, Ambystoma, 10. maculatus, Hypopachus, 94, 95, 102. Magnadigita, 18, 21. macrinii, 21, 22, 105. nigroflavescens, 21, 22, 102. sulcata, 21, 22. Malachylodes, 49. guttilatus, 49, 51. manni, Oedipus, 30. Pseudoeurycea cephalica, 26, 30, 103. marina, Rana, 37. marinus, Bufo, 41. marmoreus, Bufo, 39, 45, 102-107. marnockii, Syrrhophus, 49. martinicensis, Eleutherodactylus, 57. Hylodes, 57. matudai, Eleutherodactylus, 58, 59, 64, 2

102. Plectrohyla, 73, 102.

BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

mavortium, Ambystoma tigrinum, 10, 13

mazatlanensis, Bufo, 38, 43, 106, 107. Microhyla, 92, 107.

Meantes, 5.

megapoda, Rana, 97, 100, 104.

melancholicus, Anaxyrus, 37, 40.

melanomma, Hyla, 81, 89, 103.

melanomolga, Bolitoglossa, 27. Pseudoeuryeea, 25, 27, 106, 107.

melanomolge, Pseudoeurycea, 27.

melanonotus, Cystignathus, 57. Leptodactylus, 56, 57, 102-108.

meridionalis, Diemictylus, 15, 107. Diamictylus miniatus, 15. Triturus, 15.

mexicana, Bolitoglossa, 22, 24, 26. Dermophis, 4.

mexicanum, Engystoma, 93.

Siredon, 7, 103, 104. Spelerpes, 24. mexicanus, Borborocoetes, 62. Bufo, 40. Dermophis, 4. Dermophis mexicanus, 4, 102,"105, 107. Eleutherodactylus, 59, 62, 105,7108. Gymnopis mexicanus, 4. Gyrinus, 7. Leuiperus, 62. Oedipus, 25. Siphonops, 4.

Microbatrachylus, 46, 53, 59. albolabris, 58, 54, 102, 103,7108. hobartsmithi, 538, 55, 104. imitator, 53, 55, 102. lineatissimus, 46, 53, 54, 105. minimus, 53, 54, 102, 198, 108. montanus, 58, 54, 102. oaxacae, 53, 54, 105. pygmaeus, 53, 55, 102, 103, 105,

108

microcephala, Hyla, 85. Microhyla, 92. achatina, 92. elegans, 92, 93, 102, 108. mazatlanensis, 92, 107. olivacea, 92, 93, 1038, 107. usta, 94. usta gadovii, 92, 94, 102, 106. usta usta, 92, 93, 103, 104, 107, 108. Microhylidae, 91. Microhylinae, 92. Microphryne, 47. microtis, Cystignathus, 57. Hyla, 90. minimus, Microbatrachylus, 53, 54,°102, 103, Spelerpes, 17. miotympanum, Hyla, 82, 85, 90, 102- 106, 108. modesta, Acrodytes, 74. modestus, Acrodytes, 74, 102. Syrrhophus, 49, 50, 102. monksiae, Bufo, 43.

INDEX

115

montanus, Microbatrachylus, 53, 54, 102. | Oedipus multidentata, 32.

montezumae, Rana, 97, 99, 101, 104, 106.

moreleti, Bolitoglossa, 23, 24, 102.

cee eayelnis, 71, 102, 105, 107,

Miyls, 71) Phyllomedusa, 71. mosaueri, Chiropterotriton, 31, 32, 104. Oedipus, 32. multidentata, Bolitoglossa, 32. Chiropterotriton, 31, 32, 104, 106. Oedipus, 32. multidentatus, Oedipus, 30. multiplicata, Gymnopis, 5. ‘multiplicatus, Scaphiopus, 35, 36, 101, 103-108. Scaphiopus hammondii, 36. muricolor, Hyla, 76. mystaceus, Syrrhophus, 65.

103,

nana, Hyla, 85. natator, Eleutherodactylus, 60, 65, 105, 108. nattereri, Eupemphix, 47. nayaritensis, Bufo, 39, 44, 105. nebulifer, Bufo, 45. nebulosus, Syrrhophus, 49, 51, 102, 107. nettingi, Siren intermedia, 6, 107. nigroflavescens, Bolitoglossa, 21, 22. Magnadigita, 21, 22, 102. nigromaculata, Bolitoglossa, 29. Pseudoeurycea, 26, 29, 107. nigropunctata, Hyla, 75. nigroreticulatus, Hypopachus cuneus, 95, 96, 102, 108. nitidus, Liuperus, 48. Tomodactylus, 48, 103, 105-107. norisovalis, Thorius, 17, 18, 105.

oaxacae, Gymnopis multiplicata, 5, 102,

Microbatrachylus, 53, 54, 105. occidentalis, Bolitoglossa, 22, 23, 102.

Bufo, 43.

Eleutherodactylus, 58, 62, 102, 104,

105, 108.

Leptodactylus, 56, 106, 107. occipitalis, Bufo, 44. Oedipina, 19, 21.

lineola, 21, 107.

lineolus, 21.

uniformis, 21. Oedipus altamontanus, 28.

bellii, 26.

cephalicus, 29.

chiropterus, 32.

flaviventris, 24.

gadovii, 27.

giganteus, 27.

leprosus, 28.

lineolus, 21.

macrinii, 22.

manni, 30.

mexicanus, 26.

mosaueri, 32.

multidentatus, 30.

orizabensis, 29.

platydactylus, 24, 26.

robertsi, 28.

rufescens, 23.

salvinii, 24.

smithi, 28.

sulcatus, 28.

townsendi, 20.

variegatus, 23. olivacea, Gastrophryne, 93.

Microhyla, 92, 93, 103, 107. olivaceum, Engystoma, 93. omiltemana, Rana, 98. Opisthocoela, 33, 34. Opisthodelphys ovifera, 70. orculus, Spelerpes, 32. ordinaria, Ambystoma, 13. ordinarium, Ambystoma, 10, 13, 104. orizabensis, Oedipus, 29.

Spelerpes, 29. ovifera, Opisthodelphys, 70. ovis, Hypopachus, 95, 96, 103-105. oxyrrhinus, Hypopachus, 95, 96, 103

104, 107.

pachyderma, Hyla, 80, 86, 108. palmipes, Pohlia, 96.

Rana, 96-98, 102, 105-108. Paludicola pustulosa, 47. Parvimolge, 18, 20.

townsendi, 20.

Pelobatidae, 34.

pennatribus, Thorius, 17. pennatulus, Thorius, 16, 17, 18, 107. perlaevis, Cystignathus, 57. perplexus, Bufo, 39, 45, 102, 1038, 105. petasatus, Pharyngodon, 70.

Triprion, 70, 108. petersi, Engystomops, 47. phaeota, Hyla, 80, 88.

Pharyngodon, 70.

petasatus, 70. phlebodes, Hyla, 85.

Phyllobates eystignathoides, 52.

verruculatus, 52.

Phyllomedusa dacnicolor, 71, 72.

helenae, 72.

moreletii, 71. picta, Hyla, 79, 85, 106-108.

Hylella, 85. pinorum, Hyla, 80, 87, 103. pipiens, Rana, 1, 97, 98, 101-108. pipilans, Syrrhophus, 49, 50, 103, 105. pisciformis, Siren, 7.

Piscis ludricus, 8.

platycephala, Hylella, 76. ; 7

platydactyla, Bolitoglossa, 23,°103, 105- 107.

platydactylus, Oedipus, 24, 26. Salamandra, 22, 23, 26. Plectrohyla, 68, 73. crassa, 86. “Form b,” 73.

116

Plectrohyla guatemalensis, 73. matudai, 73, 102. sagorum, 73, 102. Plethodon croceater, 19. glutinosus, 16. Plethodontidae, 1, 16. Plethodontinae, 16, 18. Plethodontoidea, 5, 16. plicata, Hyla, 81, 88. plicatus, Hylodes, 66. Pohlia, 96. palmipes, 96. pricei, Gymnopis, 5. Procoela, 33, 36. proserpina, Ambystoma, 14. proserpine, Ambystoma, 14. Ambystoma tigrinum, 11, 14. Pseudoeurycea, 19, 25. altamontana, 26, 28, 104, 105. bellii, 25, 26, 103-107. cephalica cephalica, 26, 29, 104-107. cephalica manni, 26, 30, 103. cephalica rubrimembris, 26, 30, 103 cochranae, 26, 28, 105. gadovii, 25, 27, 106, 107. galeanae, 26, 29, 105. gigantea, 25, 27, 103, 106, 107. leprosa, 26, 28, 103-107. melanomolga, 25, 27, 106, 107. melanomolge, 27. nigromaculata, 26, 29, 107. robertsi, 26, 28, 104. smithi, 25, 28, 105. unguidentis, 25, 27, 105. Pternohyla, 67, 70. fodiens, 70, 71, 102, 104, 106, 107. Ptychohyla, 68, 91. Ptychohyla adipoventris, 91, 103. pulmonaris, Thorius, 16, 17, 105. punctatum, Spelerpes, 24. punctatus, Bufo, 39, 46, 102, 103, 105- 107. pustulosa, Paludicola, 47. Rana, 97, 98, 103, 105, 107. pustulosus, Engystomops, 47, 101, 102, 105, 107. ygmaeus, Microbatrachylus, 53, 55, 102, 103, 105, 108.

Rana, 96, 97. adtrila, 99. aurora draytoni, 97, 99, 101. bufo, 37. catesbeiana, 98, 100, 105, 107. draytoni, 99. forreri, 98. gryllus, 77. marina, 37. megapoda, 97, 100, 104. montezumae, 97, 99, 101, 103, 104,

106.

montezumae concolor, 99. omiltemana, 98. palmipes, 96-98, 102, 105-108. pipiens, 1, 97, 98, 101-108.

BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

Rana pustulosa, 97, 98, 103, 105, 107. sierramadrensis, 97, 98, 103. tarahumarae, 97, 100, 102, 104, 107. temporaria, 96. trilobata, 98. typhonia, 55. typhonius, 55.

Rana venulosa, 74.

Ranidae, 91, 196.

Raninae, 96.

rectifrenis, Scaphiopus, 35.

regilla, Hyla, 77, 78, 82, 101.

Hyliola, 77 reticulata, Diaglena, 69.

Rhinophryne dorsalis, 34, 105.

Rhinophrynidae, 34.

Rhinophrynus, 38, 34. dorsalis, 34, 101, 102, 106, 108. rostratus, 34.

rhodopis, Eleutherodactylus, 60, 66, 102,

105-108.

Lithodytes, 66.

Rhyacosiredon, 6, 8. altamirani, 8, 9, 103, 104. leorae, 8, 9, 104, 106. rivularis, 8, 9, 104. zempoalaensis, 6, 8, 9, 104.

richardsi, Hyla, 79, 85, 90, 108.

rivularis, Rhyacosiredon, 8, 9, 104.

robertmertensi, Hyla, 79, 84, 85, 102.

robertsi, Oedipus, 28.

Pseudoeurycea, 26, 28, 104, robertsorum, Hyla, 80, 87, 104. robustofemora, Hyla, 80, 86, 106. rosaceum, Ambystoma, 6, th: 13, 102. rostratus, Rhinophrynus, "34, rozellae, Hyla, 79, 86, 102. rubrimaculata, Syrrhophus, 49, 50. rubrimaculatus, Syrrhophus, 102. rubrimembris; Bolitoglossa cephalica, 30.

Pseudoeurycea cephalica, 26, 30,

103.

rudis, Hyla, 71.

rafesennsiy Holitoglores, 22, 23, 102, 105— 10

Oedipus, 23. rugulosa, Liyla, 65. rugulosus, Eleutherodactylus, 102, 103, 105, 106. rugosum, Engystoma, 92, 93.

60, 65,

sagorum, Plectrohyla, 73, 102. Salamandra lugubris, 20. platydactylus, 22, 23, 26. tigrina, 11. togata, 24. variegata, 23. Salamandridae, 14. Salamandrina attenuata, 19. Salamandroidea, 5, 14. Salientia, 3, 33. sallaei, Hylodes, 66. saltator, Eleutherodactylus, 59, 63, 103. salvinii, Oedipus, 24. Spelerpes, 24.

j 1

INDEX 117

Scaphiopus, 35.

bombifrons, 35.

couchii, 35, 101, 102, 105-108.

dugesii, 36.

permondt 35, 36, 101, 102, 105,

hammondii multiplicatus, 36.

holbrookii, 35.

Scaphiopus multiplicatus, 35, 36, 101, 103-108.

rectifrenis, 35.

solitarius, 35.

varians, 35. schmidti, Ambystoma, 10, 13, 104. Seytopis, 74.

hebes, 74. seebachii, Hypopachus, 94. sierramadrensis, Rana, 97, 98, 103. simus, Bufo, 38, 42, 102-108. Siphonops mexicanus, 4.

Siredon, 6, 7.

axolotl, 7.

dumerilii, 7.

harlanii, 13.

humboldtii, 8.

lermaensis, 7, 8, 104.

lichenoides, 10.

lichenoides alba, 7.

mexicanum, 7, 103, 104.

tigrina, 11.

Siren, 6.

intermedia, 6.

intermedia nettingi, 6, 107.

lacertina, 6.

pisciformis, 7.

Sirenidae, 5. Sirenodon, 10.

lichenoides, 10. smaragdina, Hyla, 81, 90, 104. Smilisca, 68, 75.

baudinii, 76.

baudinii baudinii, 75, 102-108.

daulinia, 75, 76. smithi, Bolitoglossa, 28.

Hyla, 79, 85, 103-106.

Oedipus, 28.

Pseudoeurycea, 25, 28, 105. smithii, Syrrhophus, 49, 51. solitarius, Scaphiopus, 35. spatulata, Diaglena, 69. spatulatus, Eleutherodactylus, 58, 61,

108

Triprion, 69. Spea, 35. hammondii, 36. speciosus, Bufo, 40. Spelerpes belli, 26. cephalicus, 29. chiropterus, 32. gibbicaudus, 29. (Oedipus) infuscatus, 21. laticeps, 29, 30. leprosus, 28. lineolus, 21.

Spelerpes mexicanum, 24. minimus, 17, orculus, 32. orizabensis, 29. punctatum, 24. salvinii, 24. suleatum, 22. variegata, 24. variegatus, 23. yucatanicus, 25. _ (Oedipus) yucatanus, 25. ee Acrodytes, 74, 75, 102, 105—

Hyla, 75. pater Hyla, 81, 88, 102-104, 106—

sternosignatus, Bufo, 45. subsalsum, Ambystoma, 11, 106. subviolacea, Ambystoma, 10. sulcata, Magnadigita, 21, 22. suleatum, Spelerpes, 22. sulcatus, Oedipus, 28. sumichrasti, Exerodonta, 76. Hylella, 76, 105. Syrrhaphus, 49. Syrrhophus, 46, 49. campi, 50, 52, 106, 107. cystignathoides, 50, 52, 106, 108. guttilatus, 49, 51, 103, 106. latodactylus, 46, 50, 51, 104, 106. leprus, 50, 51, 105, 107. marnockii, 49. modestus, 49, 50, 102. mystaceus, 65. nebulosus, 49, 51, 102, 107. pipilans, 49, 50, 103, 105. rubrimaculata, 49, 50. rubrimaculatus, 102. smithi, 49, 51. verrucipes, 50, 52, 104. verruculatus, 50, 52, 104, 106, 108. Syrrhopus, 49.

taeniopus, Hyla, 81, 89, 90, 108. bara ete Rana, 97, 100, 102, 104, tarahumaraensis, Eleutherodactylus, 59, 64, 102, 107. Taricha, 14. granulosus, 14. klauberi, 15, 101. torosa klauberi, 15. temporaria, Rana, 96. tenera, Hylella, 76. terrestris, Bolitoglossa, 33. Bufo, 41. Chiropterotriton, 31, 33, 104. Thoriidae, 16. Thoriinae, 16. Thorius, 16. dubitus, 17, 106, 107. narisovalis, 17, 18, 105. pennatribus, 17.

118

Thorius pennatulus, Le 107. pulmonaris, 16, 17, troglodytes, 17. 18, 106, 107.

tigrina, Salamandra, it. Siredon, 11.

tigrinum, Ambystoma, 10, 11, 14.

togata, Salamandra, 24.

Tomodactylus, 46, 47. albolabris, 48, 103. amulae, 47, 48, 103, 105. angustidigitorum, 47, 48, 103, 104. macrotympanum, 47, 48, 104, 106. nitidus, 48, 103, 105-107.

torosus, Triton, 14.

townsendi, Bolitoglossa, 20. Oedipus, 20.

Parvimolge, 20.

trachypus, Bufo, 44.

trilobata, Rana, 98.

Triprion, 67, 70. petasatus, 70, 108. spatulatus, 69.

Triton torosus, 14.

Triturus kallerti, 15. klauberi, 15. torosus klauberi, 15. meridionalis, 15.

troglodytes, Thorius, 17, 18, 106, 107.

typhonia, Leptodactylus, 55. Rana, 55.

typhonius, Rana, 55.

underwoodi, Hyla, 79, 85, 102, 103, 108.

unguidentis, Bolitoglossa, 27. Pseudoeurycea, 25, 27, 105.

uniformis, Oedipina, 21.

usta, Gastrophryne, 93. Microhyla, 94.

Microhyla usta, 92, 93, 103, 104,

107, 108. ustum, Engystoma, 93.

BULLETIN 194, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM

valliceps, Bufo, 39, 44, 101, 102, 104— 108

vanvlietii, Hyla, 76. varians, Scaphiopus, 35. variegata, Geotriton, 23. Salamandra, 23. Spelerpes, 24. variegatus, Oedipus, 23. Spelerpes, 23. variolosum, Engystoma, 94. velasci, Ambystoma, 11, 103, 104, 106. Ambystoma tigrinum, 11, 12. venulosa, Hyla, 74, 75. Rana, 74. venustus, Eleutherodactylus, 102, 108. Hylodes, 66. verrucipes, Syrrhophus, 50, 52, 104. verruculatus, Phyllobates, 52. Syrrhophus, 50, 52, 104, 106, 108. viridescens, Diemictylus, 15. viridis, Hyila, ite viridissima, Centrolenella, 68, 69, 103. vocalis, Eleutherodactylus, 59, 64, 104. vulgaris, Bufo, 37.

60, 66,

woodhousii, Bufo, 40. Bufo woodhousii, 37, 40, 101-103, 107. wrightorum, Hyla, 78, 84, 102.

xolocalcae, Bolitoglossa, 33. Chiropterotriton, 31, 33, 102.

yucatana, Bolitoglossa, 23, 25, 108. yucatanicus, Spelerpes, 25. yucatanus, Spelerpes (Oedipus), 25.

zempoalaenisis, Rhyacosiredon, 6, 8, 9, 104.

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