-CO 1 ==C\J o= — o o= §=00 IT- = l=oo f-Bs ==[>* n= = vl >-== =o f-Hi ■ =0 rr^— ni= ^^^s >= - — r— J z^= = CO = ^> ~co British Museum (Natural History) Dept. of Zoology- Guide to the reptiles and batrachians PRESENTED BY The Trustees THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Nn.lO GUIDE TO THE REPTILES AND BATRACHIANS EXHIBITED IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM (NATURAL HISTORY), CKOMWELL ROAD, LONDON, S.W. 7. ILLUSTRATED BY 50 FIGURES. THIRD EDITION, v ^ ^i S'jh LONDON : PRINTED BY ORDER OF THE TRUSTEES. 1922. All rights reserved. PRICE ONE SHILLING. GUIDE TO THE REPTILES AND BATRACHIANS EXHIBITED IN THE DEPABTMENT OF ZOOLOGY OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM (NATURAL HISTORY), CROMWELL ROAD, LONDON, S.W. 7. ILLUSTRATED BY 50 FIGURES. THIRD EDITION. LONDON : PRINTED BY ORDER OF THE TRUSTEES. 1922. All rights reserved. PRINTED IN ENGLAND AT THE OXFORD UNIVERSITY TRESS BY FREDEKK K HALL L BSb inn PREFACE. The Reptile Gallery is mainly devoted to the exhibition of recent Reptiles and Batrachians, but a few characteristic examples of each of the more important extinct groups are included. In addition the great Dinosaurs Diplodocus, Iguanodon, and Triceratops are placed here because room could not be found for them in the Gallery of Fossil Reptiles. The National Collection of Reptiles and Batrachians comprises about 70,000 specimens, representing most of the known species, which number nearly 9.000. The majority of these specimens are preserved in spirit, and examples of selected species only are shown in the Gallery. Thanks are due to Messrs. Macmillan & Co., Ltd., for permis- sion to reproduce a number of illustrations from the Cambridge Natural History : the process-blocks are from photographs of specimens in the Museum. C. TATE REGAN, Keeper of Zoology. British Museum (Natural History), London. March 1922. TABLE OF CONTENTS. BATRACHIAXS Urodela (Salamanders and Newts) . Apoda (Coecilians) . Anura (Frogs and Toads) . PAGE 7 8 11 12 REPTILES Rhynchocephalia (Tuatera) Crocodilia (Crocodiles and Alligators) Chelonia (Tortoises and Turtles) . Sqtvmata (Lizards and Snakes) 17 19 1!) 20 31 GUIDE TO THE REPTILES AND BATRACHIANS. BATRACHIANS. (Table-case near south end of Gallery.) The class Batrachia, or Amphibia, includes Frogs, Newts, &c. The earliest members of the group, found in the Carboniferous strata, closely approximate in structure to the bony fishes of the extinct order Rhipidistia, from which they were doubtless derived ; but they differed from them, and from all other fishes, in several characters, of which the most important is that instead of paired fins they were provided with legs ending in five-toed feet. These were the earliest terrestrial four-footed vertebrates, from which have arisen not only the modern Batrachians but also the Reptiles, and through the latter the Birds and Mammals. A few examples of these primitive Batrachians are exhibited ; they were mostly newt-like in form, but had the skull roofed by dermal bones : hence the ordinal name Stegocephala. Modern Batrachians agree with modern Reptiles in being cold- blooded, but differ from them in having the skin naked instead of scaly, and by the skull articulating with the first vertebra by two knobs, ' occipital condyles,' instead of one. Batrachians generally commence their life as truly aquatic creatures, breathing the air dissolved in the water by means of gills, and later become terrestrial, breathing atmospheric air by means of lungs, whereas Reptiles breathe by lungs throughout their life. A few Batrachians, however, are permanently aquatic and retain their gills throughout life, and there are some which, when adult, manage to breathe without either gills or lungs ; moreover, there are forms in which the young make their first appearance in an advanced stage of develojnnent and pass through the gilled larval stage in the egg or within the body of the parent. Batrachians inflate their lungs by swallowing air, having no mechanism for expanding the chest. The number of living species of Batrachians does not greatly exceed 2,000. These are placed in three orders, Urodela or Tailed Batrachians (Newts, Salamanders, &c), Apocla or Limbless Batrachians (Coecilians), and Anura or Tailless Batrachians (Frogs, Toads, &c). 8 Guide to Reptiles and Batradiians. Order I. URODELA. The Urodela, or Tailed Batraehians, are characterized by having a tail and at least the front pair of limbs. The young are provided with uncovered gills, which generally disappear in t he adult, but in some permanently aquatic forms may be retained throughout life. The group is a small one. numbering about :200 species, mostly from Europe, Northern Asia, and North America; a few species occur in Central America and in the Pig. 1. The Common Smooth Newt (Motgt vulgaris). Male and female. extending southwards to Peru. No1 many species grow Amies. ' • i greater Length than 6" inches. Wai-ly all the Urodela belong to the family ScUamandridae. These have two pairs of limbs, teeth in the jaws, and movable eye-lids; with one remarkable exception there are no iiills in adults. A curious teat uve of several members of the family is the absence of Lungs, respiration being effected by the skin and t lie pharynx. Newts [Molge or Triton) are found in Europe and Northern \-da : they have the tail strongly compressed and often furnished Salamanders and Neivts. 9 with a fin. There are three British species, in all of which the breeding males develop a high crest on the back. Newts are terrestrial : they prefer cool and moist places, and feed on insects, worms, &c. ; in winter they hibernate. At the breeding season they make their way to ponds and become aquatic for a time ; the eggs are laid and the young live in the water. The genus iSalamandra includes three species, the Spotted Salamander (S. maculosa) from Europe and Asia Minor, the Alpine Salamander (8. atra) of the Alps, and the Caucasian Salamander (S. caucasica) ; they have a rounded tail. The Spotted Salamander is noteworthy for its black and yellow Fig. 2. The Axolotl : the egg-laying larval form of Amblystoma tigrinum. Mexico. coloration and for the poisonous properties of a fluid which exudes from its skin. The Salamanders prefer hilly country, where they hide under moss or stones ; they are viviparous. In the Spotted Salamander the mother partly enters the water in the spring to produce her young, which may number up to 50 and are about an inch long when born ; they lose their gills and become terrestrial before the winter. Embryos of the Alpine Salamander are exhibited ; this species produces only two 3Toung at a birth, which are much larger than the young of the Spotted Salamander and are essentially similar to their parents. Amblystoma includes a number of species from North America ; they bear a general resemblance to the European Salamanders and live in much the same way. The famous Axolotl of the lakes near the city of Mexico is thoroughly aquatic, and is provided with three pairs of external gills and a well-developed median fin 10 Guide to Reptiles and Batrachians. both above and below : it may grow to a length of one foot. Specimens brought to Europe laid eggs which developed into Axolotls. some of which lost their gills and fins, left the water, and were found to have changed into the common terrestrial Fig. 3. Fir.. 4. t y V 1 ( The Three-toed Salamandei i . [mphiuma m ana). The < Mm i /'/.-/. us anguit from tin- caves of C'arniola. species Amblystoma tigrinum, of which the Azolotl was thus proved to be a permanenl larval form. Other important American genera are Desmognathvs, Plethodon and Spehrpes the Last being represented in Europe by S. fvscvs Salamanders and Newts. 11 of Italy anfl Sardinia, which lives in shady places, lying in wait for insects, which it catches by the sudden protrusion of its long tongue. The Amphiiimidae differ from the Salamandridae in having no eye-lids. The Giant Salamander (M ' egalobatrachus maximus) of China and Japan grows to a length of 5 feet ; it is strictly aquatic, inhabiting small mountain streams, where it often lies hidden under rocks ; it feeds on fishes, worms, &c, and as it will readily take a bait it is caught for food. An extinct Giant Salamander is known from the Miocene of Baden. The North American ' Hellbender ' (Cryptobranchus alleghaniensis) is very similar to the Asiatic species, but differs in having a gill-opening ; it grows to only 18 inches long. Amphiuma includes two species from North America, which differ from the preceding in their eel-shaped body and small limbs, with only two or three toes ; these animals inhabit swamps and often burrow in the mud. The Proteidae differ from the Amphiumidae in having no maxillary bone and in the persistence of the gills throughout life. Necturus maculatus is found in the Mississippi and the Great Lakes ; it has well-developed four-toed limbs and func- tional eyes ; its colour is brown, with irregular blackish spots. The other two members of the family are subterranean and differ from Necturus in being white, and in having their eyes concealed beneath the skin. Typhlomolge rathbuni of Texas has rather long and slender limbs, the front pair with four and the hind pair with five toes ; all the known specimens have come up with the water of an artesian well. Proteus anguineus, the ' 01m ', from the subterranean waters of the Eastern Alps and Dalmatia, has shorter limbs, with three front and two hind toes. There can be little doubt that Typhlomolge and Proteus have evolved independently from Nectums-Wke ancestors, the concealed eyes and the absence of pigment from the skin being due to their life in total darkness. The Sirenidae retain their gills throughout life, but are distin- guished from the Proteidae by their eel-shaped body, the absence of hind-limbs, and the toothless jaws. Siren lacertina is the Mud-eel, of the south-eastern United States ; it lives in ponds and ditches, burrowing in the mud. Order 2. APODA. The Limbless Batrachians, or Coecilians, are worm-like in appearance and in their mode of life, burrowing in moist ground ; they feed on worms, &c. The skin is slimy and forms a number of tiansverse folds or rings ; it may contain small embedded scales. The eyes are small and subcutaneous, but between the eye and the nostril is a soft protrtisible tentacle, probably tactile in 12 Guide to Reptiles and Batrachians. Pro. 5. function. The scales in the skin, and certain features of the skeleton, indicate that if the Apoda are derived from the Urodela they have arisen from some group more generalized in structure than the living members of that order. About 200 species arc known, from tropical America, Africa, and Southern Asia : most of these are small, few attaining a length of 18 inches. Their life-history Is imperfectly known, but the species studied include vivi- parous forms and others in which the gillcd stage is passed through in the egg. In Ichthyaphis gliitinosa of Southern Asia the female coils herself round the eggs, which are laid in a hole near running water, to which tin' young take when they are hatched although they have lost their gills : they are. however, provided with a tail-fin which disappears before they become tern -trial. The species exhibited are Coecilia gracilis and Siphonops annulatus, both from South America. Order 3. ANURA. The Anura, or Frogs and Toads, are char- acterized by the absence of the tail ; they hare well-developed limbs, the hind ones being the longer ; the front pair generally have four toes and the hind pair five. In the skeleton the vertebral column is very short and the posterior vertebrae arc fused to form a long spine, which lies betwi en the elongate and back war dly directed iliac bone-. Nearly all Frogs and Toads have a long pro- tractile tongue, with which they catch the worms, insects, &c. on which they feed, and most of them produce croaking sounds in the larynx, intensified in the males by the distension of the vocal pouches, which arc connected with the mouth and act as resonators. As a rul<' the eggs are laid in water, often in masses or strings, -which cither float or may be attached to weds or stones; the Larvae develop into tadpoles, in which the head is not marked off from the swollen bodv, which contains a lone; intestine coiled like a watch-spring, the tail is well developed, the gills are covered by an opercular fold, the small mouth is surrounded by funnel- A Limbless Amphibian (Uraeotyphlus africanus). Frogs and Toads. 13 shaped lips studded with horny teeth and the jaws are provided with horny beaks. The transformation of the aquatic tadpole into the terrestrial adult form involves the development of the limbs and lungs, the reconstruction of the intestine, the loss of the tail, gills, lips, and horny beaks, the widening of the mouth, &c. A tadpole of Pelobates is exhibited and a series of specimens of Fig. 6. A Female Surinam Toad (Pipa americana) with young emerging from the brooding pouches of the back. Pseudis 'paradoxa illustrate the change from a tadpole into a frog. In some forms the eggs are relatively few and large and are protected by the parent?, the young emerging at an advanced stage of development, sometimes even as miniature frogs. The number of known species of Frogs and Toads is nearly 2,000 ; they are found in all tropical and temperate countries. The Anura may be divided into three main groups, Aglossa, Arcifera and Firmisternia. 14 Guide to Reptiles and Batrachians. The Aglossa are characterized by the absence <>t a tongue, which is connected with their aquatic babits, a tongue not being needed by creatures which seize their prey under water. There are three genera, Xenopus and Hymenochirus from Africa and Pipa from South America. The species of A'< nopit* are known as ' Clawed Toads " from the sharply pointed nails of the lirst three hind-toes. The Surinam Toad [Pipa americana) is remarkable in that the female carries the eggs on her back, where they are placed in position by the male and sink into the soft spongy skin. so that each egti occupies a pouch, in winch the development takes place, until the young emerge as fully formed Toads. The Arcifera arc characterized by the presence of a tongue, and by the overlapping of the coracoid bones on the chest. The most primitive family is the Discoglossidae, which agree with the Aglossa in having ribs, and differ from all other Anura in having the tongue round and non-protrusible. The half-dozen specie this family are the remnants of an old and widely distributed group : Liopelma is the only Batrachian found in New Zealand ; the rest occur in Eurasia and North America. European examples are the Fire-bellied Toad (Bombinator igm us), a poisonous species with bright "warning" colours, and the Mid-wife Toad [Alytes obstetricans), the male of which carries the strings of eggs round his hind-limbs ; when the eggs are ready to hatch, betakestothe water. The Arcifera without ribs, with a protractile tongue, and with the terminal bones of the digits not claw-shaped, have been grouped into several families. Bufonidae, Pelobatidae, Cystigna- thidae, &c, but these are badly defined and unnatural. There arc two British Toads, the Common Toad {Bufo vulgaris), which ranges throughout Europe and Northern Asia, but is absent from Ireland, and the Natterjack (B. calamita), which is found in Western Europe, in some parts of England and Wales, and in Kerry in Ireland. The skin of the Common Toad is studded with w art-like prominences, from which a poisonous slime may exude : this makes it distasteful to eat. but is not used for offensive purposes. Bufo marinus is a very large Toad, attaining a length of six inches: it inhabits Central and South America. The Spade-footed Toad (Pehbates fu&cus) of Europe is provided with a sharp spur on each hind-foot, which it uses for digging, concealing itself in the sand very quickly. The Horned Toads (Geratophry8) of South America have the eye-lids produced into a pair of appendages which resemble horns. Leptodactylus of Tropical America has long and slender legs. The Hylidcu . or Tree-Frogs, differ from the Bufonidcn in having adhesive disks at the end- of the digits ; these disks are supported by the claw-shaped terminal phalanges. Most of the Hylidcu are American or Australian, but three species of Hyla are found in Europe and Northern Asia. The characteristic colour of these Fig. 7. The Horned Toad (Ceratophri/s cornuta), Brazil ; reduced. Fig. 8. The Pouched Frog (Nolotrema marsupiatum), with eggs in pouch. Ecuador. 10 Guide to Reptiles and Batrachians. arboreal Frogs is green. In Nototrema of South America the female carries the eggs in a pouch on the back. In the Firmisternia the coracoids do not overlap, but meet and arc firmly united in the middle line of the chest. Ribs are absent and the tongue is protractile. Several families have been recognized, Ranidae, Dendrobatidae, Engystomatidae, &c., but they are not yet satisfactorily defined. Fig. 9. The Common Km- < 1,'nm tt'mporaria). The genus Rana includes the Common Prog (/«'. temporaria)) the Kdible Frog (R. esculenta), and the North American Bull- Frog (R. catesbiana), which takes its name from the loud roaring noise produced by the assembled males in the breeding season, -ft- 9uPPyi of the Solomon Islands is a large frog which feed- on crabs, but R. goliath of W. Africa is still larger, attaining a Length i I marly a foot (not including the limbs). The Homed Frog [Ceratobatrachus gueniheri) of the Solomon Islands is remarkable for its enormous mouth, with teeth in both jaws. Rhacophoru8 includes a number of species from Madagascar and Southern Asia, arboreal frogs with adhesive disks at the ends of the digits, which are webbed ; some species with Large and com- pletely webbed feel are said to use them as parachutes. The EngystomatidcK have a small toothless mouth and a sharp snout ; they eat ants and are found in tropical countries. The Dendroba- tidae are arboreal. Reptiles 17 REPTILES. Reptiles may be defined as cold-blooded vertebrates which breathe by lungs throughout life, having no aquatic larval stage. Modern Reptiles are distinguished from modern Batrachians by having the skin covered with scales and by the single occipital condyle. The living Reptiles, although more numerous than the Batrachians, are but a remnant of a group which was once dominant, but has now been replaced by the Mammals and Birds. The earliest Reptiles, the Cotylosauria, made their appearance in Carboniferous times ; they Avere extremely similar to the Batrachia Stegocephala, from which they were derived, and from which it is not easy to separate them. The Anomodontia of the Permian and Triassic epochs were a large and varied group of Fig. 10. Restoration of a Long-tailed Pterodactyle (Rkamphorhynchus phyllurus), from the Upper Jurassic Lithographic Stone of Bavaria ; \ nat. size. terrestrial Reptiles, from which the Mammals originated ; some of them; e. g. AelurognatJms, are remarkable for their specialized carnivorous dentition. The Dinosauria nourished during the Mesezoic or Secondary period of geological history (Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous strata), and included both herbivorous and carnivorous forms. The skeleton of Diplodocus is the most conspicuous object in the gallery ; this gigantic Dinosaur from the Jurassic of Wyoming measures eighty-four feet nine inches in total length ; it was probably too heavy for much activity on land and may have spent most of its time in the water, feeding on water-plants, its long neck and the position of the nostrils at the top of the skull enabling it to breathe when wading at considerable depths. Other large Dinosaurs exhibited are Triceratops, with its bony neck-shield, and Iguanodon, which walked on its hind-legs. B a o |Z5 a ""' ~ — ■ — . o — - /. - ~ s: 5 — — 4i Tuatera. 19 The Ichthyosaurs and Plesiosaurs were whale-like marine Reptiles, with the limbs modified into paddles. The Cretaceous Mosasaurs also had paddle-shaped limbs, but were snake-like in form ; Liodon is estimated to have reached a length of 100 feet, a veritable Sea-serpent. The Pterodactyles were flying Reptiles, with the membrane of each wing attached to the body and supported by the elongate outermost digit of the fore -limb ; they have no affinity to Birds. Some species of Pteranoclon had a wing-spread of twenty feet ; a fine example is exhibited on the west wall of the gallery, above the door. All the orders mentioned above became extinct millions of years ago, long before man appeared. The specimens exhibited in cases 4, 5, 16 and 17 give some idea of the structure and appearance of these inhabitants of the land, the sea, and the air during the Secondary Period, the ' Age of Reptiles ' as it has been called ; they may be studied in more detail in the Gallery of Fossil Reptiles. About 6,500 species of Reptiles are living at the present day ; they belong to four orders, Rhynchocephalia, Crocodilia, Chelonia, and Squamata. Order 1. RHYNCHOCEPHALIA. (Case 5.) The Tuatera (Sjrfienodon imnctatus) of New Zealand was formerly classed with the lizards, but it differs from them in having two horizontal bony arches on each side of the temporal region of the skull, in the fixed quadrate (the bone with which the lower jaw articulates), and in many other features ; it is now recognized as the most primitive of all living Reptiles and the sole survivor of a group which dates back to Triassic times. The Tuatera is like a Lizard in appearance, and attains a length of more than two feet ; it has been exterminated on the mainland, but still lives on a few small islands near the coast. It excavates a burrow, which it often allows a petrel to share, without attempting to molest the bird or its eggs and young ; it sleeps most of the day, but at night ventures out in search of food, which consists of small living animals. The eggs have a hard, white shell ; about ten are laid in holes in the sand, in a sunny place ; they do not hatch until a year has passed. Order 2. CROCODILIA. (Cases 1 to 3.) The members of this order are large, four-footed, long-tailed Reptiles, with five toes to the fore -feet and four to the hind ones. The teeth are implanted in separate sockets, the quadrate bone B 2 20 Guide to Reptiles and Batrachians. is fixed, and the bones of the skull are sculptured. The body is covered with horny shields, beneath which, at least on the back, are series of bony plates. The inner aperture of the nostrils is placed far back on the palate, enabling these animals to breathe while holding their prey under water. There are about two dozen living species ; these frequent rivers, but their mesozoic ancestors appear to have been marine, and approximate in structure to the Dinosaurs. In the genus Crocodilus the snout is short or moderately long, and is rounded or pointed ; the teeth are large and stout, and the fourth lower tooth fits into a notch in the upper jaw, being exposed when the mouth is closed. Crocodiles occur in America from Florida to Guiana ; in the old world they inhabit Africa. Madagascar, and Southern Asia, extending through the Archi- pelago to the Solomon Islands and northern Australia. Crocodiles are large and ferocious ; they are exclusively carnivorous, and generally seize their victims (other than human beings) by the nose as they are drinking. A large number of people — especially women, as they go to the rivers for water — are annually killed in India by these Reptiles. Crocodiles bury their egu>. which have a hard white shell, in the sand. The Muggar or Marsh -Crocodile (C. palustris) of India has the snout very short and broad. Crocodilus niloficus is the common African species and the Indian C. porosus is notable for its size, attaining a length of 20 feet, and for its habits, as it frequents estuaries and may be met with out at sea. Alligators and Caimans differ from Crocodiles in that the fourth lower tooth is received into a pit in the upper jaw. Alli- gators inhabit swamps ; there are two species, Alligator mi88is8ip- jihnsis and A. sinensis, the former North American, the Latter Chinese. The American Alligator constructs a large nest on the bank, scraping together twigs, leaves, and earth to form a mound about :'. feet high, in which about 30 eggs are laid in layers. The Caimans of Central and South America differ from the Alligators in having a shield of bony plates in the skin of the under-side of the body: a line specimen of the Common Caiman (Caiman acU rops) is exhibited. The (Jharial (Carialis grtnr/eticus) of India, and the False Gharial {Tomistoma schlegelii) of Borneo, have the snout long and narrow, the two halves of the lower jaw united in a long symphysis, and the teeth slender and numerous ; they iced chiefly on tish. Order 3. CHELONIA. (Cases 6/o 10.) The Tortoises, Turtles, and Terrapins constitute this order : in them the jaw- are toothless and covered with horny beaks, and tin' body is typically enclosed in a bony case, the upper halt Fig. 12. Side View of the Head of the Timsa or Nile Crocodile (Crocodilns niloticiis). x Fouith lower taoth. (Photographed from a specimen in the Museum.) Fig. 13. Side View of the Head of the N. American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensts). (Photographed from a specimen in the Museum.) 22 Guide to Reptiles and Batrachians. of which is called the carapace and the lower the plastron. The carapace is supported by the vert ('brae and ribs, and in the few forms in which it lias been lost its former presence is shown by the modification of these elements. The carapace consists of a number of bony plates arranged in five series : those of the median series are fused with the neural spines of the vertebrae below them : on each side of them are the costal plates, either supported by the flattened ribs, or. if they ossify at a stage when the ribs are slender and cartilaginous, Fig. 14. Carapace of the Thurgi Batagur [HardeUa thurgi). The wavy Inns .-how the divisions (or sutures) between the bones; the firm lines indicate those between the overlying homy shields, c. 1-8, costal bones; m. 1-11, marginal hones; n, 1 8, neural bones; nu. nuchal bone; py. pygal bone: spy. 1. -. Buprapygal bones. Note that the horny plates do not correspond with the bony i>nes. enclosing the latter ; outside the costals are the marginals. The bones of the plastron are paired. The horny shields which usually cover the carapace and plastron have a somewhat similar arrangement to the bony plates, but do not correspond with them in size or number. Chelonians date back to the Triassic and many have been found fossil in Secondary and early Tertiary strata ; the living c J— I T- n3 3 cS O h >> Qi *-* 3^ (■S3 ^ "5 a ^ o J> ^> - 3 •vs o O =cs fl GO a 2 *~" ' «^- O -t- — H H » o 03 * O 2 .o H g s X fci *- u < 0 — a a 3* o 2 « H w 5 3 o 1— ' CO CO i <4~t o o (-1 =4-1 . o tn "^T" t> o CO j_, £ ■S; 2 3 e ° bo ^ «s t« S^ ,3 ^ •— -+J o ,(fl « ^ f-t *•» * s >._=« Srfi"^ ■ — • 5 o3 r„ P o H cS'« TOI thd vei « •£ e« ° ^ Z H..S ^^44 ■at 3 O J n Ci) 5 4 rt H-» 3 ** Q— 05 O 05 <- H -3 +3 0* 4i < * o -o 24 Guide to Reptiles and Batrachians. species number about 300. They may bo grouped into two main divisions: Pleurodira, in which the bead is retracted by a lateral flexure of the Deck : and Cryptodira, in which the bead is retracted by the curving of the neck in a vertical plane. Pleurodira. The Pleurodira withdraw the head by a lateral movement of the neck. They are fresh-water Tortoises, found in South America, Africa, and Australia. The Arrau Tortoise of the Amazons (Podocnemis expansa) is a source of profit to the natives, who collect the soft-shelled eggs, which are laid in the sand, and extract oil from them ; millions Fig. 17. The Matamata Tortoise (Chelys fimbriate,) ; reduced. of eggs are thus destroyed annually. The Matamata {Chelys fimJbriata) of Brazil has the shields of the carapace raised into knobs : it feeds on fishes and lies in the water waiting for its prey, which it is said to attract by the movements of the fringed appendages which are developed on the skin of the head and neck. The Pleurodira include the earliest known Tortoises, the Triassic Amphichelydidae, and also the large extinct Horned Tortoises of the family Miolaniidae, found in tertiary deposits of Australia and Patagonia. Cryptodira. This group includes the Chelonians, which bend their neck in a vertical plane. There are three main divisions: in the tirst, containing the typical Tortoises and Turtles, the carapace is well developed and is bordered by a complete series of marginal hone- connected with the ribs. This division includes the Families Chelydridae, Cinosternidae, Testudinidae, &c, in all of which the digits are short, as well as the Chelonidat or true Turtles, iii which the anterior limbs are developed into long paddles. The Chelydridae include the Snapping Turtle or Snappei Tortoises and Turtles. 25 (Chelydra serpentina) and the Alligator Turtle (Macroclemmys temminckii) of North America. These live mostly in the water, keeping to the bottom, but rising occasionally to breathe ; they feed on fish and waterfowl and are both fierce and greedy. The Cinosternidae, or Mud Terrapins, comprise about ten species of Cinostemum from American rivers. The Burmese Casked Terrapin (Platy sternum megacephalum) is Fig. 18. vStDiTha^ Temminck's Snapper, or Alligator Turtle (Macroclemmys temminclci) ; -J nat. size. [By permission of Messrs. Macmilhui pecies live in deserts, sometimes burrowing in the sand ; others are arboreal, and others live on rocks ; some kinds have acquired the habit of living inside or outside houses, and it has been observed that in a house one species may inhabit the cellars, another the roof, and a third crevices in the walls. The arboreal and rock-climbing species have the toes expanded and provided on the under side with transverse lamellae, forming adhesive pads, which are BO effective thai Geckos in houses may be seen walking upside down Lizards and Snakes. 33 on the ceiling. In most Geckos the tail is very brittle, and when it is broken off a new one is quickly reproduced. The majority of the species are nocturnal, concealing themselves in the day- time under stones or under the bark of trees, and at night coming out of their hiding-places in quest of insects. Of the species exhibited Tarentola mauritanica is the Common Gecko of Southern Europe, Uroplates fimbriatus of Madagascar Fro. 26. A, Turkish Gecko (Hemidactylus (urcicus), and B, Common Gecko (Tarentola mauritanica). [By permission of Messrs. Macmillan " — -esS a A ptf- pm B. p-pv ,til V ■prf &&' "-PV r-w bo eo C. Skull of the Grass Snake (Tropidonotus natrix). From the left side (A), above (B), and below (C). an. Angular. ar. Articular. bo. Basioccipital. bs. Basisphenoid. ca. Columella auris. d. Dentary. eo. Exoccipital. epg. Ectopterygoid. /. Frontal. to. Maxillary. n. Nasal. p. Parietal. pi. Palatine. pm. Praemaxillar}'. prf. Praefrontal. -cL pro. Prootic. pg. Pterygoid. ptf. Postfrontal. q. Quadrate. so. Supraoccipital. ste. Squamosal. v. Vomer. The Uropeltidae are small burrowing snakes of India and Ceylon ; they differ from the Ilysiidae in having the small quadrates directly attached to the skull, the squamosals having Fie. 413. BONES of the CLAW. BONES of the CLAW. A — Part of the flattbhsd skxn or w A i .: i ian Python [Python x<'>ae). Showing < laws representing Bind-Limbs, together with their supporting bones. B. — Complete B"m:^ OB i hi: 1Ii\m'.k LTMB-GrBDLB 01 amu'iiei: Spec imkn. Vestigial Limbs of Pythons. Tortoises and Turtles. 47 been lost ; the pterygoids do not reach the quadrates and there are no traces of pelvis or hind limbs : the tail ends in a shield. The Glauconiidae and Typhlopidae form a group apart, retain- ing vestiges of the pelvis, but in other respects showing the most complete adaptation to a burrowing life ; the quadrate bones are rather long and slender and are directed obliquely forwards ; behind they are attached to the skull directly, there being no squamosals. The body is covered with uniform cycloid scales, the snout projects beyond the small mouth and the minute eyes lie under the shields of the head. In the Typhlopidae the lower Fig. 44. Australian Carpet-Snake (Python spilotes). [By permission of Messrs. Macmillan 6c Co., Ltd. jaw is toothless, and the teeth in the upper jaw form a transverse series ; in the Glauconiidae teeth are present in the lower jaw only. Typhlops is a large genus, found in all warm countries ; Glauconia inhabits America, Africa, and S.W. Asia. The large family Colubridae includes the great majority of living Snakes, in fact all the normal or typical Snakes which are neither Boidae nor Viperidae. The mouth has the structure described above as typical, i.e. the pterygoids reach the quadrates, which are attached to the long backwardly directed squamosals ; the features which distinguish this family from the Boidae are that the praefrontals are not in contact with the nasals and there are no traces of pelvis or hind-limbs. The Colubridae have been divided into eight sub-families, not all of which are natural ; these have been grouped into three series, Aglypha, with the teeth solid or ungrooved, Opisthoglypha, with the hinder upper teeth grooved, and Proteroglypha, with the front upper teeth grooved or perforated. The Aglypha are 48 Guide to Reptiles and Batrachiaiis. mostly harmless, the Opistiioglypha venomous but not dangerous, the Proteroglypha deadly. The principal sub-family of the Aglypha is the Cohtbrinae, which includes the Grass Snake (Tropidonotvs natrix) and the Smooth Snake (Coronella austriaca), both found in Britain ; these harmless snakes are distinguished externally from the venomous Adder {Vipera bents) by the large shields on the head (fig. 45). Fig. 4.".. Fig. 4(i. Eeads of tin- Smooth Snake [Coronella austriaca), A. and the Grass Snake (Tropidonotua natrix), B. Heads of the three British Snakes. Bead of tin- Viper ( Yi pern In I The Black Snake (Zamenis constrictor) of North America is slender in form and is rery active on laud as well as in climbing trees ; it feeds on mice, frogs, birds, &c. Coluber quadrilineatus is a handsome European species. Dcndrophis and Liophis are Tree-snakes. Dasi/peltis of Africa, and Elachistodon of India are interesting ; they have no teeth in the front of the jaws, but their most remarkable peculiarity is that the lower spines of the neck vertebrae pierce the gullet, forming a series of tooth-like knobs, which arc used for crushing the eggs on which they feed. The sub-family Elapinae includes terrest rial snakes with a cylin- drical tail ; the front upper teeth are grooved or perforated for the passage of the poisonous secretion; all the venomous snakes of Australia belong to this group. The Cobras (Naia) of Africa and Southern Asia are characterized by the power of expanding flu' neck to form a hood by an outward and forward movement of the ribs (fig. 48). These snakes are very deadly, as are the Kraits {Bungarus) of India, which have no hood. Elaps is an Lizards and Snakes. 49 American genus with several species, most of which are banded with red and black. The Hydrophiinae are Sea-snakes ; they differ from the Elapines in having the tail compressed for the purpose of swim- ming. They inhabit the Indian and Pacific Oceans, and as a rule are not found far from land ; they feed on fish and are viviparous. Indian fishermen are sometimes bitten by these snakes, and the bite may prove fatal. Fig. 47. African Egg-eating Snake (Dasypeltis scabra) ; J nat. size. [By permission of Messrs. Maximilian pus, 14 Xenosauridae, .'!'•• Zniifllis, 48 Zonuiidae, 35 Zmiiinis, 35 BRITISH MUSEUM (NATURAL HISTORY). DAYS AND HOURS OF ADMISSION. The Museum is open to the Public, free daily- on Week-Days, throughout the year from 10 a.m., in January and February . . to 5 p.m. March to September (inclusive) ,, 6 „ October, November and December ,,5 ,, on Sundays, throughout the year from 2.30 to 6 p.m. On Sundays the back galleries in the east win^ are closed, namely : — Fossil Fishes, Fossil Cephaj lopods, Fossil Shells, Starfishes &c, Fossil Corals] Fossil Plants, and Special Fossil Collections. The Museum is closed on Good Friday an< Christimrs i)ay. By Order of the Trustees, S. F. HARMER, Director 1 386 1922 Ltisb Museum (Natural Histo Dept. of Zoology Guide to the reptiles and batrachians rio'ied PLEASE DO NOT REMOVE CARDS OR SLIPS FROM THIS POCKET UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO LIBRARY 88 ffl. Wmi