New Guinea .......... Batrachopsis.

β. Sacral vertebra with two condyles.

India and Malaya .......... Leptobrachium, p. [166].

b. Vertebrae opisthocoelous.

Ceylon and Malayan Islands .......... Megalophrys, p. [60] (Fig. 11).

New Guinea .......... Asterophrys.

Pelobates ("Spade-foot").–The tympanum is absent; the toes are webbed. The inner tarsal tubercle is large, and is transformed into a shovel which is covered with a hard, sharp-edged, horny sheath. The skin of the upper surface of the head is partly co-ossified with the underlying cranial bones, giving them a pitted appearance. The general shape is toad-like.

P. fuscus.–The smooth skin is brown above, with darker marblings, while the under parts are whitish, but the coloration varies greatly, from pale to dark brown or olive-grey with more or less prominent irregular dark, sometimes confluent, patches. Some specimens are adorned with numerous red spots. The tarsal spur is yellow or light brown. The iris is metallic red or golden. The male has a long oval gland on the upper surface of the upper arm, and although possessed of a voice, has no vocal sacs. The total length of full-grown females is nearly 3 inches, that of males half an inch less.

The "Spade-footed Toad," which occurs throughout the whole of Central Europe, extends from Belgium and the middle of France to North-Western Persia, and from the southern end of Sweden to Northern Italy. It prefers sandy localities, in order to dig its deep hole, in which it sits concealed during the daytime. Owing to the looseness of the sand, the hole is filled up so that no trace of its inhabitant is left. The digging is done by means of the spades, and in suitable localities the animal soon vanishes, sinking backwards out of sight. Except in the breeding season, or at night, it is therefore found only accidentally. The sand-loving habits do not, however, prevent it from enjoying moist localities. Several which I have kept for years dig themselves into the wettest moss in preference to the drier parts of their habitation. Being thoroughly nocturnal, they hunt after nightfall, the food consisting of all sorts of insects and of worms. When captured they utter a startling shrill cry, and their skin becomes covered with a dermal secretion which smells like garlic, a peculiarity which has given them in Germany the name of "Knoblauchskröte," "garlic-toad." Although they become very tame, so that they no longer smell when handled, they can be made ill-tempered by being pinched or otherwise teased, whereupon they take up a defiant attitude, and with open mouth continue to cry for several minutes. Some such scenes occur now and then, without my interference, with the specimens which share their abode with several species of Amblystoma and Spelerpes; there are heard now and then sudden loud yells, like the squeak of a cat or the yapping of a little dog.

In the spring the Spade-footed Toads take to the water for about a week, and the male's call-note is an ever-repeated clucking sound, which can also be produced under water, with the mouth shut, the air being shifted backwards and forwards through the larynx. The male grasps his mate below the waist; the eggs are combined into one thick string, which is about 18 inches long, and is wound round and between the leaves and stalks of water-plants. The eggs measure 2-2.5 mm., and are very numerous, a large string containing several thousands. The larvae are hatched on the fifth or sixth day in a very unripe condition. They are only 4 mm. long, quite black, and still devoid of gills and tail. They attach themselves to the empty gelatinous egg-membranes, which they possibly live upon. On the following day the tail begins to grow; two days later fringed external gills sprout out and serve for about ten days, when they in turn give way to new, inner gills. The little tadpoles then leave their moorings and become independent. The hind-limbs appear in the ninth week, the fore-limbs in the twelfth. At the age of three months they begin to leave the water. The most remarkable feature is the enormous size of the full-grown tadpole, the body of which is as large as a pigeon's egg; the usual total length, including the tail, amounts to about 4 inches or 100 mm., but occasionally regular monsters are found. This was the case some thirty years ago, when the Berlin Museum received a number of tadpoles, the largest of which measured nearly 7 inches. They were found in the month of December near Berlin, in a deep clay-pit with high, steep walls, so that the tadpoles were prevented from leaving the water. Similarly hemmed-in broods probably hibernate in the water under the ice, and such instances have been recorded. Normally they metamorphose into the much smaller toad within the same year.