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Show 1876.] MR. G. E. DOBSON ON THE MOLOSSI. 725 Thumb long; feet large; wing-membrane from the middle of the tibiae. Fur above and beneath very short; above white at the base, terminal three fourths of the hairs deep reddish-brown ; beneath, yellowish-white or pale reddish-yellow; the shoulders, sides of the neck, chest, and abdomen reddish brown. On the upper surface the membranes are almost quite naked; beneath, the wing-membrane is covered with very short fine pale yellowish-white hairs as far outwards as a line drawn from the middle of the humerus to the knee; and similar short fur appears upon the interfemoral membrane. First upper premolar very small, scarcely visible without the aid of a lens, in the outer angle between the closely approximated canine and second premolar; sometimes deciduous. Lower incisors crowded. Length (of an adult $ ) : head and body 2"*9 ; tail 1"*8, tail free from membrane 0"*95 ; head 1"*05 ;. ear 0"75, tragus 0"*lx0"*03; forearm 1"85; thumb 0"*45 ; second finger-metacarp. 1"*85, 1st ph. 0"*85, 2nd ph. 1"*25; third finger-metacarp. 1"*8, 1st ph. 0"-7, 2nd ph. 0"*65; fourth finger-metacarp. 1"*2, 1st ph. 0"*55, 2nd ph. 0"*22 ; tibia 0"*65 ; foot and claws 0"*4. Hab. Africa (Angola, Coanza river); Madagascar (Mahanora). Nyctinomus hepaticus, Heuglin (Nov. Act. Acad. Leop.-Car. xxiii. 1864, p. 14), appears from the original description to be very closely allied to, if not identical with, N. angolensis. But Dr. Krauss informs me that the type is not in the Royal Zoological Museum at Stuttgart, where the types of the other species of Bats described by Herr von Heuglin are preserved; and he doubts whether any specimen of the species was brought by the describer to Europe. As the description is very imperfect, and as the type cannot be found, this species must remain doubtful. 11. NYCTINOMUS MIARENSIS. Nyctinomus miarensis, Grandidier, Rev. et Mag. Zool. 1869, p. 337. Nyctinomus unicolor, Grandidier, I. c. 1870, p. 49. About the same size as N. cestoni. Ears shorter than the head, united on the muzzle by a band about 0"*15 high in the centre, at a distance of 0"*2 behind the extremity of the nose; ear-conch broadly rounded off above, the outer and inner margin continuous ; antitragus longer than high, irregularly quadrate, the shortest side above, separated by a deep notch posteriorly ; tragus narrow, much longer than broad, shortly rounded off above, inner margin slightly concave, outer straight, in general shape altogether different from that of any of the previously described species; keel of the ear-conch well developed, prominent, thickened and expanded in lower third, upper lip very expansible, deeply grooved by vertical furrows. Thumb short, with a large circular callosity. Wings from the lower end of the tibiae. Fur above dark brown, beneath brown with slightly ashy extremities. Lower incisors 4, the middle incisors overlapping the outer ones; P R O C . Z O O L . Soc-1876, No. XLVIII. 48 |