448 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM vol. 84 



Cabell County: 5 miles east of Huntington, 8. 



Greenbrier County: White Sulphur Springs, 9; 2 miles east of White Sulphur 



Springs, 2. 

 Lincoln County: Fourteen (27 miles southeast of Huntington), 2. 

 Mason County: Mercers Bottom, 7. 

 Mercer County: Flat Top, altitude 3,500 feet, 3. 



Pendleton County: Franklin, 1; Spruce Knob, altitude 4,860 feet, 1. 

 Pocahontas County: Cranberry Glades, altitude 3,300 feet, 25; Williams River, 



altitude 3,300 feet, 9; Travellers Repose, 6. 

 Raleigh County: Ghent, altitude 2,900 feet, 4; Odd, altitude 2,900 feet, 8; 



Winding Gulf, 4 miles southwest of Pemberton, altitude 2,200 feet, 4. 

 Randolph Cotuity: Middle Mountain, 11 miles northeast of Durbin, 8; Cheat 



Mountain, 3 miles west of Cheat Bridge, altitude 3,900 feet, 9. 



Family VESPERTILIONIDAE 



MYOTIS LUaFUGUS LUaFUGUS (LeConte) 



Little Brown Bat 



Bats, presumably this species, were occasionally observed at Siim- 

 mersville, Nicholas County. On Middle Mountain, Randolph County, 

 bats were fairly common, but none were collected. W. M. Perrygo 

 was told that hundreds of bats wintered in the caves in "The Sinks" 

 on Gandy Creek, 4K miles west of Spruce KJuob, Randolph County. 

 It is likely that several species of bats hibernate in these caves. Fred 

 E. Brooks (191 1, p. 29) reported that this bat was abundant at French 

 Creek, Upshur County, and at Morgantown, Monongalia County. 

 A. M. Reese (1934, pp. 45, 50, 51) records the little brown bat from 

 Cornwall's Cave in Preston County, as well as from Arbuckle's, 

 Rapp's, and Bunger's Caves in Greenbrier County. 



Greenbrier Cotinty: White Sulphur Springs, 4, 

 Pendleton County: Franklin, 2. 



MYOTIS SUBULATUS LEIBH (Audubon and Bachman) 



Leib Bat 



There are no specimens of this bat from West Virginia in the 

 National Museum collection. Miller and Allen (1928, p. 172), 

 however, recorded one from White Sulphur Springs in Greenbrier 

 County. Brooks writes that "many of these bats hibernate in the 

 caves, hanging in dense masses from their roofs." 



MYOTIS KEENII SEPTENTRIONAUS (Trouessart) 



Trouessart Bat 



This bat has been recorded in the central and northern parts of 

 the State, one having been taken in Braxton County (Miller and 

 Allen, 1928, p. 107) and two in Preston County during August 1888. 

 Preston County: Aurora, 2. 



