CHIROPTERAX NOTES 

 Bv KsiA) Andersen 



The ìjats described or commented upon in tiiis paper were 

 sent to me for inspection or identification Ly Marquis Giacomo 

 Doria, Director of the Genoa Civic Museum, during the latter 

 half of the year 190(3. Duplicates of some of the forms have kindly 

 I)een ceded l)y Marquis Doria to the British Museum. 



The principal points of interest to specialists may be these: 



a species of Mormopterus (M. dorlae) from Sumatra, l)elon- 

 ging to a section of the genus hitlierto known from tlie Malagasy 

 region and Southeast Africa only (p. 42); 



a second specimen of Chaerephon johorensis , showing the 

 range of the species to extend to Sumatra (p. 39); 



a second and third specimen of Hlpposiderus schneideri 

 from Sumatra (p. 21); 



a hitherto undescribed species of Myotis from the Andamans 

 (M. dri/as), apparently allied to M. adversus (p. 37); 



Hlpposiderus lankadiva, hitherto known from Ceylon only, 

 now recorded from Burma (p. 9) ; 



Engano individuals of Hlpposiderus diadema, constituting 

 a separate race (H. d. enganus) with closer affinities to the 

 continental than to the Sumatran race (p. 8) ; 



examples of Hlpposiderus diadema from Tenasserim and tlie 

 Malay Peninsula apparently referable to Do])Son's « Phtjllorlilna 

 f/iasonl » (p. 6); 



examples of Hlpposiderus caffer referable to Cabrera's recently 

 described « H. tephrus », showing this form to be of wide distri- 

 l)ution in Africa north of tlie Congo Basin (p. 12); 



examples of Hipposlderus caffer from San Thome and 

 Prince's Island, Gulf of Guinea, showing the race inhabiting these 

 outlying islands to be the same as the continental H. c. (jui- 

 neensls (p. 17); 



