466 Field Museum or Natural History — Zoology, Vol. XL 



lection contains a number of specimens from Hardin, Alexander, Pope, 

 and Johnson counties, and I have seen a specimen from Coles County; 

 Howell records it from Alexander, Union, Richland and Johnson 

 counties (/. c, 1910, p. 33); Wood says there are sixty-nine Bats of this 

 species in the collection of the Illinois State Laboratory of Natural 

 History at Urbana, Champaign Co., but all are without locality data 

 (/. c, p. 596). 



Strong includes this species in his list of Wisconsin mammals (/. c, 

 p. 438), but merely gives the name without information as to locality 

 or date of capture, a most unsatisfactory way to treat the first record 

 for a state. Hollister questions this record and says the species is not 



KEEWATIN ^ 



OF f^ty^ 



Piplstrellus subflavus 



Map showing the probable range of the Georgian Bat {Pipistrellus subflavus) in the United 



States. 



