472 Mr. Oldfield Thomas on a new Bat from Java. 



Fig. 5. Rostrum of Atya spinipes, Newport ?, from the Samoa Islands 

 (nat. size). 5 a, teeth of the inferior margin of the same (mag- 

 nified). 



Fig. 6. Third cephalothoracic leg of the same, showing the specific 

 distinction between this species and Atya moluccensis (nat. 

 size). 



Fig. 7. Lateral view of the second postabdominal segment of Enoplome- 

 topus dentatus, sp. n. (nat. size). 



Fig. 8. Basal portion of one of the third cephalothoracic legs of Penceus 

 Joyneri, sp. n., showing the remarkable appendage of the second 

 or basis joint (X 2 diain.). 



Fig. 9. Basal portion of fourth cephalothoracic leg of the same, showing 

 the dilatation and inferior tooth of the merus joint (x 2 diam.). 



Fig. 10. Basal portion of the fifth cephalothoracic leg, showing the form 

 of the merus joint (X 2 diam.). 



Fig. 11. Renocila ovata, gen. et sp. nov. (X 1| diam.). 



Fig. 12. Head and antennas of the same, dorsal view ( X 2 diam.). 



Fig. 13. Inferior view of head, showing the form of the front and infe- 

 rior antennas (X 2 diam.). 



Fig. 14. Inferior view of postero-lateral lobe of the sixth thoracic seg- 

 ment, showing the position of the small coxa (x 3 diam.). 



Fig. 15. Kerocila lesvinota, sp. u. (X lj diam.). 



Fig. 16. Lateral view of coxa of sixth thoracic leg (X 2 diam.). 



Fig. 17. Lateral view of coxa of the same limb in N. lonyispina, sp. n. 

 ( X 2 diam.). 



Fig. 18. Sacculina rotundata, sp. n. ( x 2 diam.). 



Fig. 19. Spicules from the epidermis of the same, as seen under a £-inch 

 objective. 



XL1I. — Description of a new Bat from Java, of the Genus 

 Kerivoula. By Oldfield Thomas, F.Z.S., Assistant in 

 the Zoological Department, British Museum. 



The specimen upon which this description is based was ob- 

 tained by Mr. H. 0. Forbes at Kosala, near Bantam, Java, 

 2100 feet above the sea, on the 24th of September, 1879, 

 and is now in the British Museum. 



Kerivoula javana , sp. n. 



Fur greyish black, each hair being nearly black for its 

 proximal third, then white for the middle third, the end being 

 black, with sometimes a shining white tip. Ears rather short ; 

 laid forward they reach to about halfway between the eyes and 

 the tip of the nose. Shape of ears and tragus exactly as in 

 K. Jagori*, the former having the second small concavity in 

 the middle of the outer edge, and the latter the deep horizontal 



* Peters, MB. Ak. Berl. 1866, p. 399 ; Dobson, Cat. Chir. B. M. 

 p. 338. 



