114 



HUNTING AND FISHING IN FLORIDA. 



and thick and is covered with scattered coarse hairs. When not 

 frightened or suspicious it generally rises to the surface to breathe 

 at intervals of from one to two and a half minutes. 



Family VESPERTILIONIDvE. The Bats. 



ARTIBEUS CARPOLEQUS Gosse. 

 Leaf-Nosed Bat. 



A. carpolcoits Chapman. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., p. 342, 



1894. 



A. perspici/lafiis H. Allen. Bats N. A., p. 93, 1893. 



Nose with leaflike membrane : general color ashy brown ; expanse 

 of wings, 12.50 to 14. 



A single specimen recorded from Key West by Mr. C. J. May- 

 nard (Bull. Essex Inst., Salem, Mass., Oct., 1872, p. 144, 

 Vol. IV., No. 10), as Ar/ibcKspcrspicillatiis. According to Mr. F. M. 

 Chapman (Bull. American Mus. Nat. Hist., p. 341, 1894), the 

 Cuban species is Art/hens carpolcgiis. Gosse, and not pcrspic- 

 illatiis, differing from that species in the absence of conspicuous 

 facial streaks, and in its smaller size. 



CORYNORHINUS HACROTIS (Zc Conte). 

 Big=Eared Bat, 



Ears very large : fur soft, dark at base with lighter tips ; under 

 parts of body pale: expanse of wings, 9.50 to 10.75. 



Recorded by Dr. Harrison Allen (Bats N. A., p. 58), from 

 Florida, a single specimen having been taken at Micanopy by 



Dr. Bean. 



VESPERTILIO QRYPHUS. F. Cuv. 

 Little Brown Bat. 



Small : general color brown, showing a tinge of olive in some 

 lights: the basal portion of the fur (concealed) is dark plumbeous; 

 face whiskered: expanse of wing, 8 to 9.25. 



Recorded by Dr. Rhoads (Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 1894,) 

 from Tarpon Springs, " Several specimens taken." 



