202 BATS. 
THE WHITE Barts. 
Genus Diclidurus. 
As white is a colour but rarely met with among the Chiroptera, we cannot 
pass over the white bats, which are represented only by two species from Central 
and South America. These bats are allied to the tomb-bats, but have three pairs of 
lower incisor teeth, and they are also distinguished from other bats by the presence 
of a peculiar pouch on the under side of the membrane between the legs. The 
typical white bat (Diclidurus albus) has the fur on the body dark at the base, 
but the greater portion of each hair, up to the tip, is of a yellowish or creamy- 
white, while the whole of the wing-membranes are pure white. The first known 
specimen was found in Brazil reposing between the fronds of a cocoanut palm. If 
this be the normal habitat of the species, its coloration may perhaps be a protective 
one, adapted to resemble the silvery hue of the under-surface of the palm leaves. 
Here it may be mentioned that albino varieties of dark-coloured bats are occasion- 
ally met with; the most recently described example that has come under our notice 
being a white specimen of a species of Vesperugo (V. capensis), obtained in 1890 
near Cape Town. 
THE HaARE-LIPPED BATs. 
Genus Noctilio. 
If the white bats are noteworthy on account of their colour, the two species of 
hare-lipped bats, which are likewise Central and South American forms, are deserv- 
ing of mention on account of the curious superficial resemblances of their muzzles 
to those of the Rodents, while at least the ordinary species (Noctilio leporinus), 
which has been known since the time of Linnzeus, is not less remarkable from the 
peculiar nature of its diet. These bats derive their ordinary name from their 
curiously folded upper lip, which is bent upwards in the middle line in the form of 
an inverted V, terminated above by the nostrils. The feet and claws are remarkable 
for their large size. They have 28 teeth, of which there are ? incisors, and # cheek- 
teeth on each side. The first, or innermost pair of upper incisor teeth, are of great 
size, and placed close together so as to conceal the small outer pair; and as the 
large ones bite against the single smaller pair of lower incisors, the resemblance to 
the mouth of a small Rodent, such as a mouse, is very striking. 
These bats appear to be almost omnivorous in their diet. That they would 
freely eat cockroaches was proved long ago by Mr. P. H. Gosse, when in Jamaica; 
and it was at the same time shown that they would chew, although not swallow, 
the flesh of small birds. In 1859, a Mx. Fraser, writing from Ecuador, stated that 
they had a very peculiar and offensive fishy smell, and that he had observed them 
“skimming the bank of the river, every now and then making a dash along, and 
actually striking the water, catching the minute shrimps as they pass up stream.” 
It was not, however, till 1880, that it was definitely known that they actually 
eaught and fed upon small fish. Professor M‘Carthy, who made special investiga- 
tions to determine the truth of their alleged fish-eating habits, writes to Mr. J. E. 
