158 University of California Publications in Zoology. |Vou.5 
setting dead-falls, and in trying various methods in getting speci- 
mens, but failed utterly. I had no special mole-trap. 
While moles from southern California are somewhat smaller 
than those from Santa Clara county (Santa Clara = type locality 
of latimanus, fide Osgood, l.c.), I am not at all sure that the 
name anthonyi (Scapanus anthonyi Allen, deseribed from the 
San Pedro Martir mountains, Lower California) can be properly 
used for the southern California mole. 
Myotis lucifugus longicrus (True). Long-legged Bat. 
This bat appeared to be a characteristically Transition species. 
It was nowhere as abundant as the large brown bat, not more than 
two or three being seen in one evening. Specimens were shot in 
June and July, 1906, along the upper Santa Ana in the vicinity 
of our South Fork camp. Here they appeared after it had be- 
come pretty dark, usually quite a while after the Vespertilios had 
come out, and we could get shots at them only as they flitted 
across between the pines, silhouetted against the sunset sky. I 
shot one at 8500 feet altitude in the firs near the upper part of 
the big cienaga at the head of South Fork, June 28, 1905. This 
was the highest station for any species of bat. Among the pines 
at Bluff lake during the latter half of July and again the last of 
August and up to September 3, 1905, the species was fairly com- 
mon. I shot a specimen at Bear lake, August 2, and another at 
Doble, August 24. 
Ten skins of this species were secured. 
Myotis californicus (Audubon & Bachman). California Bat. 
This small brown species was probably much commoner than 
our observations would seem to show. Those seen and obtained 
were noted flitting close about the foliage of oaks and pines when 
it was nearly dark. The five specimens secured were taken as 
follows: Seven Oaks, 5000 feet altitude, July 7 and 8, 1905; 
mouth of Fish ereek, 6500 feet, June 23, 1905; mouth of South 
Fork, 6200 feet, July 3, 1906; Bear lake, 6700 feet, August 1, 
1905. This species appears to belong to the Transition zone. 
