28 Mr. O. Thomas on 
and presented by Lord Delamere. The second specimen (a 
male) was obtained on November 21, 1899, to the south-east 
of Lake Stephanie, at an altitude of 3000 feet, and was 
yresented by Dr. Donaldson Smith. It is the Galago galago 
of my paper on the latter explorer’s collection *. 
This species is no doubt the Somaliland and Gallaland 
representative of the group of Galagos to which the names 
G. galago, senegalensis, teng, and zanzibaricus have been 
applied, but is evidently distinct from any of them. From 
the grey ones it differs by its drab coloration, and from the 
“zimmet-farbigen ” zanzibaricus by its yellow limbs and the 
white subterminal bands to its dorsal hairs. 
CL@OTIS f, gen. nov. (Lhinolophide) . 
Allied to Hipposiderus, Asellia, and Tricenops. 
Nose-leat tridentate, its details apparently somewhat as in 
Tricnops. 
Ears short, rim-like, almost without tip, their outer and 
inner edges arising close together. 
Thumbs extremely minute. 
Tail scarcely projecting from membrane. 
Anterior upper premolars present, but minute. Last molars 
nearly as large as the penultimate. 
Nasal pait of skull disproportionally small and feeble. 
Basal region broad between bulla, without vacuities, strongly 
ridged laterally. 
This bat does not appear to be assignable to any known 
genus. Its ear-structure, described in detail below, is quite 
unique, the shape of the ears being in this family very charac- 
teristic of the different genera. The complicated tridentate 
structure of the nose-leaf recalls Zri@nops, but the proportions 
of the skull are very different, nor is there any trace of the 
remarkable vertical expansion of the zygomata present in 
that bat. Nor do any of the species of Asediia show any 
approximation to Cleoitis. 
It is unfortunate that the two specimens were both sent as 
skins, so that, although one has been softened, the nose-leaf 
cannot yet be accurately described in detail, nor can any 
figure be given. 
Cleotis Percivali, sp. n. 
Size very small, perhaps less than in any other member of 
the family. General build very light and delicate. Nose- 
* P. Z. S. 1900, p. 802. 
+ kdovos, a collar. 
