Vol. IX, No. 10.] The Limestone Caves of Burma. 409 
[N.S.] 
have a fairly wide distribution outside caves, but Honycteris 
spelaea has only been taken in the Farm Caves, and in any case 
smaller Burmo-Malayan mammals, owing to the intensive 
study of the Oriental species now in progress in European and 
American museums. 
BIRDS. 
Literature. 
1895. Blanford, Fauna of British India, Birds IIL. 
1901. Bonhote, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, p. 68. 
then known, from C. francica (Gmel.), which is found in Ten- 
asserim, the Andaman and the Nicobar Is., as well as in the 
Malay Archipelago on the one hand and Arrakan on the other. 
C. innominata is known from the Andamans and from Tenas- 
Serim as well as the Malay Peninsula. 
REPTILES and BATRACHIA. 
Literature. 
1898. Ridley, Rep. Brit. Ass., p. 572. ae 
1903. Boulenger, ‘‘ Report on the Reptiles.’’ Fasciculi 
Malayenses (Zool.) I, p. 133. 
1203, 1904. Butler, Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. XV, pp. 
387 
1912. Boulenger, Fauna of the Malay Peninsula, Reptiles 
d Batrachia. 
N : 
the caves of Burma and Malaya, and no species of either 
hem. 
