370 



conical, without accessory cusp or point, and with a feebly developed 

 cingulum inside the tooth. Following these are two premolars, short 

 and stout, and somewhat pyramidal in form, without internal lobe 

 or projection. The following two molars are of the form so common 

 in all the Vespertilionidce ; but they, like all the other teeth, have 

 their cusps less acute than is usual, and the inner ones rather less 

 extended towards the central part of the palate. The last molar is 

 of small size, and transverse in form. 



In the lower jaw the teeth are, as may be inferred from those in 

 the upper, arranged in two straight lines, a little narrower in front 

 than behind. The incisors are of the ordinary form, and trilobed ; 

 but the canines are very short and rather stout, and are furnished 

 with an obtuse lobe on their inner surfaces sufficiently prominent to 

 occupy a space equal in breadth to the two outer incisors on each 

 side, behind and above which it may be seen when looking at the 

 jaw in front. The same peculiarity occurs, but in a less degree, in 

 the canines of the common Noetule Bat. The two next teeth are 

 triangularly pyramidal in form, short and blunt, with faint indica- 

 tions of inner accessory cusps. Following these are the three true 

 molars, requiring only to be noticed as having their cusps less acute 

 than is usual. 



Vespertilio stjillus, Temm. 



V. suillus, Temm. Mon. ii. p. 224. pi. 56. f. 4, 5, 6, 1835-41 ; 

 Wagn. Supp. Schreib. Saugth. i. p. 512, 1840; Keys, et Bias. 

 Weigm. Archiv, vi. p. 2, 1840. 



Murina suillus, Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. v. 10. no. 65. 

 p. 258, 1842 ; Zool. Voy. Samar. no. 5. p. 9, 1849 ; Gervais, Voy. 

 Castelnau, Mamm. p. 78, 1855; Horsf. Proc. Zool. Soc. pt. 24. 

 p. 394, 1856. 



Ocypetes suilla, Less. Nouv. Tab. Regne Anim. p. 30, 1842. 



Noctulinia lasyura, Hodgs. Journ. A. S. Bengal, no. 182. p. 896, 

 1847. 



On all the upper parts, with the exception of the interfemoral 

 membrane, the fur is tricoloured, brown at the base, succeeded by 

 pale rufous, and with the ends of the hairs of a brighter and deeper 

 tint of the same colour ; and in the specimen in the British Museum 

 the extreme tips are a little paler, giving an indication of a fourth 

 colour. The hair on the interfemoral membrane is of a uniform 

 light brownish rufous colour. Beneath it is bicoloured, dark brown 

 at the base, with its terminal third brownish cream-colour, but 

 rufous on the humeral region. The specimen in the British Museum 

 (included in Dr. Gray's Catalogue) has the fur much more distinctly 

 marked with the different tints than the one in my own collection, 

 in which they are very faint. The specimen in the Museum of the 

 Hon. East India Company, collected by Mr. Hodgson in Nepal, and 

 forwarded with the name of Noctulinia lasyura attached, has the 

 colours well-marked. This, with the one in the National Collection, 

 is decidedly smaller than the one in my own collection. M. Tern- 



