﻿Manchester Memoirs, Vol. xlix. (1905), No. 9. 11 



stock of its surroundings, though whether the animal can 

 see at all, in the ordinary sense of the word, is another 

 matter altogether. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



(1) Alcock, N. H. and C. B. Moffat. "The Long-eared Bat, 



Plecotus auritus, Linnaeus. The Natural History of Irish 

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(2) Kinahan, J. R. " Three Days among the Bats in Clare." 



Zoologist, vol. 19, pp. 7617 — 7624, 1 86 1. 



(3) Millais, J. G. " The Mammals of Great Britain and 



Ireland." Vol. 1, 1904. 



(4) Newstead, R. " On the Position of the Lesser Horseshoe 



Bat, Rhinolophus hipposideros, Bechstein, during Hiberna- 

 tion." Zoologist (4), vol. 1, pp. 537—538, 1897. 



(5) Oldham, Chas. "Whiskered Bat (Myotis mystacinus) in 



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 474, 1899. "Observations on the Noctule," op. cit., 

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(6) Oldham, Chas. "Lesser Horseshoe Bat (Rhinolophus hip- 



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 1903. 



