BANGS: LAND MAMMALS OF FLORIDA AND GEORGIA. 215 
Type locality. Georgia, probably near Riceboro. 
Remarks. The big-eared bat probably occurs throughout the 
region included in the scope of the present paper. Hardeeville, 
South Carolina, and Greensboro, Alabama, are, however, the only 
localities near this region from which I have seen it. The late Dr. 
Harrison Allen records a specimen from Micanopy, Fla. 
Myotis lucifugus lucifugus (Leconte). 
Vespertilio lucifugus Leconte, McMurtrie’s Cuvier, Animal king¬ 
dom, 1831, vol. 1, append., p. 431. 
Vespertilio lucifugus austroriparius Rhoads, Proc. Acad. nat. sci. 
. Phila., 1897, p. 227. (Tarpon Springs, Florida.) 
Myotis lucifugus Miller, N. Amer. fauna, 1897, no. 13, p. 59. 
Type locality. Georgia, probably near Riceboro. 
Remarks. The little brown bat is without doubt a common 
species in southern Georgia and northern Florida, though the 
southern limit of its range is not known. The only specimens from 
the region under consideration that I have seen are the type and 
six topotypes of Vespertilio lucifugus austroriparius Rhoads from 
Tarpon Springs, Florida. 
Lasionycteris noctivagajnts (Leconte). 
Vespertilio noctivagans Leconte, McMurtrie’s Cuvier, Animal 
kingdom, 1831, vol. 1, p. 31. 
.Lasionycteris noctivagans Peters, Monatsber. K. preuss. Akad. 
wissensch., Berlin, 1865, p. 648. 
Type locality. Eastern United States, exact locality unknown. 
Remarks. The silver-haired bat probably occurs as a migrant 
throughout Florida and southern Georgia. Mr. Brown took a 
specimen at Pinetucky, Ga. 
Pipistrellus subflavus (F. Cuvier). 
Vespertilio subflavus F. Cuvier, Nouv. ann. d’hist. nat., 1832, 
p. 17. 
Pipistrellus subflavus Miller, N. Amer. fauna, 1897, no. 13, p. 90. 
Type locality. Eastern United States, probably Georgia. 
