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BATS. 
abruptly truncated and marked by a groove leading up each side to the nostrils; 
the latter being situated in a depression void of hair on the upper surface of the 
muzzle. The black hair on the somewhat swollen cheeks also adds to the peculiarity 
of the physiognomy ; while the ears are relatively broad, and nearly equal in length 
to the head. The long fur is darker than that of any other European bat, and on 
the upper-parts is brownish-black, with the points of the hairs lighter; while on 
the under-parts the light tips of the hairs are longer. The length of the head and 
body is 2 inches, and that of the ears half an inch. One white example of this bat 
has been recorded, and also another in which, while the head and neck were of the 
normal tint, the body was white. 
Contrary to the habits of the long-eared bat, the barbastelle is a solitary species, 
both when in repose and during active life. “ If,” observe the authors of the second 
edition of Bell’s British Quadrupeds, “ in a twilight stroll about midsummer, a 
person tinds himself in close proximity with a bat of somewhat thick and clumsy 
form, but of rather small size, whose flight is so desultory that it appears to be 
flapping lazily about hither and thither, seemingly without purpose, and intruding 
so closely that the flutter of its wings may be heard, and even the cool air thrown 
by their movement felt upon the cheek, it may with almost certainty be regarded 
as the barbastelle. Although there is no English bat which resembles the barbastelle 
in its mode of flight, yet in choice of situation there are several. Where the 
whiskered bat and pipistrelle are seen, the barbastelle may be seen also; but, having 
been once observed, it will probably be useless to make search again at the same 
place. Equally uncertain is its diurnal retreat; most likely not the same place for 
long together, as we have found it in places where it could not have rested the day 
previously. A crevice in a wall or tree, the spaces between the rafters and tiles of 
a cowshed, the timber over a sawpit, the thatch of a shed in a brickyard, or behind 
a cottage window-shutter, are suitable places of repose for the barbastelle, in all of 
which situations we have met with it, and always alone.” The barbastelle appears 
earlier in the evening than the long-eared bat, and probably retires as the night 
advances. 
As we have already mentioned, the genus Synotus resembles Plecotus in being 
represented only by two species. Whereas, however, the second species of long¬ 
eared bat is North American, the second kind of barbastelle is a Himalayan species. 
The Himalayan barbastelle (S. darjilingensis ) is distinguished from its European 
congener by its larger ears, which lack the projecting lobe found on the outer 
margin of those of the latter. This bat appears to be common in the Himalaya, 
and has been captured in localities so far apart from one another as Gilgit and 
Darjiling. It is generally found at altitudes varying from about five thousand to 
eight thousand feet above the sea. In habits the Himalayan barbastelle appears 
to be very similar to its European relative; showing itself, however, rather late in 
the evening, and hibernating in the narrowest crevices and chinks of rocks into 
which it can contrive to crawl. There are four other bats allied to the long-eared 
bat and barbastelle, which are referred to three distinct genera. One of these is 
Hempricli’s eared-bat ( Otonycteris hemprichi) from North Africa and the North- 
West Himalaya, which is characterised by having only thirty teeth, owing to the 
reduction in the number of the upper incisors and premolars to a single pair each. 
