[163] Notopteris Macdonaldii.

[164] Rhinolophus luctus, Phyllorhina armiger, Nycticejus luteus (=Scotophilus Temminckii), Miniopterus blepotis, and Vespertilio Blythii.

[165] Rhinolophus ferrum-equinum.

[166] To this lobe the name of “antitragus” has been given.

[167] Rhinolophus hipposideros.

[168] Besides the two species found in Britain, two others inhabit southern Europe, the Levant, and Northern Africa, namely, Rhinolophus euryale and R. Blasii, the latter often described under the name of R. clivosus. Both these species are nearly allied to the English Horseshoe Bats.

[169] Rhinolophus luctus.

[170] The commonest of the numerous Eastern species of the genus are Pearson’s Horseshoe Bat (R. Pearsonii), which has a very large nose-leaf and greatly developed ear lobes, and is found throughout the lofty hill-countries from the Himalayas to the mountains of Burmah and China; Roux’s Horseshoe Bat (R. affinis), which varies in colour from orange-brown to greyish-brown, and is found among the hills all over India, and in Ceylon, Burmah, Java, Sumatra, and Borneo; and the Dwarf Horseshoe Bat (R. minor), only about one inch and three-quarters in length, which occurs in Burmah, Yunnan, Java, Sumatra, Borneo, and Japan. Several varieties of the last two species have been described as distinct forms.

[171] Rhinolophus megaphyllus.

[172] Rhinonycteris aurantia.