[193] Vesperugo pachypus.
[194] Another Eastern species, furnished with pads on the thumbs and feet, is the Club-footed Bat (V. tylopus), from Northern Borneo, which is distinguished from the above by the presence of two pre-molars on each side in the upper jaw. A small African species, the Dwarf Club-footed Bat (V. nanus), is similarly provided.
[195] Scotophilus Temminckii.
[196] Scotophilus Welwitschii.
[197] Chalinolobus tuberculatus.
[198] Vespertilio murinus.
[199] Vespertilio Nattereri.
[200] Vespertilio Daubentonii.
[201] Vespertilio mystacinus.
[202] Other European species are Bechstein’s Bat (Vespertilio Bechsteinii), which has occurred in the New Forest; the Marsh Bat (Vespertilio dasycneme), which inhabits the Altai Mountains, and in Europe extends, according to Mr. Dobson, from Russia to England; Capaccini’s Bat (V. Capaccinii), an inhabitant of Italy, with which specimens from the Philippine Islands and Japan have been identified; and the Notched-eared Bat (V. emarginatus), found in Central and Southern Europe, and extending eastward into Persia.