Although no existing reptile is thus furnished, there is a small Asiatic lizard which is ordinarily spoken of as "flying," the Draco volans. And, in fact, though this creature cannot truly fly, but only flit, it has a membrane which can be extended from each side of the body, and which, like the bat's wing, is supported by a number of bony rods. These rods, however, are not, as in the bat, enormously elongated fingers, but are elongated ribs, which stand out freely from the body when jumping, but otherwise are folded back against the flanks.
Existing reptiles, then, present us with no close resemblance to bat-structure; but when we come to extinct reptiles—reptiles which flourished during and anterior to the deposition of our chalk-cliffs—the secondary or mesozoic period—we there find reptiles to have existed which present the most striking analogies with existing bats in all that regards their modes of locomotion, and their structure as far as it is related to such modes of locomotion.
These reptiles flew in the same way that bats do, by means of a vast membrane extending from each enormously-elongated hand to the adjacent side of the body.
While, however, in the bat all the fingers of each hand are enormously elongated (to support the alar membrane)—the thumb alone remaining free—in these flying reptiles only a single finger of each hand was thus elongated, the others remaining short, and being provided with claws like the thumb.
With the approach of the winter season bats (like dormice) fall into a peculiar state of winter sleep called hibernation. For this purpose they generally assemble together in large numbers, in out-of-the-way places, caverns, hollow trees, or the roofs of buildings, hanging head downward by the claws of their feet. During this condition the most important functions of life—breathing and the circulation of the blood—are performed only with exceedingly-reduced activity, the temperature of the body becoming notably diminished.
Some of our English bats may be kept in confinement and partly domesticated for a time, small pieces of raw meat being given to them in lieu of their natural insect-food. Speaking of the long-eared bat, Mr. Bell tells us: