Rattus norvegicus has no seasonal migration habit and often lives in hills or mountains, caves and cracks in city walls. Mainly distributed in the southeast of China, including Fujian, Guangxi, Zhejiang, Hong Kong, Shandong, Shaanxi, Jiangsu, Anhui, Jiangxi, Yunnan, and Beijing is relatively rare. Bigfoot bats are in estrus in late autumn and early winter, and give birth in June the following year. The baby weighs about 6.9g, and the adult generally weighs 20-30g, with a head length of 60-65mm and a forearm length of 53-58mm. The ears are short, and you can't reach the tip of the kiss when you turn forward, and the tragus is narrow, less than half the length of the ear. The body coat is short and thick, the back is dark brown, and the belly hair is gray. Its most typical morphological feature is that its hind feet are extremely developed, about 20mm long, which is twice as long as other insect-eating bats. No.: 279 Latin scientific name: Chiroptera Chinese name: Chiroptera Chinese name: Batidae Latin scientific name: Vespertilionidae Chinese name: Rhinotus Latin scientific name: Myotis Latin scientific name: ricketti Nominee: Thomas Date: 189. 4 Chinese name: China Bat Original: Ann. Margo. N.H., 14:300 Pattern Origin: Fuzhou, Fujian Domestic Distribution: Shandong, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, Yunnan, Fujian, Guangxi, Hong Kong Note: Endemic to China.