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(experimental) Machine readable version of Handbook of the Mammals of the World

Home Page: https://jhpoelen.nl/hmw/

License: Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal

JSONiq 32.68% Shell 54.03% jq 13.29%

hmw's Introduction

hmw

Machine readable version of Handbook of the Mammals of the World

⚠️ experimental - please use at own risk.

methods / results / summary statistics / example record / R example / funding / references

Physical copies of Handbook of the Mammals of the World are a valuable taxonomic resource for mammals. This repository uses Plazi digitized taxonomic treatment versions of these physical copies to generate hmw.json, and hmw.csv. For your convenience, the first 10 records can be found hmw-sample.json, hmw-sample-pretty.json and hmw-sample.csv. The json and files are derived from a Preston tracked version of Plazi's treatment bank available via https://github.com/plazi/treatments-xml. You can find a copy of a tracked copy of this in the Releases section of this repository.

This work originates from the Biodiversity Data Hub working group of the CETAF Covid19 . For more information see https://globalbioticinteractions.org/covid19 .

Methods

The csv and json files are roughly generated via:

# get the recent version of Plazi's treatments in xml format
preston track https://github.com/plazi/treatments-xml/archive/master.zip 

# transform only HMW treatments into json using preston
preston ls | preston plazi-stream | grep "Handbook of the Mammals of the World" > hmw.json 

# convert json into csv
cat hmw.json | [some magic] > hmw.csv

The csv files are generated using jq using schema.jq and Miller (https://miller.readthedocs.io/en/latest/).

See make.sh for more details on how these files were generated.

If you'd like you can generate your own files by running make.sh after installing the dependencies preston, jq, and Miller (https://miller.readthedocs.io/en/latest/).

Results

The following results were generated on 2022-07-20 :

filename description contentId
names.txt all included species name in alphabetical order hash://sha256/333a1ee211077efdcf282989ff9f5212409faa1a62e28f947fe19351e70d6794
hmw.csv all extracted mammal descriptions in comma-separated values (CSV) hash://sha256/987bed74c31a206a515f8ea5551ada5660577e88521886dc6cf71d1f30280299
hmw.json extracted mammal description in line-json hash://sha256/96883965cce8729ec087d0c2587dc9f527054b2cee0585a4f7f32394fd46e6af
hmw-sample.csv header + first 10 records hash://sha256/7bb19ea2496a9175d45a427c9ceab985bc9dc2cdc60f031923c42d5ac6bfca83
hmw-sample.json first 10 line-json records hash://sha256/7bb19ea2496a9175d45a427c9ceab985bc9dc2cdc60f031923c42d5ac6bfca83
hmw-sample-pretty.json first 10 json record pretty printed hash://sha256/7bb19ea2496a9175d45a427c9ceab985bc9dc2cdc60f031923c42d5ac6bfca83

Summary Statistics

hmw.csv contains 6218 lines, including the header. This suggests that the hmw.csv contains at most 6217 mammal species descriptions, but probably less, because higherlevel taxa are also included as individual records.

Example Record

An example record describing Rhinolophus sinicus generated using:

cat hmw.json | grep "Rhinolophus sinicus" | jq . 

is shown below in JSON format:

{
  "http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#wasDerivedFrom": "zip:hash://sha256/15afc61b5914e4b6899b43a5eda355497d5c5d0c4b401c884c8056f418c9665b!/treatments-xml-main/data/88/58/87/885887A2FFE18A06F899F4EFF9BFD35B.xml",
  "http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type": "application/plazi+xml",
  "docId": "885887A2FFE18A06F899F4EFF9BFD35B",
  "docName": "hbmw_9_Rhinolophidae.pdf.imf",
  "docOrigin": "Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Lynx Edicions",
  "docMasterId": "hash://md5/7461ffdaffcf8a29ffccffa1ff85d963",
  "docISBN": "978-84-16728-19-0",
  "docPageNumber": "325",
  "verbatimText": "93 . Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat Rhinolophus sinicus French: Rhinolophe de Chine I German: Rotbraune. China-Hufeisennase / Spanish: Herradura rufo de China Other common names: Chinese Horseshoe Bat, Little Nepalese Horseshoe Bat Taxonomy. Rhinolophus rouxi [sic] sinicus K. Andersen, 1905 , “ Chin Tah , Anhwei [= Anhui Province ], Lower Yangtse [River ],” China . Rhinolophus sinicus is included in the rouxii species group and appears to be sister to R. thomasi . True R. sinicus is composed of three genetic lineages in the eastern, central, and Hainan portion ofits distribution while R.s. septentrionalis is sister to. thomasi , suggesting that the former is distinct at the species level. Rhinolophus sinicus was previously included in R rouxii , but shows substantial morphological, genetic, and karyological differences. There appears to be some ambiguity regarding the distribution of this species and R rouxii in published records: north Indian records previously attributed to. rouxii are now considered to refer to R.sinicus . There may also be some ambiguity regarding the distribution of this species in South-east Asia, as it is often confused with R. thomasi . Validity of races needs to be tested. Two subspecies are currently recognized, although they likely represent two distinct species, pending further revision. Subspecies and Distribution. R . s. sinicus K .Andersen, 1905 - N India ( Himachal Pradesh , Uttarakhand , Sikkim , West Bengal , Meghalaya , Arunachal Pradesh , and Nagaland ), Nepal , N Myanmar ,, S & SE China ( Xizang , Sichuan , Guizhou , Hubei , Jiangsu , Anhui , Zhejiang , Fujian , Guangdong , and Hainan I), and N & C Vietnam . On following pages: 94. Thomas's Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus thomasi ); 95. Lesser Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus hipposideros ); 96. rancis's Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus trancisi); 97. Lesser Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus sedulus ); 98. Trefoil Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus trifoliatus ); 99. Northern Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus perniger ); 100. Selangor Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus luctoides ); 101. Malaysian Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus mono ); 102. Great Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus luctus ); 1.03. Beddome's Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus beddomei ); 104. Formosan Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus formosaë ); 105. Thailand Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus thailandensis ); 106. Dobson's Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus yunanensis ); 107. Chiew Kwee's Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus chiewkweeae ); 108. Pearson's Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus pearsonii ); 109. Mitred Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus mitratus ). R .s. septentrionalis Sanborn , 1939 — S China ( Yunnan ). Descriptive notes. Head-body 43-53' 5 mm , tail 21- 5—30 mm , ear 15- 8-20 mm , hindfoot 7- 5-10 mm , forearm 43-56 mm ; weight 8-9-10- 9 g . Dorsal pelage is wood brown, occasionally with reddish tint; ventral pelage is slightly lighter. Ears are small. Noseleaf has hastate lancet that constricts before variably long to short tip; connecting process is rounded, as in the Indian Rufous Horseshoe Bat (. rouxii ) ; sella is virtually parallelsided, and widely rounded off at tip; horseshoe is relatively wide (8-1-8- 2 mm ) but does not completely cover muzzle, and there are usually clearly visible and well developed lateral leaflets. Lower lip has three mental grooves. Skull is massive and robust (zygomatic width is always much larger than mastoid width); anterior median swellings are relatively small; posterior swellings are moderately developed; rostral profile is concave; sagittal crest is moderate to high; frontal depression is shallow; supraorbital crests are low but visible. C1 is well developed and long; P2 is moderate in size and within tooth row or slightly extruded from it; P3 is medium-sized to small and partly to fully extruded from tooth row; P2 and P4 are touching or almost touching. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 36 and FNa = 60 (mainland China and Hainan ). Habitat . The Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat is typically a forest species, occurring in montane forests with heavy rainfall. It has been reported from disturbed forests in Nepal and from thick moist tropical forest with some bamboo in Myanmar . Recorded at elevations of 500-2769 m , being commonest at higher altitudes. Food and Feeding . The Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat forages for insects by aerialhawking and occasionally perch-hunting. Breeding. No information. Activity patterns. Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bats roost in caves, old disused tunnels, temples, houses, wells, and hollows in trees. They leave their roosts just after dusk to forage through the night. In colder portions of their range, they hibernate through the winter. Calls are FM/CF/FM shaped with a peak GF recorded at c.79-87 kHz across China and Hainan , and at 80 kHz in Vietnam . Movements, Home range and Social organization. The Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat roosts singly ( usually males) or in colonies varying in size from a few individuals to several hundred. During the breeding season, females form large maternity colonies that can consist of several hundred bats. Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat is widespread and relatively common throughout its distribution, and does not seem to be facing any major threats currently. It may be locally threatened by roost disturbance and general habitat loss. Bibliography. Ao Lei et al. (2007), Bates & Harrison (1997), Bates, Csorba, Molur & Srinivasulu (2008a), Bates, Thi Mar-Mar et al. (2004), Csorba et al. (2003), Francis (2008a), Kruskop (2013a), Mao Xiuguang, Dong Ji et al. (2014), Mao Xiuguang, He Guimei et al. (2013), Mao Xiuguang, Tsagkogeorga et al. (2019), Molur et al. (2002), Smith &XieYan (2008), Stoffberg et al . (2010), Wu Yi & Harada (2005), Wu Yi , Harada & LiYanhong (2004), Wu Yi, Motokawa et al. (2009), Xie Lifen et al. (2017), Zhang Lin et al. (2018), Zhang Weidao (1985).",
  "taxonomy": "Rhinolophus rouxi [sic] sinicus K. Andersen, 1905 , “ Chin Tah , Anhwei [= Anhui Province ], Lower Yangtse [River ],” China . Rhinolophus sinicus is included in the rouxii species group and appears to be sister to R. thomasi . True R. sinicus is composed of three genetic lineages in the eastern, central, and Hainan portion ofits distribution while R.s. septentrionalis is sister to. thomasi , suggesting that the former is distinct at the species level. Rhinolophus sinicus was previously included in R rouxii , but shows substantial morphological, genetic, and karyological differences. There appears to be some ambiguity regarding the distribution of this species and R rouxii in published records: north Indian records previously attributed to. rouxii are now considered to refer to R.sinicus . There may also be some ambiguity regarding the distribution of this species in South-east Asia, as it is often confused with R. thomasi . Validity of races needs to be tested. Two subspecies are currently recognized, although they likely represent two distinct species, pending further revision.",
  "commonNames": "Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat @en | China-Hufeisennase @en | Herradura rufo de China @es | Chinese Horseshoe Bat @en | Little Nepalese Horseshoe Bat @en",
  "interpretedAuthorityName": "K. Andersen",
  "interpretedAuthorityYear": "1905",
  "interpretedClass": "Mammalia",
  "interpretedFamily": "Rhinolophidae",
  "interpretedGenus": "Rhinolophus",
  "interpretedKingdom": "Animalia",
  "interpretedOrder": "Chiroptera",
  "interpretedPageId": "46",
  "interpretedPageNumber": "325",
  "interpretedPhylum": "Chordata",
  "interpretedRank": "species",
  "interpretedSpecies": "sinicus",
  "name": "Rhinolophus sinicus",
  "subspeciesAndDistribution": "R . s. sinicus K .Andersen, 1905 - N India ( Himachal Pradesh , Uttarakhand , Sikkim , West Bengal , Meghalaya , Arunachal Pradesh , and Nagaland ), Nepal , N Myanmar ,, S & SE China ( Xizang , Sichuan , Guizhou , Hubei , Jiangsu , Anhui , Zhejiang , Fujian , Guangdong , and Hainan I), and N & C Vietnam . On following pages: 94. Thomas's Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus thomasi ); 95. Lesser Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus hipposideros ); 96. rancis's Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus trancisi); 97. Lesser Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus sedulus ); 98. Trefoil Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus trifoliatus ); 99. Northern Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus perniger ); 100. Selangor Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus luctoides ); 101. Malaysian Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus mono ); 102. Great Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus luctus ); 1.03. Beddome's Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus beddomei ); 104. Formosan Woolly Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus formosaë ); 105. Thailand Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus thailandensis ); 106. Dobson's Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus yunanensis ); 107. Chiew Kwee's Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus chiewkweeae ); 108. Pearson's Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus pearsonii ); 109. Mitred Horseshoe Bat ( Rhinolophus mitratus ). R .s. septentrionalis Sanborn , 1939 — S China ( Yunnan ).",
  "distributionImageURL": "https://zenodo.org/record/3750096/files/figure.png",
  "bibliography": "Ao Lei et al. (2007) | Bates & Harrison (1997) | Bates, Csorba, Molur & Srinivasulu (2008a) | Bates, Thi Mar-Mar et al. (2004) | Csorba et al. (2003) | Francis (2008a) | Kruskop (2013a) | Mao Xiuguang, Dong Ji et al. (2014) | Mao Xiuguang, He Guimei et al. (2013) | Mao Xiuguang, Tsagkogeorga et al. (2019) | Molur et al. (2002) | Smith &XieYan (2008) | Stoffberg et al . (2010) | Wu Yi & Harada (2005) | Wu Yi , Harada & LiYanhong (2004) | Wu Yi, Motokawa et al. (2009) | Xie Lifen et al. (2017) | Zhang Lin et al. (2018) | Zhang Weidao (1985)",
  "foodAndFeeding": "The Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat forages for insects by aerialhawking and occasionally perch-hunting.",
  "breeding": "No information.",
  "activityPatterns": "Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bats roost in caves, old disused tunnels, temples, houses, wells, and hollows in trees. They leave their roosts just after dusk to forage through the night. In colder portions of their range, they hibernate through the winter. Calls are FM/CF/FM shaped with a peak GF recorded at c.79-87 kHz across China and Hainan , and at 80 kHz in Vietnam .",
  "movementsHomeRangeAndSocialOrganization": "The Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat roosts singly ( usually males) or in colonies varying in size from a few individuals to several hundred. During the breeding season, females form large maternity colonies that can consist of several hundred bats.",
  "statusAndConservation": "Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat is widespread and relatively common throughout its distribution, and does not seem to be facing any major threats currently. It may be locally threatened by roost disturbance and general habitat loss.",
  "descriptiveNotes": "Head-body 43-53' 5 mm , tail 21- 5—30 mm , ear 15- 8-20 mm , hindfoot 7- 5-10 mm , forearm 43-56 mm ; weight 8-9-10- 9 g . Dorsal pelage is wood brown, occasionally with reddish tint; ventral pelage is slightly lighter. Ears are small. Noseleaf has hastate lancet that constricts before variably long to short tip; connecting process is rounded, as in the Indian Rufous Horseshoe Bat (. rouxii ) ; sella is virtually parallelsided, and widely rounded off at tip; horseshoe is relatively wide (8-1-8- 2 mm ) but does not completely cover muzzle, and there are usually clearly visible and well developed lateral leaflets. Lower lip has three mental grooves. Skull is massive and robust (zygomatic width is always much larger than mastoid width); anterior median swellings are relatively small; posterior swellings are moderately developed; rostral profile is concave; sagittal crest is moderate to high; frontal depression is shallow; supraorbital crests are low but visible. C1 is well developed and long; P2 is moderate in size and within tooth row or slightly extruded from it; P3 is medium-sized to small and partly to fully extruded from tooth row; P2 and P4 are touching or almost touching. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 36 and FNa = 60 (mainland China and Hainan ).",
  "habitat": "The Chinese Rufous Horseshoe Bat is typically a forest species, occurring in montane forests with heavy rainfall. It has been reported from disturbed forests in Nepal and from thick moist tropical forest with some bamboo in Myanmar . Recorded at elevations of 500-2769 m , being commonest at higher altitudes."
}

For more examples, see hmw-sample.csv or hmw-sample-pretty.json.

Code Examples

R Example

# get the data
hmw <- read.csv('https://github.com/jhpoelen/hmw/raw/main/hmw.csv')

# list first 10 names
head(hmw$name)
#[1] "Geomys pinetis"        "Heterogeomys hispidus" "Orthogeomys grandis"
#[4] "Zygogeomys trichopus"  "Heterogeomys cavator"  "Heterogeomys lanius"

# list descriptive notes for "Rhinolophus sinicus"
hmw[hmw$name == "Rhinolophus sinicus",]$descriptiveNotes
# [1] "Head-body 43-53' 5 mm, tail 21- 5—30 mm, ear 15- 8-20 mm, hindfoot 7- 5-10 mm, forearm 43-56 mm; weight 8-9-10- 9 g. Dorsal pelage is wood brown, occasionally with reddish tint; ventral pelage is slightly lighter. Ears are small. Noseleaf has hastate lancet that constricts before variably long to short tip; connecting process is rounded, as in the Indian Rufous Horseshoe Bat (. rouxii); sella is virtually parallelsided, and widely rounded off at tip; horseshoe is relatively wide (8-1-8- 2 mm) but does not completely cover muzzle, and there are usually clearly visible and well developed lateral leaflets. Lower lip has three mental grooves. Skull is massive and robust (zygomatic width is always much larger than mastoid width); anterior median swellings are relatively small; posterior swellings are moderately developed; rostral profile is concave; sagittal crest is moderate to high; frontal depression is shallow; supraorbital crests are low but visible. C1 is well developed and long; P2 is moderate in size and within tooth row or slightly extruded from it; P3 is medium-sized to small and partly to fully extruded from tooth row; P2 and P4 are touching or almost touching. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 36 and FNa = 60 (mainland Chinaand Hainan)."

# list the available columns names
names(hmw)
#[1] "docId"
#[2] "docOrigin"
#[3] "docISBN"
#[4] "docName"
#[5] "docMasterId"
#[6] "docPageNumber"
#[7] "derivedFrom"
#[8] "name"
#[9] "interpretedGenus"
#[10] "interpretedSpecies"
#[11] "interpretedAuthorityName"
#[12] "interpretedAuthorityYear"
#[13] "commonNames"
#[14] "taxonomy"
#[15] "subspeciesAndDistribution"
#[16] "descriptiveNotes"
#[17] "habitat"
#[18] "foodAndFeeding"
#[19] "breeding"
#[20] "activityPatterns"
#[21] "movementsHomeRangeAndSocialOrganization"
#[22] "statusAndConservation"
#[23] "bibliography"
#[24] "distributionImageURL"
#[25] "verbatimText"
#

Related Data

Please see release attachment preston-data.zip for underlying data.

Funding

OAC 1839201 from the National Science Foundation, 1-R21-AI164268-01 from the National Institutes of Health

References

$ preston history
<urn:uuid:0659a54f-b713-4f86-a917-5be166a14110> <http://purl.org/pav/hasVersion> <hash://sha256/a965b45916bcffb49aa572675970f002e4e839cead8c1957dc5ba638c838b9b6> .

and other content ids include:

$ preston ls\
| grep -o -E "hash://sha256/[0-9a-f]{64}"\
| sort\
| uniq
hash://sha256/15afc61b5914e4b6899b43a5eda355497d5c5d0c4b401c884c8056f418c9665b

hmw's People

Contributors

jhpoelen avatar myrmoteras avatar

Stargazers

Anna Willoughby avatar Anatoly Chernov avatar Sandalots avatar Alexandre Flament avatar

Watchers

 avatar Kendra Phelps avatar  avatar

hmw's Issues

split hmw.csv into separate volumes for ease of processing

@ajacsherman and @n8upham suggested to split the hmw into separate files per volume.

Here's the unique docOrigins as provided by Plazi's transcriptions. Note that volume 9 has various spelling variations. @myrmoteras are variations in docOrigins descriptions expected? Should I use a different field to partition the corpus by?

$ cat hmw.json | jq --raw-output .docOrigin | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr
   1711 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 7 Rodents II, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
   1233 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
    845 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 6 Lagomorphs and Rodents I, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
    635 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 8 Insectivores, Sloths and Colugos, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
    493 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 3 Primates, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
    374 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 5 Monotremes and Marsupials, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
    362 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 2 Hoofed Mammals, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
    259 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 1 Carnivores, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
    140 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 4 Sea Mammals, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
    110 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Lynx Edicions
     54 Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Lyny Edicions
      1 Handbook of the Mammals of the World, Vol. 9, Lyny Edicions

without records count:

$ cat hmw.json | jq --raw-output .docOrigin | sort | uniq
Handbook of the Mammals of the World, Vol. 9, Lyny Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 1 Carnivores, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 2 Hoofed Mammals, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 3 Primates, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 4 Sea Mammals, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 5 Monotremes and Marsupials, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 6 Lagomorphs and Rodents I, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 7 Rodents II, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 8 Insectivores, Sloths and Colugos, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Lynx Edicions
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Lyny Edicions

missing HMW species list

@ajacsherman shared the following list of names that are expected, but were not yet from the extracted HMW resources:

Acerodon celebensis
Acerodon jubatus
Acerodon macklotii
Afronycteris helios
Afronycteris nana
Ametrida centurio
Anoura aequatoris
Anoura cadenai
Anoura caudifer
Anoura cultrata
Anoura fistulata
Anoura geoffroyi
Anoura javieri
Anoura latidens
Anoura luismanueli
Anoura peruana
Ardops nichollsi
Arielulus societatis
Ariteus flavescens
Artibeus aequatorialis
Artibeus amplus
Artibeus concolor
Artibeus fimbriatus
Artibeus fraterculus
Artibeus hirsutus
Artibeus inopinatus
Artibeus intermedius
Artibeus jamaicensis
Artibeus lituratus
Artibeus obscurus
Artibeus planirostris
Artibeus schwartzi
Baeodon alleni
Baeodon gracilis
Balionycteris seimundi
Boneia bidens
Brachyphylla cavernarum
Brachyphylla nana
Carollia benkeithi
Carollia brevicauda
Carollia castanea
Carollia manu
Carollia monohernandezi
Carollia perspicillata
Carollia sowelli
Carollia subrufa
Casinycteris argynnis
Casinycteris ophiodon
Centurio senex
Chilonatalus macer
Chilonatalus micropus
Chilonatalus tumidifrons
Chiroderma doriae
Chiroderma gorgasi
Chiroderma improvisum
Chiroderma salvini
Chiroderma scopaeum
Chiroderma trinitatum
Chiroderma villosum
Chironax melanocephalus
Choeroniscus godmani
Choeroniscus minor
Choeroniscus periosus
Choeronycteris mexicana
Chrotopterus auritus
Coleura gallarum
Cynomops kuizha
Cynopterus brachyotis
Cynopterus luzoniensis
Cynopterus minutus
Cynopterus sphinx
Cynopterus titthaecheilus
Dermanura anderseni
Dermanura azteca
Dermanura bogotensis
Dermanura cinerea
Dermanura glauca
Dermanura gnoma
Dermanura phaeotis
Dermanura rava
Dermanura rosenbergi
Dermanura tolteca
Dermanura watsoni
Desmalopex leucopterus
Desmalopex microleucopterus
Desmodus rotundus
Dobsonia inermis
Dobsonia magna
Dobsonia moluccensis
Dobsonia peronii
Dryadonycteris capixaba
Dyacopterus rickarti
Ectophylla alba
Eidolon dupreanum
Eidolon helvum
Enchisthenes hartii
Eonycteris spelaea
Epomophorus angolensis
Epomophorus crypturus
Epomophorus dobsonii
Epomophorus gambianus
Epomophorus grandis
Epomophorus labiatus
Epomophorus minor
Epomophorus pusillus
Eptesicus alienus
Eptesicus bottae
Eptesicus brasiliensis
Eptesicus cadenai
Eptesicus colombiae
Eptesicus diphanopterus
Eptesicus humboldti
Eptesicus kobayashii
Eptesicus laephotis
Eptesicus langeri
Eptesicus macrotus
Eptesicus magellanicus
Eptesicus mochica
Eptesicus montanus
Eptesicus nilssonii
Eptesicus orinocensis
Eptesicus pachyotis
Eptesicus velatus
Erophylla bombifrons
Erophylla sezekorni
Eudiscoderma thongareeae
Eudiscopus denticulus
Gardnerycteris crenulatum
Gardnerycteris keenani
Gardnerycteris koepckeae
Glossophaga antillarum
Glossophaga bakeri
Glossophaga commissarisi
Glossophaga leachii
Glossophaga longirostris
Glossophaga morenoi
Glossophaga mutica
Glossophaga soricina
Glossophaga valens
Glyphonycteris behnii
Glyphonycteris daviesi
Glyphonycteris sylvestris
Harpyionycteris celebensis
Hesperoptenus doriae
Hipposideros atrox
Hipposideros khasiana
Hipposideros swinhoei
Hsunycteris cadenai
Hsunycteris dashe
Hsunycteris pattoni
Hsunycteris thomasi
Hylonycteris underwoodi
Kerivoula pusilla
Laephotis capensis
Laephotis kirinyaga
Laephotis malagasyensis
Laephotis matroka
Laephotis robertsi
Laephotis stanleyi
Lampronycteris brachyotis
Lasiurus arequipae
Lasiurus blossevillii
Lasiurus ega
Lasiurus egregius
Lasiurus pfeifferi
Lasiurus varius
Lasiurus villosissimus
Leptonycteris curasoae
Leptonycteris nivalis
Leptonycteris yerbabuenae
Lichonycteris degener
Lichonycteris obscura
Lionycteris spurrelli
Lonchophylla bokermanni
Lonchophylla chocoana
Lonchophylla concava
Lonchophylla dekeyseri
Lonchophylla fornicata
Lonchophylla handleyi
Lonchophylla hesperia
Lonchophylla inexpectata
Lonchophylla mordax
Lonchophylla orcesi
Lonchophylla orienticollina
Lonchophylla peracchii
Lonchophylla robusta
Lonchorhina aurita
Lonchorhina fernandezi
Lonchorhina inusitata
Lonchorhina mankomara
Lonchorhina marinkellei
Lonchorhina orinocensis
Lophostoma brasiliense
Lophostoma carrikeri
Lophostoma evotis
Lophostoma kalkoae
Lophostoma occidentale
Lophostoma schulzi
Lophostoma silvicolum
Macroderma gigas
Macroglossus minimus
Macroglossus sobrinus
Macrophyllum macrophyllum
Megaerops albicollis
Megaerops niphanae
Megaloglossus azagnyi
Megaloglossus woermanni
Melonycteris melanops
Mesophylla macconnelli
Micronycteris hirsuta
Micronycteris megalotis
Micronycteris minuta
Micronycteris simmonsae
Micronycteris tresamici
Mimon bennettii
Mimon cozumelae
Miniopterus nimbae
Miniopterus wilsoni
Mirimiri acrodonta
Mirostrellus joffrei
Molossus bondae
Molossus currentium
Molossus fluminensis
Molossus melini
Molossus nigricans
Monophyllus plethodon
Monophyllus redmani
Mops aloysiisabaudiae
Mops ansorgei
Mops atsinanana
Mops bemmeleni
Mops bivittatus
Mops bregullae
Mops chapini
Mops gallagheri
Mops jobensis
Mops jobimena
Mops johorensis
Mops leucogaster
Mops major
Mops nigeriae
Mops plicatus
Mops pumilus
Mops pusillus
Mops russatus
Mops shortridgei
Mops solomonis
Mops tomensis
Murina jinchui
Murina puta
Murina silvatica
Musonycteris harrisoni
Myonycteris angolensis
Myotis alticraniatus
Myotis ancricola
Myotis armiensis
Myotis australis
Myotis bakeri
Myotis bartelsii
Myotis hoveli
Myotis larensis
Myotis moratellii
Myotis nimbaensis
Myotis nipalensis
Myotis pampa
Myotis sowerbyi
Nanonycteris veldkampii
Natalus jamaicensis
Natalus macrourus
Natalus major
Natalus mexicanus
Natalus primus
Natalus stramineus
Natalus tumidirostris
Neonycteris pusilla
Neopteryx frosti
Neoromicia anchietae
Neoromicia bemainty
Neoromicia guineensis
Nesonycteris fardoulisi
Nesonycteris woodfordi
Notopteris macdonaldii
Nycteris vinsoni
Nycticeinops bellieri
Nycticeinops crassulus
Nycticeinops eisentrauti
Nycticeinops grandidieri
Nycticeinops happoldorum
Nycticeinops macrocephalus
Nycticeius cubanus
Nyctiellus lepidus
Nyctimene aello
Nyctimene albiventer
Nyctimene cephalotes
Nyctimene keasti
Nyctimene major
Nyctimene robinsoni
Nyctimene sanctacrucis
Nyctimene vizcaccia
Nyctophilus
Nyctophilus holtorum
Paranyctimene raptor
Phylloderma stenops
Phyllonycteris aphylla
Phyllonycteris poeyi
Phyllops falcatus
Phyllostomus discolor
Phyllostomus elongatus
Phyllostomus hastatus
Phyllostomus latifolius
Pilonycteris celebensis
Pipistrellus aero
Pipistrellus creticus
Pipistrellus hanaki
Pipistrellus minahassae
Pipistrellus papuanus
Pipistrellus raceyi
Pipistrellus rusticus
Pipistrellus simandouensis
Platalina genovensium
Platyrrhinus albericoi
Platyrrhinus angustirostris
Platyrrhinus aquilus
Platyrrhinus aurarius
Platyrrhinus brachycephalus
Platyrrhinus dorsalis
Platyrrhinus fusciventris
Platyrrhinus guianensis
Platyrrhinus helleri
Platyrrhinus incarum
Platyrrhinus infuscus
Platyrrhinus ismaeli
Platyrrhinus lineatus
Platyrrhinus masu
Platyrrhinus matapalensis
Platyrrhinus nitelinea
Platyrrhinus recifinus
Platyrrhinus umbratus
Platyrrhinus vittatus
Pseudoromicia
Pseudoromicia
Pseudoromicia
Pseudoromicia
Pseudoromicia
Pseudoromicia
Pseudoromicia
Ptenochirus wetmorei
Pteralopex anceps
Pteralopex atrata
Pteralopex flanneryi
Pteralopex pulchra
Pteralopex taki
Pteronotus fuscus
Pteronotus parnellii
Pteronotus personatus
Pteronotus psilotis
Pteronotus quadridens
Pteropus admiralitatum
Pteropus aldabrensis
Pteropus aldabrensis
Pteropus allenorum
Pteropus anetianus
Pteropus brunneus
Pteropus caniceps
Pteropus capistratus
Pteropus chrysoproctus
Pteropus conspicillatus
Pteropus coxi
Pteropus dasymallus
Pteropus ennisae
Pteropus faunulus
Pteropus fundatus
Pteropus gilliardorum
Pteropus griseus
Pteropus hypomelanus
Pteropus intermedius
Pteropus keyensis
Pteropus macrotis
Pteropus mahaganus
Pteropus mariannus
Pteropus medius
Pteropus melanopogon
Pteropus melanotus
Pteropus molossinus
Pteropus neohibernicus
Pteropus nitendiensis
Pteropus ocularis
Pteropus ornatus
Pteropus pelagicus
Pteropus pelewensis
Pteropus personatus
Pteropus pilosus
Pteropus pohlei
Pteropus poliocephalus
Pteropus pumilus
Pteropus rayneri
Pteropus rennelli
Pteropus rodricensis
Pteropus samoensis
Pteropus seychellensis
Pteropus speciosus
Pteropus subniger
Pteropus temminckii
Pteropus tokudae
Pteropus tonganus
Pteropus tuberculatus
Pteropus ualanus
Pteropus vampyrus
Pteropus vetula
Pteropus voeltzkowi
Pteropus woodfordi
Pygoderma bilabiatum
Rhinolophus adami
Rhinolophus foetidus
Rhinolophus hirsutus
Rhinolophus imaizumii
Rhinolophus lanosus
Rhinolophus septentrionalis
Rhinolophus yonghoiseni
Rhinophylla alethina
Rhinophylla fischerae
Rhinophylla pumilio
Rhinopoma macinnesi
Rhogeessa
Rhyneptesicus nasutus
Rousettus amplexicaudatus
Scleronycteris ega
Scotoecus albigula
Scotoecus hindei
Scotonycteris bergmansi
Scotonycteris zenkeri
Scotophilus celebensis
Sphaeronycteris toxophyllum
Stenoderma rufum
Stenonycteris lanosus
Sturnira adrianae
Sturnira angeli
Sturnira aratathomasi
Sturnira bakeri
Sturnira bidens
Sturnira bogotensis
Sturnira burtonlimi
Sturnira erythromos
Sturnira giannae
Sturnira hondurensis
Sturnira koopmanhilli
Sturnira lilium
Sturnira ludovici
Sturnira luisi
Sturnira magna
Sturnira mistratensis
Sturnira mordax
Sturnira nana
Sturnira oporaphilum
Sturnira parvidens
Sturnira paulsoni
Sturnira perla
Sturnira sorianoi
Sturnira tildae
Styloctenium mindorensis
Styloctenium wallacei
Syconycteris australis
Thainycteris aureocollaris
Thoopterus suhaniahae
Tonatia bakeri
Tonatia bidens
Tonatia maresi
Trachops cirrhosus
Trachops ehrhardti
Trinycteris nicefori
Uroderma bakeri
Uroderma bilobatum
Uroderma convexum
Uroderma davisi
Uroderma magnirostrum
Vampyressa elisabethae
Vampyressa melissa
Vampyressa pusilla
Vampyressa sinchi
Vampyressa thyone
Vampyressa voragine
Vampyriscus bidens
Vampyriscus brocki
Vampyriscus nymphaea
Vampyrodes caraccioli
Vampyrodes major
Vampyrum spectrum
Vespertilio sinensis
Xeronycteris vieirai

24 entries with missing information

  docId docOrigin docISBN docName docMasterId docPageNumber derivedFrom name interpretedGenus interpretedSpecies interpretedAuthorityName interpretedAuthorityYear commonNames taxonomy subspeciesAndDistribution descriptiveNotes habitat foodAndFeeding breeding activityPatterns movementsHomeRangeAndSocialOrganization statusAndConservation bibliography distributionImageURL verbatimText
205 0383245F2223977C8F09F4DEF81EFB14 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Rhinonycteridae_194.pdf.imf hash://md5/ffba5c272223977c8e73f509ffb1ffd0 194 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/83/24/0383245F2223977C8F09F4DEF81EFB14.xml         NA                         Family RHINONYCTERIDAE (TRIDENT BATS) ‚Ä¢ Small insectivorous bats with rather small ears lacking tragus and typically large complex noseleaves that, in all but one species, have posterior margins with three tall pointed processes forming trident-like structures. ‚Ä¢ 6-12 cm. ‚Ä¢ Afrotropical, Australasian, and marginally Palearctic Regions. ‚Ä¢ From dry savannas to forest savannas and forests in tropics, marginally in subtropics. ‚Ä¢ 4 genera, 9 species, 9 taxa. ‚Ä¢ 1species Vulnerable; none extinct since 1600.
296 038D264C754FD70B84D4FE3C55D7FB15 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Nycteridae_374.pdf.imf hash://md5/ffb45e34754fd70b851affef527effbd 374 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/8D/26/038D264C754FD70B84D4FE3C55D7FB15.xml         NA                         Family NYCTERIDAE (SLIT-FACED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Small to medium-sized with relatively long and thick pelage, small eyes, distinctive cleft running longitudinally along muzzle that covers noseleaves, and long ears. ‚Ä¢ 7-17cm. ‚Ä¢ Afrotropical and Indo-Malayan regions. ‚Ä¢ Deserts, arid grasslands, savannas, and tropical forests from sea level to mid-elevations on mountains. ‚Ä¢ 1 genus, 15 species, 15 axa. ‚Ä¢ 1 species Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
377 039187AC5C3E2A53F32608B938D2FB28 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Furipteridae_412.pdf.imf hash://md5/ffa8ffd45c3e2a53f03609113f64ffc4 412 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/91/87/039187AC5C3E2A53F32608B938D2FB28.xml         NA                         Family FURIPTERIDAE (SMOKY BAT THUMBLESS BAT) ‚Ä¢ Small bats with thumb embedded in patagium, except tiny claw; pair of functional abdominal mammae; long, thick smoky to slate-gray dorsal fur, paler on venter;tail encased in uropatagium; muzzle blunt with oval or triangular nostrils; and large funnel-shaped ears. ‚Ä¢ 5-8 cm. ‚Ä¢ Neotropical Region. ‚Ä¢ Deserts into tropical deciduous and evergreen forests. ‚Ä¢ 2 genera, 2 species, 2 taxa. ‚Ä¢ 1 species Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
627 03A637439157FFEBE687C89F289BA554 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Mormoopidae_424.pdf.imf hash://md5/ff9f4f3b9157ffebe472c9232f51a072 424 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/A6/37/03A637439157FFEBE687C89F289BA554.xml         NA                         Family MORMOOPIDAE (GHOSTFACED, NAKED-BACKED AND MUSTACHED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Smallto medium-sized bats characterized by small eyes, large and funnel-shaped ears and complex lower lips with flap-like outgrowths. ‚Ä¢ 5-11 cm. ‚Ä¢ Nearctic and Neotropical Regions. ‚Ä¢ Arid and semiarid regions to coastal lowlands, tropical rainforest, and montane forests up to elevations of 2700 m . ‚Ä¢ 2 genera, 18 species, 24 taxa. ‚Ä¢] species Endangered; none Extinct since 1600.
742 03A687BCFFB1FFB111F5FE0AF85BF766 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Phyllostomidae_444.pdf.imf hash://md5/ff9fffc4ffb1ffb1133cffbaffe0f244 444 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/A6/87/03A687BCFFB1FFB111F5FE0AF85BF766.xml         NA                         Family PHYLLOSTOMIDAE (NEW WORLD LEAF-NOSED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Relatively small to medium-sized bats with a usually welldevelopedfleshy noseleat above nostrils; great variation nN size. ‚Ä¢ 3.5-15. 5 cm . ‚Ä¢ Nearctic and Neotropical Regions . ‚Ä¢ Tropical rainforests, tropical dry forests, subtropical cloudforests, transformed landscapes, and deserts. ‚Ä¢ 60 genera, 217 species, 295 taxa . ‚Ä¢ 1 species Critically Endangered, 6 species Endangered, 7 species Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
930 03AD87FAFF91F67F896D3090F9CEF648 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Pteropodidae_16.pdf.imf hash://md5/ff94ff82ffc4f62a891e341cffa5ff9b 143 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/AD/87/03AD87FAFF91F67F896D3090F9CEF648.xml         NA                         150. Island Flying Fox Pleropus hypomelanus French: Roussette hypom√©lane / German: Inselflughund / Spanish: Zorro volador pequeno Other common names: Small Flying Fox , Variable Flying Fox; Mearns's Flying Fox (mearnsi) Taxonomy. Pleropus hypomelanus Temminck, 1853 , ‚Äú1.‚Äôile de Ternate [= Ternate Island ],‚Äù Moluccas , Indonesia . Pteropus hypomelanus is in the griseus species group. Subspecies are in need of revision. Subspecies vulcanius by O. Thomas in 1915 is synonymized with luteus; subspecies satyrus, previously assigned to P. melanotus , 1s In needed of clarification. Sixteen subspecies recognized. Subspecies and Distribution P.h.hypomelanusTemminck,1853‚ÄîNMoluccas(HalmaheraandTernate)P.h.annectensK.Andersen,1908‚ÄîSNatunaIs(Serasan)P.h.cagayanusMearns,1905‚ÄîP.h. . . . P.h.canusK.Andersen,1908‚ÄîNNatunaIsP.h.condorensisPeters,1869‚ÄîConDaoIs(Vietnam),andothersmallislandsintheGulfofThailand(CambodiaandThailand). . P.h.enganusG.S.Miller,1906‚ÄîMentawaiIsP.h.fretensisKloss,1916‚ÄîJarakIintheStraitsofMalaccaP.h.gemanorumG.S.Miller,1903‚ÄîMerguiArchipelagoinSMyanmar(SouthTwinI),WcoastofSThailandIs(KoSurin,Similan,Satun),andWcoastofPeninsularMalaysiaIs(Langkawi). . . P.h.lepidusG.S.Miller,1900‚ÄîTiomanandAurIs,offECoastofPeninsularMalaysia,andTambelanArchipelago,oftSWBorneo. P.h.luteusK.Andersen,1908‚ÄîafewrecordsonmainlandNEPapuaNewGuineabutspeciallyonislandsoffN&Ecoasts,alsoinAdmiraltyIs,BismarckArchipelago,Solomons(RussellIs),TrobriandandWoodlarkIs,D‚ÄôEntrecasteuxIs,andLouisiadeArchipelago. P.h.macassaricusHeude,1896‚ÄîSulawesi,Sangihe,andTalaudIs. P.h.marisG.M.Allen,1936‚ÄîMaldivesIs. P.h.robinson:K.Andersen,1909‚ÄîRumbiaIintheStraitsofMalacca. P.h.satyrusK.Andersen,1908‚ÄîAndamanIs(Narcondam)P.h.sitmalurusThomas,1923‚ÄîTapahIandothersatelliteislandsnearSimeulueI,offNWSumatra. . P. h. tomesii Peters, 1869 ‚Äî Labuan I and other offshore islands off NW Borneo. Descriptive notes. Head-body 194-225 mm (tailless), ear 24-27 mm , hindfoot 52- 68 mm , forearm 125-145 mm ; weight 300-420 g . Wingspans are 1000-1200 mm , depending on subspecies. Greatest lengths of skulls are 59-69 mm and tibias 56-62 mm . The Island Flying Fox is highly variable, with robust skull and laterally compressed rostrum. Forearm length and body mass vary among subspecies and geographical regions, but subspecific variations is primarily in color. Ears are somewhat broad and rounded. Fur is short and adpressed on back and humerus, with some longer hairs in middle of back. Tibia is naked. Base offur is dark brown. Wing membranes are brown and attach near spine. Subspecies in eastern end ofits distribution ( hypomelanus , luteus, and macassaricus) have dark brown backs and pale to ocherous bellies; luteus is considerably paler brown on front and back of body, with reddish brown on fore neck and sides of neck and brown head. Western subspecies have varieties of darker fur, some with sprinklings of grayish flecks and other variation in color, such as chestnut, cinnamon, or golden ocherous. Subspecies in the South China Sea area are slightly larger in average size of teeth, and subspecies enganus is significantly smaller in size overall and wholly dark in color. Subspecies geminorum is wholly dark, with two color morphs: one almost without bright colors and the other with grizzled extension of gray and black sprinkling on head, flanks, and sides of chest and belly; this morph might also occur in western and central subspecies. Skull has well-developed postorbital processes, and temporal ridges joined to form sagittal crest. Orbit is rather large. Coronoid is moderate and somewhat sloping. Canines are distinctly recurved, with narrow but distinct cingulum around entire base. Incisors are arranged in semicircle, with gap away from canines. P' is reduced and minute, lost in many adults. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 38 and FN = 72. Habitat. Secondary and mangrove forests (few records in primary forests) from sea level up to elevations of ¬¢. 900 m . The Island Flying Fox occurs on species-poor, small islands and primarily roosts on small offshore islands. Food and Feeding. Diet of the Island Flying Fox includes fruits, flowers, and nectar from natural and agroforestry habitats. Various Ficus species ( Moraceae ) make up significant parts ofits diet throughout its distribution. It also feeds on cultivated species. It uses flowers of Ceiba and Durio (both Malvaceae ); Cocos ( Arecaceae ); Pouteria ( Sapotaceae ); and Eucalyptus ( Myrtaceae ). It mostly feeds alone for an average of 21 seconds/flower, but individuals occasionally feed together on the same tree. When finished with a flower, an individual moved to the next flower by flying or crawling on the same branch; minimal flower damage was recorded. Individuals forage continuously throughout the night, frequently vocalizing and wing flapping, which generally decrease after 23:00 h. Breeding. Male and female Island Flying Foxes are reproductively mature at one year of age. Females typically give birth to one young once a year. Birthing peaks vary across the distribution. In the Philippines , females are pregnant around April and give birth in April-May. Young remain dependent on mothers for at least three months. On islands offshore of Papua New Guinea , females were lactating in August, and young were observed in May‚ÄîAugust. In captivity at Lubee Bat Conservancy (Gainesville, Florida), individuals originally wild caught in Indonesia in 1990 give birth year-round; males began aggressive reproductive behavior around October. Lactation lasts ¬¢.100 days. Activity patterns. Island Flying Foxes are nocturnal and leave roosts around dusk to forage. In Malaysia , individuals arrive at durian trees prior (at ¬¢.19:20 h) to other bat species. Individuals return to day roosts before dawn. The Island Flying Fox has lowerthan-expected basal metabolic rate. Movements, Home range and Social organization. The Island Flying Fox can fly 30- 50 km /night to forage and will skim within troughs of waves to reduce wind resistance when flying long distances. In Papua New Guinea , it commutes from its day roost on small offshore islands to other small islands to forage but rarely to the mainland unless strong winds make flying seaward difficult. It is gregarious and roosts colonially (up to 5000 individuals) in tall trees with low levels of disturbance but forms smaller colonies throughout much ofits distribution. Colonies are of mixed sexes, including females with dependent young. At day roosts, they rest and wing-flap, and occasionally engage in territorial interactions. In the Philippines , the Island Flying Fox roosts with other flying fox species; in Indonesia and Malaysia , most are single-species colonies. In Milne Bay islands, it sometimes roosts with the Spectacled Flying Fox ( P. conspicillatus ). Status and Conservation. CITES Appendix II. Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. Rate of decline throughout the distribution of the Island Flying Fox due to overhunting and ongoing habitat degradation from human activity and climate change is so far less than 30%. Continued rise in global sea level will result in loss of essential roosting habitat and might result in reclassification as Vulnerable. It is much more rare than in the past due to overhunting and habitat loss. Individuals are normally sold locally, making detection ofillegal killing difficult. Hunters use various methods from guns to nets and fishhooks hanging from lines. There are some resident populations in human-dominant landscapes (orchards and coastal resorts) that has led to conflict and persecution, sometimes resulting in hunting of bats or attempts to expel a colony from the site. Hunting of flying foxes in the Philippines is illegal, except by a few indigenous groups, but hunting is unregulated and therefore continues even today; fruit bat buyers prefer larger species but often buy the relatively small Island Flying Fox. Bibliography. Aimeida et al. (2014), Andersen (1912b), Aziz et al. (2017), Bonaccorso (1998), Corbet & Hill (1992), Flannery (1995a), Francis, Rosell-Ambal, Bonaccorso et al. (2008), Heaney et al. (2016), Ingle & Heaney (1992), Jones & Kunz (2000), Koopman (1979), Metrione et al. (2008), Rickart, Heaney & Rosenfeld (1989), Simmons (2005), Thomas (1915b).
984 03AD87FAFFC4F62A883F35AAF85BFB5F Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Pteropodidae_16.pdf.imf hash://md5/ff94ff82ffc4f62a891e341cffa5ff9b 16 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/AD/87/03AD87FAFFC4F62A883F35AAF85BFB5F.xml         NA                         Family PTEROPODIDAE (OLD WORLD FRUIT BATS) ‚Ä¢ Small to verylarge fruit and nectar feeding bats ofthe Old Worldtropics. ‚Ä¢ 6-40 cm. ‚Ä¢ Palearctic, Afrotropical, Indo-Malayan, and Australasian Regions. ‚Ä¢ From montane and lowland tropical rainforests to open woodlands and desert. ‚Ä¢ 46 genera, 191 species, at least 330 extant taxa. ‚Ä¢ ‚Ä¢ 8 species Critically Endangered, 16 species Endangered, 37 species Vulnerable; 6 species Extinct since 1600.
1121 03B0BC062413FFD5FC8BEB8EF84CFB3A Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Myzopodidae_388.pdf.imf hash://md5/ff89c47e2413ffd5ff87ea47ff90ffc9 388 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/B0/BC/03B0BC062413FFD5FC8BEB8EF84CFB3A.xml         NA                         Family MYZOPODIDAE ( MADAGASCAR SUCKER-FOOTED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Relatively small insectivorous bats, with distinctive sucker-like structure on wrists and ankles, as well as elon-gated ears with mushroom-like structure at their bases. ‚Ä¢ 9-11 cm. ‚Ä¢ Afrotropical Region ( Madagascar ). ‚Ä¢ Humid and dry deciduous forests, forest edges, and open areas with palms, and often marshy areas. ‚Ä¢ 1 genus, 2 species, 2 taxa. ‚Ä¢ No species threatened; none Extinct since 1600.
1203 03BD87A2C676A204FC35FDF5F6AE45AE Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Hipposideridae_210.pdf.imf hash://md5/ff84ffdac676a204fff8ff9affef4346 227 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/BD/87/03BD87A2C676A204FC35FDF5F6AE45AE.xml         NA                         Family HIPPOSIDERIDAE (OLD WORLD LEAF-NOSED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Small to large-sized insectivorous bats with soft fine pelage; small eyes; and distinctive, large, but simple noseleaves on top of muzzles. ‚Ä¢ 7-16 cm. ‚Ä¢ Palearctic, Afrotropical, Indo-Malayan, and Australasian Regions . ‚Ä¢ Deserts, arid grasslands, savannas, tropical forests, from sea level to mid-elevations on mountains. ‚Ä¢ 7 genera, 88 species, 129 taxa. ‚Ä¢ 2 species Critically Endangered, 1 Endangered, 13 Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
1504 03D587F2FFCF4C04FEC43712F67EF9CD Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Emballorunidae.pdf.imd hash://md5/ffecff8affcf4c04ffa53577fff8ffe9 349 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/D5/87/03D587F2FFCF4C04FEC43712F67EF9CD.xml         NA                         Family EMBALLONURIDAE (SHEATH-TAILED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Small- to medium-sized insectivorous bats with tail protruding above uropatagium radio-metacarpal sacs and gular sac often prominent in males. ‚Ä¢ 3-5-17 cm. ‚Ä¢ Afrotropical , Indo-Malayan, Australasian , Neotropical, and Holarctic (marginally) Regions. ‚Ä¢ Closed and open forests to savannas and semi-deserts. ‚Ä¢ 14 genera, 54 species , 94 taxa. ‚Ä¢ 1 species Critically Endangered, 2 Endangered, 3 Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
1551 03DABE4AFFE0FFA056EA45CEF873CD9F Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Noctilionidae_404.pdf.imf hash://md5/ffe3c632ffe0ffa057444405ffa9c95b 404 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/DA/BE/03DABE4AFFE0FFA056EA45CEF873CD9F.xml         NA                         Family NOCTILIONIDAE (BULLDOG BATS) ‚Ä¢ Medium to large bats with very short fur; large, flappy cheek pouches and pointy, elongated ears; dull grayto bright orange pelage, with adult males tending to be brighter than females; very broad uropatagium; and medium to very large hindclaws. ‚Ä¢ 813 cm . ‚Ä¢ Neotropical and Nearctic (marginally) Regions. ‚Ä¢ Forests and savannas as long as there are some trees for roosting and water bodies for foraging. ‚Ä¢] genus, 2 species, 7 taxa. ‚Ä¢ No species threatened; none Extinct since 1600.
3094 194287C9FFBABA16B486F2CFB08FF240 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Molossidae_598.pdf.imf hash://md5/e57bffb1ffbcba10b412f760b226ffce 625 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/19/42/87/194287C9FFBABA16B486F2CFB08FF240.xml         NA                         14. Bonda Mastiff Bat Molossus currentium Fund : Mousse de Banda Gƒ±mƒ±ƒ±ƒ±ƒ± Bonda-SamtÔ¨Çedermaus Spanish Moloso de Bonds Other common namas Thomass Free-ta ed Bat. Thomass Mast If Bat Thxonomy . Molossus obscuras cunmt√≠um Thomas, 1901 , ‚ÄúGoya, Conientcs∆í' Argentina . Molassus bondae was recently synonymized under M. cƒ±mmtium due to morphological similarities. Monotypic. Distribution . Disjunct in E Honduras , Nicaragua , Costa Rica , Panama , Colombia , NW Venezuela , and Ecuador that is separate from CW Brazil , N Paraguay , E Argentina , and Uruguay ; is potentially present in E Bolivia . Descriptive notes . Head‚Äîbody 66-80 mm , tail 34-44 mm , ear 13-16 mm , hindfoot 9-13 mm , foreann 38-43 mm ; weight 10-21 g . The Bonda Mastiff Bat medium-sized and smaller than the Sinaloan Mastiff Bat (M. sinaloa) and Alvarez's Mastiff Bat (M. alvafw) but larger than Pallas‚Äôs Mastiff Bat ( M. molossus ) and the Aztec MastiԨŠBat (M. aztecas). The Bonda Mastiff Bat has dark to medium brown dorsal hair, with narrow pale band at base that covers one-quarter to one-half the hair length. Reddish orange dorsal pelage also occurs in some populations. Dorsal fur is 2- 2 - 5 mm long. Venter is slightly paler than dorsurn. Membranes, face, muzzle, and ears are of similar color as fur. Ears are rounded and arise from same point on forehead. Tragus is small, and antitragus is constricted at its base. Upper lip and snout are smooth and lack any medial ridge. Skull has globose braincase, quadrangular occipital region, and infraorbital foramen opening laterally in frontal view. Basioccipital pits are moderately deep. I* spatulated or slightly elongated, with parallel or convergent tips. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 48 and FN = 66. Habitat . Savannas, palm forests, seasonally wet and Ô¨Çooded forests, subtropical moist lowlands, tropical rainforests, and pastures from lowlands to elevations of 1060 m in Central America and below 600 m in South America. Food and Feeding . The Bonda Mastiff Bat is an aerial insec√ºvore that mostly eat: moths but aim beetle: and other insets. Breeding . The Bonda Mastiff Bat usually gives birth to one young, and polyestry has been reported in Costa Rica , with pregnant females caught injanuary-Augtrst. In Nicaragua , pregnant females were caught in july. Activity patterns. Bonda Mastiff Bats roost in caves, hollow tree trunks, cracks in rocks and buildings, and thatch roofs. Movements, Home range and Soda! organization . Colonies of Bonda Mastiff Bats were found roosting with Argentine Serotines (Eptesiaƒ±sfƒ±ƒ±ƒ±inalis), long-tongued bats (Ghmophagu spp.), Sinaloan Mastiff Bats, Common Black Myotis ( Myotis nigricans ), Lesser Bulldog Bats (Nocliltb albiventnk), and Blaclt-winged Little Yellow Bats (Rhogmsa tumida). Status and Conservation . ClassiÔ¨Åed as Least Concern on The IUCNR√∏d List. The Bonda Mastiff Bat is found in protected areas in Paraguay and Argentina . ..‚Äû,.... ‚Äû,..‚Äû ..., w.w,......, ...a ..-....,,...... Bibliography Burnett eta! (2001) Dolan & Caner (1979). Eger (2008) Eƒ±senberg (1989), Gardner eta/ (1970). Koopman (19823. 1993). Laval (1977), Lava B¬´ Fitch (1977), L√≥pez-Gonz√°lez (( 9981:), Lopez-Gonzalez G¬´ Presley (2001), Loureƒ±ro. Gregonn √† Penn: (Z018) Mora (2016), Simmons (2005). Tamsrtt √•ƒ±valdƒ±vƒ±eso (1966). Ttmm √† Laval (1998). Valdlvleso (1964). Wƒ±llƒ±g at ll (2000)
3099 194287C9FFBCBA10B5A3F6AEB7C1FB06 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Molossidae_598.pdf.imf hash://md5/e57bffb1ffbcba10b412f760b226ffce 598 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/19/42/87/194287C9FFBCBA10B5A3F6AEB7C1FB06.xml         NA                         Family MOLOSSIDAE (FREE-TAILED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Insectivorous bats, no noseleaf; long narrow wings for fast flight; fairly large, typically conjoined ears; and tail protrudes beyond uropatagium. ‚Ä¢ 6-26 cm. ‚Ä¢ Nearctic, Neotropical, Palearctic, Afrotropical, Indo-Malayan, and Australasian Regions. ‚Ä¢ From deserts through savanna grasslands and forests. es 29 genera, 126 species, 150 taxa. ‚Ä¢ ‚Ä¢ 5 species Endangered, 6 species Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
3937 290787FFFFA41873FE1E94CDED1131CD Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Natalidae_584.pdf.imf hash://md5/d53eff87ffa41873ffba9505eb7b3516 589 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/29/07/87/290787FFFFA41873FE1E94CDED1131CD.xml         NA                         Family NATALIDAE (FUNNEL-EARED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Very smallto medium-sized bats, with smooth, funnelshaped ears; very small eyes covered by mustache-like facial pelage; long legs and tail enclosed in membrane; broad wings; long, silky, and usually pale hair. ‚Ä¢ 8-12 cm . ‚Ä¢ Nearctic and Neotropical Regions. ‚Ä¢ Tropical zone of the New World from desert through wet forest to mountain areas. ‚Ä¢ 3 genera, 12 species, 12 taxa. ‚Ä¢ | species Critically Endangered, 2 species Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
4907 4C3D87E8FFBE6A01FA8B933A1835B7FC Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Vespertilionidae_716.pdf.imf hash://md5/b004ff90fffb6a44fffc96591e00bb32 827 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/4C/3D/87/4C3D87E8FFBE6A01FA8B933A1835B7FC.xml         NA                         142. Social Sprite Arelulus societatis French: Farfadet des soci√©t√©s / German: Soziale Elfenfledermaus / Spanish: Arielulus social Other common names: Benom-gilded Pipistrelle , Social Pipistrelle Taxonomy. Pipistrellus societatis Hill, 1972 , Malaysia , ‚ÄúBase Camp, Gunong Benom, Pahang , Malaya [= Malaysia ], 3¬∞51'N , 102¬∞11'E , 800 ft. [= 244 m ].‚Äù Previously considered merely a lowland form of A. circumdatus , but this opinion was rejected on the basis of morphological characteristics. Monotypic. Distribution Known only from Peninsular Malaysia , including Selangor (Ulu Gombak) and Pahang (Sungai Tekam Forest Reserve, Gunung Benom, and Krau Wildlife Reserve) provinces. Also listed from Fraser‚Äôs Hill Forest Reserve, Pahang ; but this record needs verification. Descriptive notes. Head-body 41-44 mm, tail 33-37 mm, ear 8-5-9 mm, forearm 36-6‚Äî40-6 mm; weight 4-3-8-5 g. The Social Sprite closely resembles the Bronze Sprite ( A. circumdatus ), but with smaller forearms, post-palatal extension, tooth row, and rostrum. Dorsal pelage is blackish brown with orange or bronze tipping (hairs basally brown, blackish brown for most of length, and tipped orange or bronze); crown pelage is orange-tipped but with a small area of straw-color; underparts are dark brown, tipped grayish white. Ears are large and bluntly rounded, with posteriorly directed basal lobe; tragus is large, and ears have yellowish-white rims, as in congeners. Wings are uniformly black. Baculum is Y-shaped with paired basal lobes and short shaft. Skull is short and wide, with rounded, rather globular braincase, inflated and elevated in frontal region; interorbital region wide; supraorbital region crests only faintly defined, terminating in small tubercles; rostrum is shorter, and narrower than in the Bronze Sprite, with more inflated braincase. Dentition is similar to that of the Bronze Sprite, less massive, with M¬Æ reduced, and posterior cusp virtually absent. Condylo-basal lengths are 13-9-14-8 mm; maxillary tooth row lengths are 5-2-5-6 mm. Chromosomal complement has 2n= 50 and FN= 48. Habitat. Recorded in primary lowland and hill forests, and secondary forests. The type specimen was found near a stream at 266 m . Food and Feeding. No information. Breeding. No information. Activity patterns. Nocturnal. It was mist-netted above small ford on a tributary of the Gombak River . In Selangor , found roosting in a tree-trunk hole beside a forest stream. Movements, Home range and Social organization. No information. Status and Conservation. Classified as Vulnerable on The IUCN Red List because its extent of occurrence is less than 20,000 km ?, its range is fragmented across forest patches, and there is continuing decline in the extent and quality of its habitat due to rapid deforestation. It occurs in Krau Wildlife Reserve. Bibliography. Bates, Francis & Csorba (2008), Boitani et al. (2006), Corbet & Hill (1992), Francis (2008a), Heller & Volleth (1984, 1989), Hill (1972, 1983), Hill & Francis (1984), Hill & Harrison (1987), Kingston , Francis et al. (2003), Kingston , Lim & Zubaid (2006), Lim et al. (2017), Medway (1983), Mohd-Hanif et a/.(2015), Simmons (2005).
5027 4C3D87E8FFFB6A44FE46978619FEBFEF Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Vespertilionidae_716.pdf.imf hash://md5/b004ff90fffb6a44fffc96591e00bb32 716 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/4C/3D/87/4C3D87E8FFFB6A44FE46978619FEBFEF.xml         NA                         Family VESPERTILIONIDAE (VESPER BATS) ‚Ä¢ Small to medium-sized bats, with stout bodies, short to moderately long rostra, no elaborate nose appendages (except in a few genera), small to big ears, complete uropatagiumstretching to ends or just before ends of long tails, and generally long narrow wings. ‚Ä¢ 5-22 cm. ‚Ä¢ Worldwide, except Antarctica . ‚Ä¢ From arid deserts to temperate and tropical forests. ‚Ä¢ 54 genera, 496 species, at least 708 extant taxa. ‚Ä¢ 6 species Critically Endangered, 15 species Endangered, 27 species Vulnerable; 1 species Extinct since 1600.
5225 61143626C159FFE7FC88F09EF9E1FAF2 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Mystacinidae_394.pdf.imf hash://md5/9d2d4e5ec159ffe7ff80f125ff8dffff 394 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/61/14/36/61143626C159FFE7FC88F09EF9E1FAF2.xml         NA                         Family MYSTACINIDAE (NEW ZEALAND SHORT-TAILED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Medium-sized and tree-roosting, with short, dense, velvety brown fur on body and bare, gray-brown skin on ears, wings, nose, hindlegs, and tail. ‚Ä¢ 6-9 cm. ‚Ä¢ Australasian Region (New Zealand). ‚Ä¢ Mostly interiors of indigenous forests from sea level to high elevations but will cross open grassland and forages in scrub and non-native forest plantations. ‚Ä¢ 1 genus, 2 species, 4 taxa. ‚Ä¢ 1 species Critically Endangered, 1 species Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
5250 67120269A43AE04DFE8FFE09F853FB77 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Thyropteridae_418.pdf.imf hash://md5/9b2b7a11a43ae04dffe6ffc7ff89ffd6 418 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/67/12/02/67120269A43AE04DFE8FFE09F853FB77.xml         NA                         Family THYROPTERIDAE (DISK-WINGED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Small insectivorous bats with elongated slender muzzle and funnel-shaped ears and characterized by round or oval adhesive pads or disks on soles of hindfeet and below thumbs. ‚Ä¢ 6-9 cm. ‚Ä¢ Neotropical Region. ‚Ä¢ Lowland tropical forests. ‚Ä¢ 1 genus, 5 species, 5 taxa. ‚Ä¢ No species threatened; none Extinct since 1600.
5270 720CC525FFF94548ECA6FE686484FB54 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Cistugidae_710.pdf.imf hash://md5/8e35bd5dfff94548ed13ff8f634affed 710 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/72/0C/C5/720CC525FFF94548ECA6FE686484FB54.xml         NA                         Family CISTUGIDAE (WING-GLAND BATS) ‚Ä¢ Small, pipistrelle-like bats, with no special nose appendage, rather small ears, elongated tragus, and one or several small, translucent glands on wing membranes. ‚Ä¢ 7-10 cm. ‚Ä¢ Afrotropical Region. ‚Ä¢ Rocky outcrops in arid habitats, grasslands, and shrublands, often close to water. ‚Ä¢ 1 genus, 2 species, 2 taxa. ‚Ä¢ No species threatened; none Extinct since 1600.
5398 860EC8445717FFECFF48FE7FBF97FB28 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Rhinopomatidae_164.pdf.imf hash://md5/7a37b03c5717ffecffb6ffb0b83cffe1 164 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/86/0E/C8/860EC8445717FFECFF48FE7FBF97FB28.xml         NA                         Family RHINOPOMATIDAE (MOUSE-TAILED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Smallto medium-sized insectivorous bats, with reduced tail membrane but free long tail; relatively large auricles, with tragus; and minute noseleaf above fleshy anterior pad of muzzle with dorsally oriented, valvular nostrils. ‚Ä¢ 10-16 cm. ‚Ä¢ Palearctic, Afrotropical, and Indo-Malayan regions. ‚Ä¢ Arid and semiarid habitats, roosting in caves, rocky niches, and man-made structures. ‚Ä¢ 1 genus, 6 species, 8 taxa. ‚Ä¢ 1 species Endangered; none Extinct since 1600.
5428 885887A2FFCF8A29FE0BFDEEF5BBDF21 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Rhinolophidae.pdf.imf hash://md5/7461ffdaffcf8a29ffccffa1ff85d963 260 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/88/58/87/885887A2FFCF8A29FE0BFDEEF5BBDF21.xml         NA                         Family RHINOLOPHIDAE (HORSESHOE BATS) ‚Ä¢ Relatively small to medium-sized insectivorous bats with ornate facial growths including horseshoe-shaped plate between mouth and nares and ears without tragus. ‚Ä¢ 5-16- 5 cm . ‚Ä¢ Palearctic, Afrotropical , Indo-Malayan, and Australa¬≠ sian Regions . ‚Ä¢ Deserts, forests, and mountainous areas, mainly tropi¬≠ cal but extending into temperate regions to c. 52¬∞ N . ‚Ä¢ 1 genus, 109 species, 199 taxa. ‚Ä¢ 1 species Critically Endangered, 6 species Endangered, 6 species Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
5697 C13F1641FF8DFFE2FE98FE42F9DF6EC6 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Megadermatidae_182.pdf.imf hash://md5/3d066e39ff8dffe2ffd7ff8aff916a04 182 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/C1/3F/16/C13F1641FF8DFFE2FE98FE42F9DF6EC6.xml         NA                         Family MEGADERMATIDAE (FALSE-VAMPIRES) ‚Ä¢ Medium to large bats, with long earsjoined above the forehead, large forked tragus, well-developed erect noseleaf, broad wings, large uropatagium, and no external tail. ‚Ä¢ 5-13 cm . ‚Ä¢ Afrotropical, Indo-Malayan, Australasian, and marginally Palearctic Regions. ‚Ä¢ Tropical and subtropical rainforests, dry forests, and savannas. ‚Ä¢ 6 genera, 6 species, 25 taxa. ‚Ä¢ 1 species Critically Endangered, 1 species Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
5922 DA564F57FF8AAC35E25CFE50F84E1CA1 Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Craesononycteridae_178.pdf.imf hash://md5/266f372fff8aac35e341ffe0ffdf183d 178 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/DA/56/4F/DA564F57FF8AAC35E25CFE50F84E1CA1.xml         NA                         Family CRASEONYCTERIDAE (HOG-NOSED BAT) ‚Ä¢ Very small bats, often considered the smallest bat, even mammal, in the world, with hog-like nose; long body hair; very large, pointed-tipped ears; and short tail membrane without bonytail and calcar. ‚Ä¢ 3.3-5 cm. ‚Ä¢ Indo-Malayan Region. ‚Ä¢ Limestone caves in mixed or dry deciduous forests. ‚Ä¢ 1 genus, 1 species, 1 taxon. ‚Ä¢ 1 species Vulnerable; none Extinct since 1600.
6043 E84887F9FFD6D6580B7BFE2016E532DE Handbook of the Mammals of the World ‚Äì Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions 978-84-16728-19-0 hbmw_9_Miniopteridae_674.pdf.imf hash://md5/1471ff81ffd6d6580a4affec112f3619 674 zip:hash://sha256/50e34e1acabeb41f9ab0c5dabfa10baf3190f89e0e29b6eb32d7e1c46fda9b0d!/treatments-xml-main/data/E8/48/87/E84887F9FFD6D6580B7BFE2016E532DE.xml         NA                         Family MINIOPTERIDAE (LONG-FINGERED BATS) ‚Ä¢ Small to medium-sized bats, with simple muzzle and no nasal process or noseleaf, tail completely within uropatagium, and second phalanx of the third finger nearly three times as long as the first, with a characteristically bent appearance. ‚Ä¢ 9-13 cm. ‚Ä¢ Palearctic, Afrotropical, Indo-Malayan, and Australasian Regions . ‚Ä¢ (Cave roosting and all biomes, except deserts. ‚Ä¢ 1 genus, 38 species, 47 taxa. ‚Ä¢ 2 species Endangered; none Extinct since 1600.

create pre-populated feedback link in data

to help facilitate an easy way to let the Plazi team now about suspicious names or other data associated with HMW, suggest to include feedback link in the data.

The feedback link should prepopulate a github issue with the following elements:

  1. doc uuid
  2. name
  3. placeholder text to describe desired behavior

Spelling errors during Plazi extraction

@jhpoelen @flsimoes
The following were spelling errors from the Plazi extraction process followed by their correct spelling and docID. Thanks for your help.

Plazi Correct   docID
Anthops omatus Anthops ornatus 4C3D87E8FFB46A0BFF7997F21FD8B734
Carollia brevicaudum Carollia brevicauda 03A687BCFF85FF841694F68BFAD5FB73
Chilonatalus tumaidifrons Chilonatalus tumidifrons 290787FFFFA71870FF0B9FF2E2B33232
Emballonura seni Emballonura serii 03D587F2FFC34C08FF0337D6FEFCF45F
Lophostoma silvicola Lophostoma silvicolum 03A687BCFFA4FFA413BDFC41FE2DFFD6
Mirimiri acrodonta duplicate in extraction    
Mops trevor Mops trevori 194287C9FF99BA36B1A5FEC2B010FD24
Pipustrellus aero Pipistrellus aero 4C3D87E8FFE96A57FA579E4F1C78B92A
Pipustrellus hanaki Pipistrellus hanaki 4C3D87E8FFF56A4BFA5B9FC01B2EBE6B
Pipustrellus minahassae Pipistrellus minahassae 4C3D87E8FFEC6A5CFA9B9F081B4DB830
Pipustrellus papuanus Pipistrellus papuanus 4C3D87E8FFE36A5CFF449CE81442BD54
Pipustrellus paterculus Pipistrellus paterculus 4C3D87E8FFEC6A53FF9092061C26B04E
Pipustrellus rusticus Pipistrellus rusticus 4C3D87E8FFEA6A56FA9392D01DB8B84F
Pipustrellus wattsi Pipistrellus wattsi 4C3D87E8FFE26A5DFF9294481FB2BCF9
Pipustrellus westralis Pipistrellus westralis 4C3D87E8FFE26A5DFF919E4D18B8BFBC
Plecotus christii Plecotus christiei 4C3D87E8FF976A28FF4C935C18A1BAE2
Pleralopex flanneryi Pteralopex flanneryi 03AD87FAFF83F66D896A3CFDF8FAF8AC
Rhinolophus cognotus Rhinolophus cognatus 885887A2FFEC8A0AFF06F534F239DC09
Rhinolophus deckend Rhinolophus deckenii 885887A2FFC18A26F89AF3F4F964D1A2
Tadarida latouchet Tadarida latouchei 194287C9FF8CBA20B482F5FEB6BEF840
Pleralopex atrata Pteralopex atrata 03AD87FAFF81F66C8C753E69FB55F62F
Rhinolophus odami Rhinolophus adami 885887A2FFCD8A2BFF63FD82FCF4D255
Manaopterus brachytragos Miniopterus brachytragos E84887F9FFC6D6480FC9FE281B1D31BC
Muniopterus mossambicus Miniopterus mossambicus E84887F9FFD8D6570F3EF4BD157B32AE
Rhinolophus comutus Rhinolophus cornutus 885887A2FFD08A09F8B3F3E5FDDDD522
Thainycleris torquatus Thainycteris torquata 4C3D87E8FFBF6A01FA569C0B1D3FBF02

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