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The bats of Trinidad and Tobago include 68 or 69 species[note 1] representing all nine families of bats present in the Neotropics.[1]: 4
Distribution
editBat caves
editEcology
editCultural significance
editHistory of bat study
editRabies
editTrinidad Regional Virus Laboratory
editNotes
edit- ^ Gomes and Reid (2015) list 68 species. Gutiérrez et al. (2017) reclassified Tobagonian bats formerly classified as Myotis nigricans as a new species, M. attenboroughi, but were uncertain as to whether Trinidadian individuals belonged to this species or were members of an undescribed cryptic species they called Myotis aff. nigricans.
References
edit- ^ Gomes, Geoffrey A.; Reid, Fiona A. (2015). Bats of Trinidad and Tobago : A Field Guide and Natural History. ISBN 9780692444085. OCLC 922043550.
Bibliography
edit- Gutiérrez, Eliécer E.; Helgen, Kristofer M.; Novaes, Roberto L. M.; Wilson, Don E.; Moratelli, Ricardo (2017). "Caribbean Myotis (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae), with description of a new species from Trinidad and Tobago". Journal of Mammalogy. 98 (4): 994–1008. doi:10.1093/jmammal/gyx062. ISSN 0022-2372.
- Goodwin, George C.; Greenhall, Arthur M. "A Review of the Bats of Trinidad and Tobago". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 122: 187–320.