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line:xlsx:hash://sha256/181a039844a33e66a35a457b7ece741051086608e425a040051b79581d606b97!/Sheet1!/L1374	application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus euryotis		[MSW3] euryotis species group. Subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity, were discussed by Hill (1983); also see Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso (1998).; [HMW] Rhinolophus euryotis Tem - minck, 1835 , Ambon Island , Molucca Islands , Indonesia . Rhinolophus euryotis is placed in the euryotis species group. It appears to be sister to an undescribed species from the central highlands of Sulawesi that is usually considered a population of R. arcuatus . Only populations from mainland New Guinea have been studied genetically; the forms from a number of islands between New Guinea and Sulawesi still need to be tested, including the type locality of R. euryotis ; the validity and relationships of the various races is still unclear. Five subspecies recognized .; [batnames2022]  euryotis species group. Subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity, were discussed by Hill (1983); also see Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso(1998).  Does not include specimens from Sulawesi and may contain as many as 2 species; see Patrick et al. 2013.  ; [MDD2022] previously included R. tatar; [IUCN] The previous IUCN account followed Bonaccorso (1998) and incorrectly applied the name R. euryotis to R. canuti on the island of Timor. A modern approach to taxonomy that incorporates genetic markers is required to examine range limits and the status of subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity (Simmons 2005). Further details in Csorba et al . (2003) and Simmons (2005).; [batnames2023]  euryotis species group. Subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity, were discussed by Hill (1983); also see Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso(1998).  Does not include specimens from Sulawesi and may contain as many as 2 species; see Patrick et al. 2013.  ; [MDD2023] previously included R. tatar; [MDD2025_2.0] previously included R. tatar; [batnames2025_1.7] euryotisspecies group. Subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity, were discussed by Hill (1983); also see Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso(1998).<strong> </strong>Does not include specimens from Sulawesi and may contain as many as 2 species; see Patrick et al. 2013. <strong> </strong>; [MDD2025_2.2] previously included R. tatar						aruensis, burius, praestens, tatar, timidus.	tatar, timidus, burius, euryotis, praestans, aruensis	euryotis, aruensis, burius, praestens, tatar, timidus		euryotis, aruensis, burius, praestans, timidus		euryotis, aruensis, burius, praestens, timidus		euryotis, praestens, timidus, aruensis, burius	The previous IUCN account followed Bonaccorso (1998) and incorrectly applied the name R. euryotis to R. canuti on the island of Timor. A modern approach to taxonomy that incorporates genetic markers is required to examine range limits and the status of subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity (Simmons 2005). Further details in Csorba et al . (2003) and Simmons (2005).	euryotis, aruensis, burius, praestens, timidus		euryotis, praestens, timidus, aruensis, burius 	euryotis, praestans, timidus, aruensis, burius, praestens	aruensis, burius, euryotis, praestens, timidus		euryotis Temminck, 1834|praestans Andersen, 1905|timidus Andersen, 1905|aruensis Andersen, 1907|burius Hinton, 1925|praestens Simmons, 2005 [incorrect subsequent spelling]		Corbet, G.B. and Hill, J.E. 1980. A World List of Mammalian Species. British Museum (Natural History), London, 226 pp.	Broad-eared horseshoe bat	Moluccas, Kei Is, AruIs	Honacki, J.H., Kinman, K.E. and Koeppl, J.W. 1982. Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Allen Press, Lawrence, 694 pp.	Rhinolophus euryotis	Indonesia, Molucca Isis., Amboina Isl.	Temminck	1835	Monogr. Mamm., 2:26.	Distribution: Ranging from Celebes through the Moluccas and New Guinea to the Bismarcks.		Corbet, G.B. and Hill, J.E. 1991. A World List of Mammalian Species. Third edition. Oxford University Press, London, 243 pp. ISBN 0-19-854017-5	Broad-eared horseshoe bat	Sulawesi, Moluccas, New Guinea, New Britain, Kiriwina I, Aru Is	Koopman, K.F. 1993. Order Chiroptera. Pp. 137–242 in Wilson, D.E. and Reeder, D.M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Second edition. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, 1206 pp.	Temminck	1835	Monogr. Mamm., 2:26.		Aru Isis, Buru, Amboina, Seram, and Timor Laut Isis, Kei Isis, Halmahera, and Sulawesi (Indonesia); New Guinea; Bismarck Arch.; adjacent small islands.	Indonesia, Molucca Isis, Amboina Isl.		TEMMINCK	1834	Large broad ears with well-developed antitragal lobe. Horseshoe broad. Skull with high projecting median anterior rostral swellings. Anterior upper premolar in toothrow but middle lower extruded. Palatal bridge short, less than 1 /3 length of maxillary toothrow. Connecting process high. Anterior edge of horseshoe scarcely emarginated but with broad, parallel swollen longitudinal ridges ex tending back to the internarial region, enclosing a groove that widens posteriorly to terminate at a low median projection. Size relatively large (forearm length, 52-58 mm).	Distribution: Ranging from Celebes through the Moluccas and New Guinea to the Bismarcks.	Six subspecies are currently recognized (though some are of du bious validity, HILL 1983):	R. e. tatar (Celebes), R. e. timidus (northern Moluccas through New Guinea to the Bismarcks), R. e. burius (Buru), R. e. euryotis (Ceram to Timorlaut), R. e. praestans (Keis), R. e. aruensis (Arus).	58	species	R. euryotis	TEMMINCK	1834	Rhinolophus	genus	Rhinolophus euryotis				Large broad ears with well-developed antitragal lobe. Horseshoe broad. Skull with high projecting median anterior rostral swellings. Anterior upper premolar in toothrow but middle lower extruded. Palatal bridge short, less than 1 /3 length of maxillary toothrow. Connecting process high. Anterior edge of horseshoe scarcely emarginated but with broad, parallel swollen longitudinal ridges ex tending back to the internarial region, enclosing a groove that widens posteriorly to terminate at a low median projection. Size relatively large (forearm length, 52-58 mm).	Six subspecies are currently recognized (though some are of du bious validity, HILL 1983):		56. R. euryotis TEMMINCK 1834 [euryotis group],	56	_R. e. aruensis_ Andersen, 1907; _R. e. burius_ Hinton, 1925; _R. e. euryotis_ Temminck, 1834; _R. e. praestans_ Andersen, 1905; _R. e. timidus_ Andersen, 1905			Don E. Wilson & DeeAnn M. Reeder (editors). 2005. Mammal Species of the World. A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed), Johns Hopkins University Press, 2,142 pp. (Available from Johns Hopkins University Press, 1-800-537-5487 or (410) 516-6900, or at http://www.press.jhu.edu).	CHIROPTERA	Rhinolophidae			Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus		euryotis	Temminck		1835		Monogr. Mamm.	2		26		Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat	Indonesia, Molucca Isls, Amboina Isl.	Aru Isls, Buru, Bacan, Amboina, Seram, and Tanimbar Isls, Kai Isls, Halmahera, and Sulawesi (Indonesia); New Guinea; Bismarck Arch.; adjacent small islands.	IUCN 2003 and IUCN/SSC Action Plan (2001) – Lower Risk (lc).	aruensis K. Andersen, 1907; burius Hinton, 1925; praestens K. Andersen, 1905; tatar Bergmans and Rozendaal, 1982; timidus K. Andersen, 1905.	euryotis species group. Subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity, were discussed by Hill (1983); also see Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso (1998).	885887A2FFDF8A38F899FBD8F436D1A0	Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions	978-84-16728-19-0	hbmw_9_Rhinolophidae.pdf.imf	hash://md5/7461ffdaffcf8a29ffccffa1ff85d963	318	zip:hash://sha256/ec5fd314a06aba1a7b0b72f23e54ac625ae272bd98f82f1d01f4c09627d9e8e0!/treatments-xml-main/data/88/58/87/885887A2FFE88A0EFF02FA7CF4A0DB35.xml	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophidae	Rhinolophus	euryotis	Temminck	1834	Rhinolophe euryote @fr | Neuguinea-Hufeisennase @de | Herradura de Nueva Guinea @es | Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat @en | New Guinea Horseshoe Bat @en	Rhinolophus euryotis Tem - minck, 1835 , Ambon Island , Molucca Islands , Indonesia . Rhinolophus euryotis is placed in the euryotis species group. It appears to be sister to an undescribed species from the central highlands of Sulawesi that is usually considered a population of R. arcuatus . Only populations from mainland New Guinea have been studied genetically; the forms from a number of islands between New Guinea and Sulawesi still need to be tested, including the type locality of R. euryotis ; the validity and relationships of the various races is still unclear. Five subspecies recognized .	R.e. euryotis Temminck, 1835 — C Moluccas Is ( Ambon and Seram) and Tanimbar Is. R.e. aruensis K. Andersen, 1907 — Aru Is. R. e. burius Hinton, 1925 — C Moluccas Is (Buru). R. e. praestans K.Andersen, 1905 — Kai Is. R. e. timidus K. Andersen, 1905 - N Moluccas Is (Halmahera and Bacan), New Guinea (including Waigeo , Batanta, and Yapen Is), Bismarck Archipelago ( New Britain and New Ireland ), and Trobriand Is (Kiriwina).	Head—body 54-73 mm , tail 16—28 mm , ear 19—26- 5 mm , hindfoot 11—15 mm , forearm 50—60 mm ; weight 14-1—27- 5 g . Dorsal pelage is brown (hairs paler drab basally), whereas ventral pelage is lighter brownish or wood brown. Ears are moderately long. Noseleaf has more or less straight-sided and densely haired lancet ; connecting process is semicircular and hairy; sella is wide but relatively short and almost parallel-sided, with convex outlined tip; horseshoe has longitudinal groove with raised edges extending from median edge to intemarial region, is dark in color with exception of whitish stripe on median longitudinal groove, is very wide (10- 2—13 mm ), covers muzzle and even projects slighdy beyond it, and has very shallow median emargination. Lower lip has three mental grooves. Skull is large but relatively slender in build (zygomatic breadth is only slighdy larger than mastoid breadth); anterior median swellings are prominent and bulbous; posterior swellings are reduced; frontal depression extends anteriorly to medium swellings and is elongated and moderately deep; supraorbital crests are conspicuous but not very sharp; sagittal crest is moderately developed. C1 is long and strong; P2 is medium-sized and within tooth row or halfway extruded from it; P is small and completely extruded from tooth row, or is sometimes missing entirely; P, and P4 are usually very close to one another or touching. Dental formula is the usual of 32 teeth for the genus or only 30 teeth when a lower premolar is missing.	Known to forage in both primary and secondary rainforest from sea level up to elevations of 2050 m .	The New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat forages for insects by substrate-gleaning.	Pregnant females were reported in late August on New Britain , and four pregnant and one lactating females were captured in late October on Batanta Island; based on these data, females probably give birth in late October. Each pregnant female carried only a single embryo.			Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat is widespread but is likely to be threatened by roost disturbance, as well as habitat destruction and alteration.	Armstrong & Aplin (2017h) | Bonaccorso (1998) | Csorba et al. (2003) | Flannery (1995a, 1995b) | Leary & Pennay (2011) | Patrick et al. (2013) | Robson et al. (2012)	https://zenodo.org/record/3750066/files/figure.png	78 . New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat Rhinolophus euryotis French: Rhinolophe euryote I German: Neuguinea-Hufeisennase / Spanish: Herradura de Nueva Guinea Other common names: Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat, New Guinea Horseshoe Bat Taxonomy. Rhinolophus euryotis Tem - minck, 1835 , Ambon Island , Molucca Islands , Indonesia . Rhinolophus euryotis is placed in the euryotis species group. It appears to be sister to an undescribed species from the central highlands of Sulawesi that is usually considered a population of R. arcuatus . Only populations from mainland New Guinea have been studied genetically; the forms from a number of islands between New Guinea and Sulawesi still need to be tested, including the type locality of R. euryotis ; the validity and relationships of the various races is still unclear. Five subspecies recognized . Subspecies and Distribution. R.e. euryotis Temminck, 1835 — C Moluccas Is ( Ambon and Seram) and Tanimbar Is. R.e. aruensis K. Andersen, 1907 — Aru Is. R. e. burius Hinton, 1925 — C Moluccas Is (Buru). R. e. praestans K.Andersen, 1905 — Kai Is. R. e. timidus K. Andersen, 1905 - N Moluccas Is (Halmahera and Bacan), New Guinea (including Waigeo , Batanta, and Yapen Is), Bismarck Archipelago ( New Britain and New Ireland ), and Trobriand Is (Kiriwina). Descriptive notes. Head—body 54-73 mm , tail 16—28 mm , ear 19—26- 5 mm , hindfoot 11—15 mm , forearm 50—60 mm ; weight 14-1—27- 5 g . Dorsal pelage is brown (hairs paler drab basally), whereas ventral pelage is lighter brownish or wood brown. Ears are moderately long. Noseleaf has more or less straight-sided and densely haired lancet ; connecting process is semicircular and hairy; sella is wide but relatively short and almost parallel-sided, with convex outlined tip; horseshoe has longitudinal groove with raised edges extending from median edge to intemarial region, is dark in color with exception of whitish stripe on median longitudinal groove, is very wide (10- 2—13 mm ), covers muzzle and even projects slighdy beyond it, and has very shallow median emargination. Lower lip has three mental grooves. Skull is large but relatively slender in build (zygomatic breadth is only slighdy larger than mastoid breadth); anterior median swellings are prominent and bulbous; posterior swellings are reduced; frontal depression extends anteriorly to medium swellings and is elongated and moderately deep; supraorbital crests are conspicuous but not very sharp; sagittal crest is moderately developed. C1 is long and strong; P2 is medium-sized and within tooth row or halfway extruded from it; P is small and completely extruded from tooth row, or is sometimes missing entirely; P, and P4 are usually very close to one another or touching. Dental formula is the usual of 32 teeth for the genus or only 30 teeth when a lower premolar is missing. Habitat. Known to forage in both primary and secondary rainforest from sea level up to elevations of 2050 m . Food and Feeding. The New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat forages for insects by substrate-gleaning. Breeding. Pregnant females were reported in late August on New Britain , and four pregnant and one lactating females were captured in late October on Batanta Island; based on these data, females probably give birth in late October. Each pregnant female carried only a single embryo. Activity patterns. New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bats roost by day in caves and tunnels. Call shape is FM/CF/FM, with peak frequencies of 52-58 kHz recorded in New Guinea . Movements, Home range and Sodai organization. Colonies can reach over 1000 individuals (e. g . a maternity colonywith over 1000 bats was reported in November on New Guinea ). Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat is widespread but is likely to be threatened by roost disturbance, as well as habitat destruction and alteration. Bibliography . Armstrong & Aplin (2017h), Bonaccorso (1998), Csorba et al. (2003), Flannery (1995a, 1995b), Leary & Pennay (2011), Patrick et al. (2013), Robson et al. (2012).	Simmons, N.B. and A.L. Cirranello. 2022B. Bat Species of the World: A taxonomic and geographic database. Accessed on 10/11/2022.	Rhinolophidae	Rhinolophus euryotis	Rhinolophus		euryotis	Temminck	1835	0	Monogr. Mamm.	2:26	Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat	<b> aruensis </b>K. Andersen, 1907;<b> burius </b>Hinton, 1925;<b> praestens </b>K. Andersen, 1905; <b> timidus </b>K. Andersen, 1905.	Indonesia, Molucca Isls, Amboina Isl.	Aru Isls, Buru, Bacan, Amboina, Seram, and Tanimbar Isls, Kai Isls, Halmahera; New Guinea; Bismarck Arch.; adjacent small islands.	Not listed.	Least Concern	 euryotis species group. Subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity, were discussed by Hill (1983); also see Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso(1998).  Does not include specimens from Sulawesi and may contain as many as 2 species; see Patrick et al. 2013.  	Mammal Diversity Database. (2023). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 1.11) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7830771 released 15 April 2023	Rhinolophus euryotis	23	New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat	Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat|New Guinea Horseshoe Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	PTEROPODIFORMES	NA	NA	RHINOLOPHOIDEA	RHINOLOPHIDAE	NA	NA	Rhinolophus	NA	euryotis	Temminck	1835	0	Rhinolophus_euryotis	Temminck, C. J. (1835). Monographies de mammalogie, ou Description de quelques genres de mammifÃ¨res, dont les espÃ¨ces ont Ã©tÃ© observÃ©es dans les diffÃ©rens musÃ©es de l'Europe, Vol. 2. Leiden, 26.	https://www.google.com/books/edition/Monographies_de_mammalogie/yHQQAQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=monographies+de+mammalogie+temminck+volume+2&printsec=frontcover	ZMB 381, ZMB 382, ZMB 2573 [syntypes]		Ambon Island, Molucca Islands, Indonesia.			euryotis Temminck, 1835|praestens K. Andersen, 1905|timidus K. Andersen, 1905|aruensis K. Andersen, 1907|burius Hinton, 1925	previously included R. tatar	Patrick, L.E., McCulloch, E.S., Ruedas, L.A. 2013. Systematics and biogeography of the arcuate horseshoe bat species complex (Chiroptera, Rhinolophidae). Zoologica Scripta. doi: 10.1111/zsc.12026.	Indonesia|Papua New Guinea	Asia|Oceania	Australasia/Oceania	LC	0	0	0	Rhinolophus_euryotis	0	sciname match	Rhinolophus_euryotis	0	IUCN. 2022. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2022-1. https://www.iucnredlist.org. Accessed on [28 September, 2022].	80000000	Rhinolophus euryotis	ANIMALIA	CHORDATA	MAMMALIA	CHIROPTERA	RHINOLOPHIDAE	Rhinolophus	euryotis	Temminck, 1835	The previous IUCN account followed Bonaccorso (1998) and incorrectly applied the name R. euryotis to R. canuti on the island of Timor. A modern approach to taxonomy that incorporates genetic markers is required to examine range limits and the status of subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity (Simmons 2005). Further details in Csorba et al . (2003) and Simmons (2005).	200000000	Rhinolophus euryotis	Least Concern		2021	2016-02-17 00:00:00 UTC	3.1	English	<p>This bat is listed as Least Concern given its wide distribution, use of a broad range of habitats, presumed large population size, occurrence in protected areas, and the absence of significant key threats or evidence for a decline.</p>	<p>Colonies in excess of 1,000 individuals have been observed in limestone caves, mine adits and military tunnels, such as on the island of New Britain in Papua New Guinea and the Arfak Mountains of Papua Province, Indonesia (Bonaccorso 1998). Females give birth in late October (Bonaccorso 1998). Its echolocation call is relatively low and distinctive in Papua New Guinea, with a characteristic frequency 52â€“58 kHz (Leary and Pennay 2011; Robson et al . 2012).</p>	<p>Like all cave-roosting bats, R. euryotis is sensitive to disturbance of their underground roost sites, especially during breeding. Local population declines may follow high levels of vegetation alteration and clearance around roost sites. The availability of suitable roost sites will also affect local occurrence, and loss of roost sites could reduce area of occupancy.</p>	<p>It can be common locally, and colonies in caves and tunnels can reach over 1,000 individuals (Bonaccorso 1998; Robson et al . 2012). </p>	Unknown	<p>This species is widespread in parts of Wallacea, and the island of New Guinea and its nearby islands (Flannery 1995a,b; Bonaccorso 1998; Csorba et al. 2003; Simmons 2005). It is represented in Indonesia as R. e. euryotis on the islands of Sulawesi, Amboina, Seram and the Tanimbar Islands; as R. e. burius on the Buru Islands; as R. e. praestans on the Kai Islands; as R. e. aruensis on the Aru Islands; and as R. e. timidus on the islands of Halmahera, Bacan, Walgeo, Japen, and Papua Province on the island of New Guinea. It is also present in Papua New Guinea, including on the mainland, and the islands of New Britain, New Ireland and Kiriwina, as R. e. timidus . It has been recorded in habitats ranging in elevation from sea level to 2,050 m (Robson et al . 2012).</p>		Terrestrial	<p>It is present in several protected areas across its range. The protection of known underground roosts should be a priority for management, but consideration of the area and quality of foraging habitat around roosts is equally important for maintaining area of occupancy. The addition of gates over mine entrances could have a seriously detrimental effect on colony size. Taxonomic resolution of the various forms on different islands will help with future assessments of conservation status.</p>	Australasian		FALSE	FALSE	Global	Simmons, N. B., & Cirranello, A. L. (2023). Batnames.org Species List Version 1.4 (1.4). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8136157 	Rhinolophidae	Rhinolophus		euryotis	Temminck	1835	0	Monogr. Mamm.	2:26	Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat	<b> aruensis </b>K. Andersen, 1907;<b> burius </b>Hinton, 1925;<b> praestens </b>K. Andersen, 1905; <b> timidus </b>K. Andersen, 1905.	Indonesia, Molucca Isls, Amboina Isl.	Aru Isls, Buru, Bacan, Amboina, Seram, and Tanimbar Isls, Kai Isls, Halmahera; New Guinea; Bismarck Arch.; adjacent small islands.	Not listed.	Least Concern	 euryotis species group. Subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity, were discussed by Hill (1983); also see Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso(1998).  Does not include specimens from Sulawesi and may contain as many as 2 species; see Patrick et al. 2013.  	Rhinolophus euryotis	1004683	23	New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat	Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat|New Guinea Horseshoe Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	PTEROPODIFORMES	NA	NA	RHINOLOPHOIDEA	Rhinolophidae	NA	NA	Rhinolophus	NA	euryotis	Temminck	1835	0	Rhinolophus_euryotis	Temminck, C. J. (1835). Monographies de mammalogie, ou Description de quelques genres de mammifÃ¨res, dont les espÃ¨ces ont Ã©tÃ© observÃ©es dans les diffÃ©rens musÃ©es de l'Europe, Vol. 2. Leiden, 26.	https://www.google.com/books/edition/Monographies_de_mammalogie/yHQQAQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=monographies+de+mammalogie+temminck+volume+2&printsec=frontcover	ZMB 381, ZMB 382, ZMB 2573 [syntypes]		Ambon Island, Molucca Islands, Indonesia.			euryotis Temminck, 1835|praestens K. Andersen, 1905|timidus K. Andersen, 1905|aruensis K. Andersen, 1907|burius Hinton, 1925	previously included R. tatar	Patrick, L.E., McCulloch, E.S., Ruedas, L.A. 2013. Systematics and biogeography of the arcuate horseshoe bat species complex (Chiroptera, Rhinolophidae). Zoologica Scripta. doi: 10.1111/zsc.12026.				Indonesia|Papua New Guinea	Asia|Oceania	Australasia/Oceania	LC	0	0	0	Rhinolophus_euryotis	0	sciname match	Rhinolophus_euryotis	0	Burgin, C. J., Zijlstra, J. S., Becker, M. A., Handika, H., Alston, J. M., Widness, J., Liphardt, S., Huckaby, D. G., and Upham, N. S. (2025). How many mammal species are there now? Updates and trends in taxonomic, nomenclatural, and geographic knowledge. Journal of Mammalogy in revision: TBD. https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.02.27.640393	Rhinolophus_euryotis	1004683	23	New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat	Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat|New Guinea Horseshoe Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	Chiroptera	Yinpterochiroptera	NA	NA	Rhinolophoidea	Rhinolophidae	NA	NA	Rhinolophus	NA	euryotis	Temminck	0	Rhinolophus euryotis	Temminck, C.J. 1834. Over een geslacht der vleugelhandige zoogdieren, _Bladneus_ genaamd. (_Rhinolophus_ Geoff., Cuv., Illig, Desm.; _Vespertilio_ Linn., Erxleb.; _Noctilio_ Kuhl). Tijdschrift voor Natuurlijke Geschiedenis en Physiologie 1:1-30.	https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/13473238	RMNH.MAM.35195, RMNH.MAM.35196, RMNH.MAM.35197, RMNH.MAM.35198, RMNH.MAM.35199, RMNH.MAM.35200, RMNH.MAM.35201, RMNH.MAM.35203, RMNH.MAM.35204, RMNH.MAM.35205, RMNH.MAM.35206, RMNH.MAM.35207, RMNH.MAM.35208, RMNH.MAM.35209, RMNH.MAM.35210, ZMB 381, ZMB 382, ZMB 2573	syntypes	https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35195.a | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35195.b | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35196 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35197 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35198 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35199 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35200 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35201 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35203 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35204 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35205 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35206 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35207 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35208 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35209 | https://data.biodiversitydata.nl/naturalis/specimen/RMNH.MAM.35210	Ambon Island, Molucca Islands, Indonesia.			previously included R. tatar	Patrick, L.E., McCulloch, E.S., Ruedas, L.A. 2013. Systematics and biogeography of the arcuate horseshoe bat species complex (Chiroptera, Rhinolophidae). Zoologica Scripta. doi: 10.1111/zsc.12026.				Indonesia|Papua New Guinea	Asia|Oceania (Continent)	Australasia	LC	0	0	0	Rhinolophus_euryotis	0	sciname match	Rhinolophus_euryotis	0	Simmons, N. B., & Cirranello, A. L. (2025). Batnames.org Species List Version 1.7 (1.7). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14796586	Rhinolophidae	Rhinolophus		euryotis	Temminck	1835	0	Monogr. Mamm.	2:26	Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat	aruensis K. Andersen, 1907; burius Hinton, 1925; praestens K. Andersen, 1905;  timidus K. Andersen, 1905.	Indonesia, Molucca Isls, Amboina Isl.	Aru Isls, Buru, Bacan, Amboina, Seram, and Tanimbar Isls, Kai Isls, Halmahera; New Guinea; Bismarck Arch.; adjacent small islands.	<a href='https://cites.org/eng/app/appendices.php' target='_blank'>Not Listed</a>	<a href='https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/84372418/209537830/' target='_blank'>Least Concern</a>	euryotisspecies group. Subspecies, some of which are of dubious validity, were discussed by Hill (1983); also see Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso(1998).<strong> </strong>Does not include specimens from Sulawesi and may contain as many as 2 species; see Patrick et al. 2013. <strong> </strong>		Mammal Diversity Database. (2025). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 2.2) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15007505	NA	Rhinolophus euryotis; Rhinolophus euryotis; Rhinolophus euryotis; Rhinolophus euryotis; Rhinolophus euryotis; Rhinolophus euryotis; euryotis; aruensis; burius; praestens; tatar; timidus; euryotis; aruensis; burius; praestans; timidus; aruensis; burius; praestens; timidus; euryotis; praestens; timidus; aruensis; burius; Rhinolophe euryote; Neuguinea-Hufeisennase; Herradura de Nueva Guinea; Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat; New Guinea Horseshoe Bat; New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat; Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat; New Guinea Horseshoe Bat; Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat; Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat; R. euryotis
