http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#wasDerivedFrom	http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/format	name_CH1_1980	name_MSW1_1982	name_CH3_1991	name_MSW2_1993	name_Koopman_1994	name_MSW3_2005	name_HMW_2019	name_BatNames_2022	name_MDD_2022	name_IUCN_2022	name_BatNames_2023	name_MDD_2023	name_MDD_2025_2.0	name_batnames_2025_1.7	name_MDD_2025_2.2	column151	taxonomic_notes_concatenated	column171	synonyms_CH1	subspecies__MSW2	synonyms__MSW1	synonyms_CH3	synonyms_MSW2	subspecies_Koopman94_interpreted	subspecies_MSW3_interpreted	synonym_MSW3_interpreted	subspecies_HMW_interpreted	synonym_HMW_interpreted	subspecies_batnames_interpreted	synonym_batnames_interpreted	synonym_MDD_interpreted	synonym_IUCN_interpreted	subspecies_batnames2023_interpreted	synonym_batnames2023_interpreted	synonym_MDD2023_interpreted	synonym_MDD2025_interpreted	subspecies_batnames2025_interpreted	synonyms_batnames2025_interpreted	nominalNames	column391	docOrigin_CH1	commonName_CH1	distribution_CH1	docOrigin_MSW1	column451	typeLocality_MSW1	authority_MSW1	year_MSW1	citation_MSW1	distribution	comment_MSW1	docOrigin_CH3	commonName_CH3	distribution_CH3	docOrigin_MSW2	authority_MSW2	year_MSW2	citation_MSW2	comments_MSW2	distribution_MSW2	typeLocality_MSW2	docOrigin_Koopman94	authority_Koopman94	year_Koopman94	description_Koopman94	distribution_Koopman94	diversity_Koopman94	subspecies_Koopman94	page	rank	name	authority	year	parent	parent_rank	corrected_name	actual_species_count	claimed_species_count	dental_formula	description	diversity	full_subspecies_text	name_line	species_index	subspecies	synonym	text	docOrigin_MSW3	order_MSW3	family_MSW3	subfamily_MSW3	tribe_MSW3	name_MSW3	genus_MSW3	subgenus_MSW3	species_MSW3	authoritySpeciesAuthor_MSW3	(parentheses (1=author & date in parentheses)_MSW3	authoritySpeciesYear_MSW3	actualDate_MSW3	citation_MSW3	volume_MSW3	issue_MSW3	pages_MSW3	type_species_MSW3	commonName_MSW3	typeLocality_MSW3	distribution_MSW3	status_MSW3	synonym_MSW3	comments_MSW3	docId_HMW	docOrigin_HMW	docISBN_HMW	docName_HMW	docMasterId_HMW	docPageNumber_HMW	derivedFrom_HMW	name_HMW	family_HMW	genus_HMW	species_HMW	authoritySpeciesAuthor_HMW	authoritySpeciesYear	commonNames_HMW	taxonomy_HMW	subspeciesAndDistribution_HMW	descriptiveNotes_HMW	habitat_HMW	foodAndFeeding_HMW	breeding_HMW	activityPatterns_HMW	movementsHomeRangeAndSocialOrganization_HMW	statusAndConservation_HMW	bibliography_HMW	distributionImageURL_HMW	verbatimText_HMW	docOrigin_batnames	family_batnames	name_batnames	genus_batnames	subgenus_batnames	species_batnames	authoritySpeciesAuthor_batnames	date_batnames	parentheses_batnames (1=author & date in parentheses)	citation_batnames	docPageNumber_batnames	common Name_batnames	synonyms_batnames	type_locality_batnames	Distribution_batnames	CITES_batnames	IUCN_batnames	comments_batnames	docOrigin_MDD	name_MDD	phylosort_MDD	mainCommonName_MDD	otherCommonNames_MDD	subclass_MDD	infraclass_MDD	magnorder_MDD	superorder_MDD	order_MDD	suborder_MDD	infraorder_MDD	parvorder_MDD	superfamily_MDD	family_MDD	subfamily_MDD	tribe_MDD	genus_MDD	subgenus_MDD	specificEpithet_MDD	authoritySpeciesAuthor_MDD	authoritySpeciesYear_MDD	authorityParentheses_MDD	originalNameCombination_MDD	authoritySpeciesCitation_MDD	authoritySpeciesLink_MDD	holotypeVoucher_MDD	holotypeVoucherURIs_MDD	typeLocality_MDD	typeLocalityLatitude_MDD	typeLocalityLongitude_MDD	nominalNames_MDD	taxonomyNotes_MDD	taxonomyNotesCitation_MDD	countryDistribution_MDD	continentDistribution_MDD	biogeographicRealm_MDD	iucnStatus_MDD	extinct_MDD	domestic_MDD	flagged_MDD	CMW_sciName_MDD	diffSinceCMW_MDD	MSW3_matchtype_MDD	MSW3_sciName_MDD	diffSinceMSW3_MDD	docOrigin_IUCN	internalTaxonId_IUCN	NAME_IUCN	kingdomName_IUCN	phylumName_IUCN	className_IUCN	orderName_IUCN	familyName_IUCN	genusName_IUCN	speciesName_IUCN	authoritySpeciesAuthorYear_IUCN	taxonomicNotes_IUCN	assessmentId_IUCN	scientificName_IUCN	redlistCategory_IUCN	redlistCriteria_IUCN	yearPublished_IUCN	assessmentDate_IUCN	criteriaVersion_IUCN	language_IUCN	rationale_IUCN	habitat_IUCN	threats_IUCN	population_IUCN	populationTrend_IUCN	range_IUCN	useTrade_IUCN	systems_IUCN	conservationActions_IUCN	realm_IUCN	yearLastSeen_IUCN	possiblyExtinct_IUCN	possiblyExtinctInTheWild_IUCN	scopes_IUCN	docOrigin_batnames2023	FAMILY_batnames2023	GENUS_batnames2023	SUBGENUS_batnames2023	SPECIES_batnames2023	authoritySpeciesAuthor_batnames2023	authoritySpeciesYearbatnames2023	PARENTHESES_batnames2023 (1=AUTHOR & DATE IN PARENTHESES)	CITATION_batnames2023	PAGES_batnames2023	COMMON NAME_batnames2023	SYNONYMS_batnames2023	TYPE LOCALITY_batnames2023	DISTRIBUTION_batnames2023	CITES_batnames2023	IUCN_batnames2023	COMMENTS_batnames2023	name MDD2023	id_MDD2023	phylosort_MDD2023	mainCommonName_MDD2023	otherCommonNames_MDD2023	subclass_MDD2023	infraclass_MDD2023	magnorder_MDD2023	superorder_MDD2023	order_MDD2023	suborder_MDD2023	infraorder_MDD2023	parvorder_MDD2023	superfamily_MDD2023	Family_mdd2023	subfamily_MDD2023	tribe_MDD2023	genus_MDD2023	subgenus_MDD2023	specificEpithet_MDD2023	authoritySpeciesAuthor_MDD2023	authoritySpeciesYear_MDD2023	authorityParentheses_MDD2023	originalNameCombination_MDD2023	authoritySpeciesCitation_MDD2023	authoritySpeciesLink_MDD2023	holotypeVoucher_MDD2023	holotypeVoucherURIs_MDD2023	typeLocality_MDD2023	typeLocalityLatitude_MDD2023	typeLocalityLongitude_MDD2023	nominalNames_MDD2023	taxonomyNotes_MDD2023	taxonomyNotesCitation_MDD2023	distributionNotes_MDD2023	distributionNotesCitation_MDD2023	subregionDistribution_MDD2023	countryDistribution_MDD2023	continentDistribution_MDD2023	biogeographicRealm_MDD2023	iucnStatus_MDD2023	extinct_MDD2023	domestic_MDD2023	flagged_MDD2023	CMW_sciName_MDD2023	diffSinceCMW_MDD2023	MSW3_matchtype_MDD2023	MSW3_sciName_MDD2023	diffSinceMSW3_MDD2023	docOrigin_MDD2025	sciName	id	phylosort	mainCommonName	otherCommonNames	subclass	infraclass	magnorder	superorder	order	suborder	infraorder	parvorder	superfamily	family	subfamily	tribe	genus	subgenus	specificEpithet	authoritySpeciesAuthor	authorityParentheses	originalNameCombination	authoritySpeciesCitation	authoritySpeciesLink	typeVoucher	typeKind	typeVoucherURIs	typeLocality	typeLocalityLatitude	typeLocalityLongitude	taxonomyNotes	taxonomyNotesCitation	distributionNotes	distributionNotesCitation	subregionDistribution	countryDistribution	continentDistribution	biogeographicRealm	iucnStatus	extinct	domestic	flagged	CMW_sciName	diffSinceCMW	MSW3_matchtype	MSW3_sciName	diffSinceMSW3	docOrigin_batnames2025	Family	Genus	Subgenus	Species	Author	Date	Parentheses (1=author & date in parentheses)	Citation	Pages	Common Name	Synonyms	Type Locality	Distribution	CITES	IUCN	Comments	column3781	column3791	subtribe	CONCAT_ALTNAMES
line:xlsx:hash://sha256/181a039844a33e66a35a457b7ece741051086608e425a040051b79581d606b97!/Sheet1!/L1618	application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet	N/A	N/A	N/A	N/A	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni		[MSW3] Subgenus Taphozous. Included in georgianus by McKean and Price (1967) and Koopman (1993, 1994), but see Chimimba and Kitchener (1991).; [HMW] Taphozous troughtoni Tate, 1952 , “ Rifle Creek, Mt. Isa, northwest Queensland ,” Australia . Taphozous troughtoni is in the subgenus Taphozous . It was considered ajunior synonym of T georgianus , but. T. Chimimba and D. J. Kitchener in 1991 raised it to a distinct species. Monotypic.; [batnames2022] Included in georgianus by McKean and Price (1967) and Koopman (1993, 1994), but see Chimimba and Kitchener (1991).; [IUCN] Taphozous troughtoni was first described by Tate (1952) from near Mt Isa, Queensland, Australia, and was considered as a junior synonym of T. georgianus (McKean and Price 1967) until taxonomic work by Chimimba and Kitchener (1991). Later work by Reardon and Thomson (unpublished) revised the extent of occurrence from an area within the Mt Isa Inland bioregion (Commonwealth of Australia 2012) to areas through northern Queensland previously attributed to T. georgianus based mainly on allozyme patterns and echolocation calls. Taxonomic studies are ongoing and support the distinction between the two species but are investigating the possibility of introgression given previous observations of morphological intermediates in areas of range overlap (K.N. Armstrong and T.B. Reardon unpublished data).; [batnames2023] Included in georgianus by McKean and Price (1967) and Koopman (1993, 1994), but see Chimimba and Kitchener (1991).; [batnames2025_1.7] Included in georgianus by McKean and Price (1967) and Koopman (1993, 1994), but see Chimimba and Kitchener (1991).														troughtoni	Taphozous troughtoni was first described by Tate (1952) from near Mt Isa, Queensland, Australia, and was considered as a junior synonym of T. georgianus (McKean and Price 1967) until taxonomic work by Chimimba and Kitchener (1991). Later work by Reardon and Thomson (unpublished) revised the extent of occurrence from an area within the Mt Isa Inland bioregion (Commonwealth of Australia 2012) to areas through northern Queensland previously attributed to T. georgianus based mainly on allozyme patterns and echolocation calls. Taxonomic studies are ongoing and support the distinction between the two species but are investigating the possibility of introgression given previous observations of morphological intermediates in areas of range overlap (K.N. Armstrong and T.B. Reardon unpublished data).			troughtoni	troughtoni			troughtoni Tate, 1952						N/A					Distribution: Definitely known only from central Queensland, but may extend into the Northern Territory.													TATE	1952	Gular sac absent, but no differentiated throat patch. Size relatively large (forearm length 70-75 mm). Basisphenoid pits medium in width. Anterior ventral mandibu lar emargination strong.	Distribution: Definitely known only from central Queensland, but may extend into the Northern Territory.	No sub species.		42	species	T. troughtoni	TATE	1952	Taphozous	subgenus	Taphozous troughtoni				Gular sac absent, but no differentiated throat patch. Size relatively large (forearm length 70-75 mm). Basisphenoid pits medium in width. Anterior ventral mandibu lar emargination strong.	No sub species.		10. T. troughtoni TATE 1952.	10	NA			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	Emballonuridae	Taphozoinae		Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous	Taphozous	troughtoni	Tate		1952		Bull. Am. Mus. Nat, Hist.	98		563		Troughton's Tomb Bat	Australia, Queensland, 10 mi. (15 km) E of Mt. Isa, Rifle Creek.	NW Queensland (Australia).	IUCN 2003 and IUCN/SSC Action Plan (2001) – Critically Endangered.		Subgenus Taphozous. Included in georgianus by McKean and Price (1967) and Koopman (1993, 1994), but see Chimimba and Kitchener (1991).	4C3D87E8FFBF6A01FA569C0B1D3FBF02	Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions	978-84-16728-19-0	hbmw_9_Vespertilionidae_716.pdf.imf	hash://md5/b004ff90fffb6a44fffc96591e00bb32	355	zip:hash://sha256/ec5fd314a06aba1a7b0b72f23e54ac625ae272bd98f82f1d01f4c09627d9e8e0!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/D5/87/03D587F2FFC94C03F8F13AECFBD8F765.xml	Taphozous troughtoni	Emballonuridae	Taphozous	troughtoni	Tate	1952	Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat @en | Taphien de Troughton @fr | Troughton-Grabfledermaus @de | Tafozode Troughton @es | Troughton's Tomb Bat @en	Taphozous troughtoni Tate, 1952 , “ Rifle Creek, Mt. Isa, northwest Queensland ,” Australia . Taphozous troughtoni is in the subgenus Taphozous . It was considered ajunior synonym of T georgianus , but. T. Chimimba and D. J. Kitchener in 1991 raised it to a distinct species. Monotypic.	NE Australia endemic, in WC, C & E Queensland.	Head-body 79-4-86-3 mm, tail 31-5-36-9 mm, ear 22-4-27-1 mm, hindfoot 9-8-10-3 mm, forearm 73-76 mm; weight. 20-29 g. Dorsum of Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat is predominately olive­ brown, with pale mouse-gray guard hairs. Venter surface hairs are olive-brown from chin to shoulders and posteriorly dark yellow-brown, with guard hairs of pale mouse-gray. Uropatagium close to abdomen is heavily furred. Throat pouches are absent, and radio-metacarpal sacs are present in both sexes. Skin of rhinarium, wings, uropatagium, lips, face, and tragus are fuscous (pale yellow).	Wide variety of habitats and bioregions of interior Queensland.	Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bats forage for insects well above tree canopies and high over open habitats. Large, high-flying grasshoppers are preferred food items and often taken back to cave roosts to eat.	No information.	Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat roosts in caves, mines and tunnels, rock crevices, and rocky escarpments. Echolocation call is less than 25 kHz and distinguishes it from the Common Sheath-tailed Bat (. georgianus ) where they co-occur .	Large colonies of Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat can be found in landscapes with abundant rocky outcrops, especially in tower karst. Colony size might be limited by roosting structures, especially in more arid areas where there are few caves deep enough to support large colonies.	Classified as Least Concern on TheIUCNRed List. Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat has a large distribution and presumably large and stable overall population, uses a wide variety of habitats, occurs in protected areas, and does not face significant threats. It was originally recorded only from a small area in the Mount Isa Inland bioregion of Queensland, but recent studies based on isozymes and echolocation calls extend distribution further east throughout much of interior and near coastal region of central Queensland, formerly attributed to the Common Sheathtailed Bat. Recent reports of absence of Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat in western parts of its distribution require additional verification, possibly leading to re-evaluation of its conservation status after taxonomic issues are clarified.	Chimimba & Kitchener (1991) | Hall (2008b) | McKean & Price (1967) | Reardon & Thomson (2002) | Tate (1952) | Thomson et al. (2001) | Woinarski et al. (2014)	https://zenodo.org/record/3747930/files/figure.png	14 . Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat Taphozous troughtoni French : Taphien deTroughton I German : Troughton-Grabfledermaus I Spanish : Tafozo de Troughton Other common names: Troughton'sTomb Bat Taxonomy . Taphozous troughtoni Tate, 1952 , “ Rifle Creek, Mt. Isa, northwest Queensland ,” Australia . Taphozous troughtoni is in the subgenus Taphozous . It was considered ajunior synonym of T georgianus , but. T. Chimimba and D. J. Kitchener in 1991 raised it to a distinct species. Monotypic. Distribution. NE Australia endemic, in WC, C & E Queensland. Descriptive notes. Head-body 79-4-86-3 mm, tail 31-5-36-9 mm, ear 22-4-27-1 mm, hindfoot 9-8-10-3 mm, forearm 73-76 mm; weight. 20-29 g. Dorsum of Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat is predominately olive­ brown, with pale mouse-gray guard hairs. Venter surface hairs are olive-brown from chin to shoulders and posteriorly dark yellow-brown, with guard hairs of pale mouse-gray. Uropatagium close to abdomen is heavily furred. Throat pouches are absent, and radio-metacarpal sacs are present in both sexes. Skin of rhinarium, wings, uropatagium, lips, face, and tragus are fuscous (pale yellow). Habitat . Wide variety of habitats and bioregions of interior Queensland. Food and Feeding . Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bats forage for insects well above tree canopies and high over open habitats. Large, high-flying grasshoppers are preferred food items and often taken back to cave roosts to eat. Breeding . No information. Activity patterns. Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat roosts in caves, mines and tunnels, rock crevices, and rocky escarpments. Echolocation call is less than 25 kHz and distinguishes it from the Common Sheath-tailed Bat (. georgianus ) where they co-occur . Movements, Home range and Social organization. Large colonies of Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat can be found in landscapes with abundant rocky outcrops, especially in tower karst. Colony size might be limited by roosting structures, especially in more arid areas where there are few caves deep enough to support large colonies. Status and Conservation . Classified as Least Concern on TheIUCNRed List. Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat has a large distribution and presumably large and stable overall population, uses a wide variety of habitats, occurs in protected areas, and does not face significant threats. It was originally recorded only from a small area in the Mount Isa Inland bioregion of Queensland, but recent studies based on isozymes and echolocation calls extend distribution further east throughout much of interior and near coastal region of central Queensland, formerly attributed to the Common Sheathtailed Bat. Recent reports of absence of Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat in western parts of its distribution require additional verification, possibly leading to re-evaluation of its conservation status after taxonomic issues are clarified. Bibliography. Chimimba & Kitchener (1991), Hall (2008b), McKean & Price (1967), Reardon & Thomson (2002), Tate (1952),Thomson eta /. (2001), Woinarski eta/. (2014).	Simmons, N.B. and A.L. Cirranello. 2022B. Bat Species of the World: A taxonomic and geographic database. Accessed on 10/11/2022.	Emballonuridae	Taphozous troughtoni	Taphozous		troughtoni	Tate	1952	0	Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist.	107:23:00	Troughton's Tomb Bat	None.	Australia, Queensland, 10 mi. (15 km) E of Mt. Isa, Rifle Creek.	NW Queensland (Australia).	Not listed.	Least Concern	Included in georgianus by McKean and Price (1967) and Koopman (1993, 1994), but see Chimimba and Kitchener (1991).	Mammal Diversity Database. (2023). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 1.11) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7830771 released 15 April 2023	Taphozous troughtoni	23	Troughton's Sheath-tailed Bat	Troughton's Tomb Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	VESPERTILIONIFORMES	NA	NA	EMBALLONUROIDEA	EMBALLONURIDAE	TAPHOZOINAE	NA	Taphozous	Taphozous	troughtoni	Tate	1952	0	Taphozous_troughtoni	Tate, G. H. H. (1952). Mammals of Cape York Peninsula: with notes on the occurrence of rain forest in Queensland. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 98, 607.	https://digitallibrary.amnh.org/handle/2246/1834	AMNH 162708		"Rifle Creek, Mt. Isa, northwest Queensland," Australia.			troughtoni Tate, 1952	NA	NA	Australia	Oceania	Australasia/Oceania	LC	0	0	0	Taphozous_troughtoni	0	sciname match	Taphozous_troughtoni	0	IUCN. 2022. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2022-1. https://www.iucnredlist.org. Accessed on [28 September, 2022].	21466	Taphozous troughtoni	ANIMALIA	CHORDATA	MAMMALIA	CHIROPTERA	EMBALLONURIDAE	Taphozous	troughtoni	Tate, 1952	Taphozous troughtoni was first described by Tate (1952) from near Mt Isa, Queensland, Australia, and was considered as a junior synonym of T. georgianus (McKean and Price 1967) until taxonomic work by Chimimba and Kitchener (1991). Later work by Reardon and Thomson (unpublished) revised the extent of occurrence from an area within the Mt Isa Inland bioregion (Commonwealth of Australia 2012) to areas through northern Queensland previously attributed to T. georgianus based mainly on allozyme patterns and echolocation calls. Taxonomic studies are ongoing and support the distinction between the two species but are investigating the possibility of introgression given previous observations of morphological intermediates in areas of range overlap (K.N. Armstrong and T.B. Reardon unpublished data).	200000000	Taphozous troughtoni	Least Concern		2021	2016-07-31 00:00:00 UTC	3.1	English	This species 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. There are some observations of recent absence in the western parts of its range, but further information is needed before a decline can be concluded and the threatened criteria do not currently apply.	<p>It roosts in caves, abandoned mines and tunnels, crevices, and rocky escarpments within a wide range of habitats and bioregions of the Queensland interior. Colony size is probably limited by the size of roost structures. It forages well above tree canopy and high in open habitats, and show a preference for large high-flying grasshoppers that are sometimes taken back to a roost to be consumed (Hall 2008). Their echolocation call is several kilohertz lower than that of T. georgianus , which produces calls with a characteristic frequency of 25 kHz across its range (Reardon and Thomson unpublished). ; </p>	<p>There are no known major threats to this species, however there are recent observations of absence at sites visited earlier in 2001 as part of the study of Reardon and Thomson (unpublished) in the western part of its range around Camooweal, Mt Isa and Croydon (K.N. Armstrong unpublished data). Further work is required before this could be considered as a decline.</p>	<p>Taphozous troughtoni is widespread but it can occur at relatively low density in arid areas where there are few caves deep enough to support small colonies. Larger colonies can be found in landscapes with good availability of rocky outcrop, and especially in tower karst. The overall population is thought to be greater than 10,000 (Woinarski et al . 2014). </p>	Decreasing	<p>Taphozous troughtoni was thought previously to have a very restricted distribution around the town of Mt Isa in western Queensland, Australia, and predominantly in the Mount Isa Inlier biogeographic region (Hall 2008, Commonwealth of Australia 2012). Following work by Reardon and Thomson (unpublished), it is now considered to be throughout much of the interior, central and near-coastal part of Queensland instead of T. georgianus (Woinarski et al . 2014). ; </p>		Terrestrial	<p>A Recovery Plan for this species has been developed (Thomson et al. 2001). The species is known to be present in several protected areas. Taxonomic work needs to be concluded to clarify geographic boundaries (K.N. Armstrong and T.B. Reardon unpublished data). </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 	Emballonuridae	Taphozous		troughtoni	Tate	1952	0	Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist.	108:07:00	Troughton's Tomb Bat	None.	Australia, Queensland, 10 mi. (15 km) E of Mt. Isa, Rifle Creek.	NW Queensland (Australia).	Not listed.	Least Concern	Included in georgianus by McKean and Price (1967) and Koopman (1993, 1994), but see Chimimba and Kitchener (1991).	Taphozous troughtoni	1004830	23	Troughton's Sheath-tailed Bat	Troughton's Tomb Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	VESPERTILIONIFORMES	NA	NA	EMBALLONUROIDEA	Emballonuridae	TAPHOZOINAE	NA	Taphozous	Taphozous	troughtoni	Tate	1952	0	Taphozous_troughtoni	Tate, G. H. H. (1952). Mammals of Cape York Peninsula: with notes on the occurrence of rain forest in Queensland. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 98, 607.	https://digitallibrary.amnh.org/handle/2246/1834	AMNH 162708		"Rifle Creek, Mt. Isa, northwest Queensland," Australia.			troughtoni Tate, 1952	NA	NA				Australia	Oceania	Australasia/Oceania	LC	0	0	0	Taphozous_troughtoni	0	sciname match	Taphozous_troughtoni	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	Taphozous_troughtoni	1004830	23	Troughton's Sheath-tailed Bat	Troughton's Tomb Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	Chiroptera	Yangochiroptera	NA	NA	Emballonuroidea	Emballonuridae	Taphozoinae	NA	Taphozous	NA	troughtoni	Tate	0	Taphozous troughtoni	Tate, G.H.H. 1952-03-25. Results of the Archbold Expeditions. No. 66. Mammals of the Cape York Peninsula with notes on the occurrence of rainforest in Queensland. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 98(7):563-616.	https://hdl.handle.net/2246/1834	AMNH M-162708	holotype	http://portal.vertnet.org/o/amnh/mammals?id=urn-catalog-amnh-mammals-m-162708	"Rifle Creek, Mt. Isa, northwest Queensland," Australia.			NA	NA				Australia	Oceania (Continent)	Australasia	LC	0	0	0	Taphozous_troughtoni	0	sciname match	Taphozous_troughtoni	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	Emballonuridae	Taphozous		troughtoni	Tate	1952	0	Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist.	108:07:00	Troughton's Tomb Bat	None.	Australia, Queensland, 10 mi. (15 km) E of Mt. Isa, Rifle Creek.	NW Queensland (Australia).	<a href='https://cites.org/eng/app/appendices.php' target='_blank'>Not Listed</a>	<a href='https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/21466/209539933/' target='_blank'>Least Concern</a>	Included in georgianus by McKean and Price (1967) and Koopman (1993, 1994), but see Chimimba and Kitchener (1991).		Mammal Diversity Database. (2025). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 2.2) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15007505	NA	Taphozous troughtoni; Taphozous troughtoni; Taphozous troughtoni; Taphozous troughtoni; Taphozous troughtoni; Taphozous troughtoni; troughtoni; Troughton’s Sheath-tailed Bat; Taphien de Troughton; Troughton-Grabfledermaus; Tafozode Troughton; Troughton's Tomb Bat; Troughton's Sheath-tailed Bat; Troughton's Tomb Bat; Troughton's Tomb Bat; Troughton's Tomb Bat; T. troughtoni
