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line:xlsx:hash://sha256/181a039844a33e66a35a457b7ece741051086608e425a040051b79581d606b97!/Sheet1!/L379	application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet	N/A	Hipposideros galeritus [synonym of]	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros cervinus		[MSW2] Considered distinct from galeritus (in which it was formerly included) by Jenkins and Hill (1981).; [MSW3] bicolor species group. Distinct from galeritus; see Flannery (1995a, b). Also see Jenkins and Hill (1981) and Hill (1983).; [HMW] Rhinolophus cervinus Gould, 1854 , Cape York and Albany Island, Queensland , Australia . Hipposideros ceruinus was formerly included in the bicolor species group, but is now placed in the calcaratus species group. Future taxonomic study may prove that the Malay Peninsula population represents a different taxon. Two subspecies recognized.; [batnames2022]  bicolor species group. Distinct from galeritus; see Flannery (1995a, b). Also see Jenkins and Hill (1981) and Hill (1983).; [IUCN] <span id="docs-internal-guid-7f17190e-7fff-ced2-b6c7-b8a5ef17fb2a">The taxonomic status and distribution of this species were discussed by Jenkins and Hill (1981). The possibility for species-level distinctness of any of the allopatric island groups spread from Peninsula Malaysia, through Indonesia, to the Solomon Islands has not been subject to rigorous taxonomic evaluation with modern methods, but a study with sufficient geographic sampling is likely to result in the discovery of cryptic species.; [batnames2023]  bicolor species group. Distinct from galeritus; see Flannery (1995a, b). Also see Jenkins and Hill (1981) and Hill (1983).; [batnames2025_1.7] bicolorspecies group. Distinct from galeritus; see Flannery (1995a, b). Also see Jenkins and Hill (1981) and Hill (1983).						batchianensis, celebensis, labuanensis, misoriensis, schneideri.	labuanensis, cervinus, batchianensis, misorensis	cervinus, batchianus, labuanensis, misoriensis	celebensis; labuanensis - schneidersi	ceruinus, labuanensis		cervinus, batchianus, labuanensis, misoriensis	cervinus - celebensis; labuanensis - schneidersi	cervinus, labuanensis, batchianus, schneidersi, misoriensis, celebensis	<span id="docs-internal-guid-7f17190e-7fff-ced2-b6c7-b8a5ef17fb2a">The taxonomic status and distribution of this species were discussed by Jenkins and Hill (1981). The possibility for species-level distinctness of any of the allopatric island groups spread from Peninsula Malaysia, through Indonesia, to the Solomon Islands has not been subject to rigorous taxonomic evaluation with modern methods, but a study with sufficient geographic sampling is likely to result in the discovery of cryptic species.	cervinus, batchianus, labuanensis, misoriensis	cervinus - celebensis; labuanensis - schneidersi	cervinus, labuanensis, batchianus, schneidersi, misoriensis, celebensis 	cervinus, labuanensis, batchianus, schneidersi, misorensis, celebensis, schneideri, misoriensis	batchianus, cervinus, labuanensis, misoriensis	cervinus - celebensis; labuanensis - schneidersi	cervinus (J. Gould, 1854)|labuanensis (Tomes, 1859)|batchianus Matschie, 1901|schneidersi O. Thomas, 1904|misorensis (W. C. H. Peters, 1906)|celebensis Sody, 1936|schneideri J. Edwards Hill, 1963 [incorrect subsequent spelling]|batchianensis Koopman, 1994 [incorrect subsequent spelling]|misoriensis Simmons, 2005 [incorrect subsequent spelling]						N/A					Distribution: Ranging from Malaya and Sumatra to the Philippines, New He brides, and northeastern Queensland (Australia).		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	Gould's leaf-nosed bat	Malaya, Sumatra, Philippines – Vanuatu, NE Australia; ref. 4.33	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.	Gould	1863	Mamm. Austr., 3: pl. 34.	Considered distinct from galeritus (in which it was formerly included) by Jenkins and Hill (1981).	W Malaysia, Sumatra, and the Philippines to Vanuatu (= New Hebrides) and NE Australia.	Australia, Queensland, Cape York.		GOULD	1854	Two lateral leaflets present, neither one extending anteriorly beneath anterior noseleaf to the median line. Posterior noseleaf without a well-developed transverse serrated supplementary structure on its posterior face, but supported by three septa. In ternarial septum not swollen or expanded. Pterygoids long, sphenoidal bridge wide, partly concealing lateral apertures. Ears haired for two thirds of their length. Tips of upper incisors not strongly convergent. Intermediate noseleaf narrower than posterior noseleaf. Rostrum relatively long and uninflated. Size medium (forearm length, 40-52 mm).	Distribution: Ranging from Malaya and Sumatra to the Philippines, New He brides, and northeastern Queensland (Australia).	Four subspecies are currently recognized (JEN KINS & HILL 1980):	H. c. labuanensis (= schneideri) (Malaya, Sumatra, Bor neo, Philippines), H. c. cervinus (= celebensis) (Celebes east to the New Hebrides and northeastern Queensland, except for Batjan and Biak), H. c. batchianensis (Batjan in the northern Moluccas), H. c. misorensis (Biak island northeast of New Guinea).	62	species	H. cervinus	GOULD	1854	Hipposideros	genus	Hipposideros cervinus				Two lateral leaflets present, neither one extending anteriorly beneath anterior noseleaf to the median line. Posterior noseleaf without a well-developed transverse serrated supplementary structure on its posterior face, but supported by three septa. In ternarial septum not swollen or expanded. Pterygoids long, sphenoidal bridge wide, partly concealing lateral apertures. Ears haired for two thirds of their length. Tips of upper incisors not strongly convergent. Intermediate noseleaf narrower than posterior noseleaf. Rostrum relatively long and uninflated. Size medium (forearm length, 40-52 mm).	Four subspecies are currently recognized (JEN KINS & HILL 1980):		22. H. cervinus (GOULD 1854) [bicolor group],	22	_H. c. batchianus_ Matschie, 1901; _H. c. cervinus_ (Gould, 1854) (synonyms: _celebensis_ Sody, 1936); _H. c. labuanensis_ (Tomes, 1859) (synonyms: _schneidersi_ Thomas, 1904); _H. c. misorensis_ (Peters, 1906)			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	Hipposideridae			Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros		cervinus	Gould	y	1854		Mamm. Austr.	3		pl. 34		Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat	Australia, Queensland, Cape York and Albany Isl.	W Malaysia, Sumatra, and Mindanao (Philippines) to the Mollucca Isls, Vanuatu, and NE Australia. Specimens from Mansuar Isl (Prov. of Papua, Indonesia) may represent cyclotis (Meinig, 2002).	IUCN 2003 and IUCN/SSC Action Plan (2001) – Lower Risk (lc).	celebensis Sody, 1936; batchianus Matschie, 1901; labuanensis Tomes, 1859; schneidersi Thomas, 1904; misoriensis Peters, 1906.	bicolor species group. Distinct from galeritus; see Flannery (1995a, b). Also see Jenkins and Hill (1981) and Hill (1983).	03BD87A2C665A217FF2BF2D6F7904401	Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions	978-84-16728-19-0	hbmw_9_Hipposideridae_210.pdf.imf	hash://md5/ff84ffdac676a204fff8ff9affef4346	246	zip:hash://sha256/ec5fd314a06aba1a7b0b72f23e54ac625ae272bd98f82f1d01f4c09627d9e8e0!/treatments-xml-main/data/03/BD/87/03BD87A2C665A217FF2BF2D6F7904401.xml	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideridae	Hipposideros	cervinus		1854	Phyllorhine de Gould @fr | Rehbraune Rundblattnase @de | Hiposidérido de Gould @es | awn Horseshoe Bat @en | awn Roundleaf Bat @en | Fawn-colored Roundleaf Bat @en | Gould's Leaf-nosed Bat @en	Rhinolophus cervinus Gould, 1854 , Cape York and Albany Island, Queensland , Australia . Hipposideros ceruinus was formerly included in the bicolor species group, but is now placed in the calcaratus species group. Future taxonomic study may prove that the Malay Peninsula population represents a different taxon. Two subspecies recognized.	H. c. ceruinus Gould, 1854 -Sulawesi and adjacent Is, Talaud, Moluccas , Kai, and Aru Is, New Guinea (including Waigeo and Yapen Is), Admiralty Is (Manus), Bismarck and Louisiade archipelagos, NE Australia (Cape York Peninsula and Moa and Albany Is), Solomon Is, and Vanuatu . H. c. labuanensisTomes, 1859 -Malay Peninsula, Sumatra (includingMentawai, Enggano, and Bangka Is), Borneo, Kangean Is, and Philippines ( Palawan and Mindanao Is).	Head—body 50—55 mm , tail 21—31 mm , ear 14-17-5 mm, forearm 44—53 mm ; weight 6-9 g. There are no other specific measurements available. The Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat is a small to medium-sized Hipposideros . Noseleaf has two supplementary leaflets. Posterior leaf has three vertical septa, which divide the posterior leaf into four cells. Pelage color is variable from grayish brown or yellowish brown to bright orange; ventral side is paler than the dorsal.	The Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat usually roosts in caves but can also be found in other habitats, e.g. abandoned mines and tree hollows. It forages in lowland forest understory from sea level up to 1400 m .	The Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat feeds on small beedes, moths, and other insects over shrubs, creeks and water bodies by using aerial and gleaning tactics. It can fly slowly and hover during the gleaning.	In Madang Province , Papua New Guinea , females give birth to a single young twice a year, with lactation peaks in March and September. Pregnant females were captured in July-September. Females become sexually mature in c.8—9 months. In peninsular Malaysia , lactating females were found throughout the year, with peak pregnancy in February—March.	The Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat emerges from the roost at sunset, and sets off, flying fast within 3 m of the ground, for its foraging grounds. It is a cavedwelling species. Echolocation is a typical CF/FM type, with a call frequency of the F segment of 144—145 kHz, with the FM segment dropping to 120 kHz. In Peninsular Malaysia , call frequency is 126 kHz.	Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bats roost gregariously. Colony size can be thousands of individuals. In Niah Caves, Borneo, colony size was estimated at up to 250,000 individuals. The species can be found sharing the roost with Bicolored Leaf-nosed Bats { H. bicolor ) and antor ’s Leaf-nosed Bats { H. galeritus ).	Classified as Least Concern on IUCN Red List. This species is common to abundant in caves throughout its range, and forms large colonies.	Bonaccorso (1998) | Corbet & Hill (1992) | Csorba, Bumrumgsri, Francis, Bates, Gumal, Hall & Bonaccorso (2008) | Francis (2008a) | Heaney et al. (1998) | Kingston et al. (2006) | Phillipps & Phillipps (2016) | Simmons (2005)	https://zenodo.org/record/3749139/files/figure.png	52. Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat Hipposideros cervinus French: Phyllorhine de Gould / German: Rehbraune Rundblattnase / Spanish: Hiposidérido de Gould Other common names: awn Horseshoe Bat , awn Roundleaf Bat , Fawn-colored Roundleaf Bat , Gould's Leaf-nosed Bat Taxonomy. Rhinolophus cervinus Gould, 1854 , Cape York and Albany Island, Queensland , Australia . Hipposideros ceruinus was formerly included in the bicolor species group, but is now placed in the calcaratus species group. Future taxonomic study may prove that the Malay Peninsula population represents a different taxon. Two subspecies recognized. Subspecies and Distribution. H. c. ceruinus Gould, 1854 -Sulawesi and adjacent Is, Talaud, Moluccas , Kai, and Aru Is, New Guinea (including Waigeo and Yapen Is), Admiralty Is (Manus), Bismarck and Louisiade archipelagos, NE Australia (Cape York Peninsula and Moa and Albany Is), Solomon Is, and Vanuatu . H. c. labuanensisTomes, 1859 -Malay Peninsula, Sumatra (includingMentawai, Enggano, and Bangka Is), Borneo, Kangean Is, and Philippines ( Palawan and Mindanao Is). Descriptive notes. Head—body 50—55 mm , tail 21—31 mm , ear 14-17-5 mm, forearm 44—53 mm ; weight 6-9 g. There are no other specific measurements available. The Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat is a small to medium-sized Hipposideros . Noseleaf has two supplementary leaflets. Posterior leaf has three vertical septa, which divide the posterior leaf into four cells. Pelage color is variable from grayish brown or yellowish brown to bright orange; ventral side is paler than the dorsal. Habitat. The Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat usually roosts in caves but can also be found in other habitats, e.g. abandoned mines and tree hollows. It forages in lowland forest understory from sea level up to 1400 m . Food and Feeding. The Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat feeds on small beedes, moths, and other insects over shrubs, creeks and water bodies by using aerial and gleaning tactics. It can fly slowly and hover during the gleaning. Breeding. In Madang Province , Papua New Guinea , females give birth to a single young twice a year, with lactation peaks in March and September. Pregnant females were captured in July-September. Females become sexually mature in c.8—9 months. In peninsular Malaysia , lactating females were found throughout the year, with peak pregnancy in February—March. Activity patterns. The Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat emerges from the roost at sunset, and sets off, flying fast within 3 m of the ground, for its foraging grounds. It is a cavedwelling species. Echolocation is a typical CF/FM type, with a call frequency of the F segment of 144—145 kHz, with the FM segment dropping to 120 kHz. In Peninsular Malaysia , call frequency is 126 kHz. Movements, Home range and Social organization. Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bats roost gregariously. Colony size can be thousands of individuals. In Niah Caves, Borneo, colony size was estimated at up to 250,000 individuals. The species can be found sharing the roost with Bicolored Leaf-nosed Bats { H. bicolor ) and antor ’s Leaf-nosed Bats { H. galeritus ). Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on IUCN Red List. This species is common to abundant in caves throughout its range, and forms large colonies. Bibliography. Bonaccorso (1998), Corbet & Hill (1992), Csorba, Bumrumgsri, Francis, Bates, Gumal, Hall & Bonaccorso (2008), Francis (2008a), Heaney eta/. (1998), Kingston eta/. (2006), Phillipps & Phillipps (2016), Simmons (2005).	Simmons, N.B. and A.L. Cirranello. 2022B. Bat Species of the World: A taxonomic and geographic database. Accessed on 10/11/2022.	Hipposideridae	Hipposideros cervinus	Hipposideros		cervinus	Gould	1854	1	Mamm. Austr.	3: pl. 34	Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat	 celebensis Sody, 1936; <b>batchianus</b> Matschie, 1901; <b>labuanensis</b> Tomes, 1859; schneidersi Thomas, 1904; <b> misoriensis </b> Peters, 1906.	Australia, Queensland, Cape York and Albany Isl.	W Malaysia, Sumatra, Sarawak Borneo, and Mindanao (Philippines) to the Mollucca Isls, Vanuatu, and NE Australia. Specimens from Mansuar Isl (Prov. of Papua, Indonesia) may represent cyclotis (Meinig, 2002).	Not listed.	Least Concern	 bicolor species group. Distinct from galeritus; see Flannery (1995a, b). Also see Jenkins and Hill (1981) and Hill (1983).	Mammal Diversity Database. (2023). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 1.11) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7830771 released 15 April 2023	Hipposideros cervinus	23	Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat	Fawn Horseshoe Bat|Fawn Roundleaf Bat|Fawn-colored Roundleaf Bat|Gould's Leaf-nosed Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	PTEROPODIFORMES	NA	NA	RHINOLOPHOIDEA	HIPPOSIDERIDAE	NA	NA	Hipposideros	NA	cervinus	Gould	1854	1	Rhinlophus_cervinus	Gould, J. (1854). The mammals of Australia. Taylor and Francis, London, v.3, pl. 34.	https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/197034#page/145/mode/1up	BM 1855.11.7.13		Cape York and Albany Island, Queensland, Australia.			cervinus (Gould, 1854)|labuanensis (Tomes, 1859)|batchianus Matschie, 1901|schneidersi O. Thomas, 1904|misoriensis (W. Peters, 1906)|celebensis Sody, 1936	NA	NA	Malaysia|Singapore?|Indonesia|Brunei|Philippines|Papua New Guinea|Australia|Solomon Islands|Vanuatu	Asia|Oceania	Indomalaya|Australasia/Oceania	LC	0	0	0	Hipposideros_cervinus	0	sciname match	Hipposideros_cervinus	0	IUCN. 2022. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2022-1. https://www.iucnredlist.org. Accessed on [28 September, 2022].	10118	Hipposideros cervinus	ANIMALIA	CHORDATA	MAMMALIA	CHIROPTERA	HIPPOSIDERIDAE	Hipposideros	cervinus	(Gould, 1863)	<span id="docs-internal-guid-7f17190e-7fff-ced2-b6c7-b8a5ef17fb2a">The taxonomic status and distribution of this species were discussed by Jenkins and Hill (1981). The possibility for species-level distinctness of any of the allopatric island groups spread from Peninsula Malaysia, through Indonesia, to the Solomon Islands has not been subject to rigorous taxonomic evaluation with modern methods, but a study with sufficient geographic sampling is likely to result in the discovery of cryptic species.	20000000	Hipposideros cervinus	Least Concern		2021	2020-12-10 00:00:00 UTC	3.1	English	This species is assessed as Least Concern given its wide distribution, use of a broad range of forested habitats, presumed large population size, occurrence in protected areas, and the absence of evidence for a decline. It is considered as Near Threatened in Australia because of evidence of a mild decline within a relatively small extent of occurrence (Woinarski et al. 2014).	<span id="docs-internal-guid-c78a5fe3-7fff-9987-3a95-243070f5a71c"><p>This species has been recorded from primary and secondary tropical moist forest and also from open forest habitats. It roosts in caves (especially large caves), abandoned mines and in hollow trees. Many hundreds of individuals may be encountered at a single roost. The females give birth to a single young (Flannery 1995, Bonaccorso 1998).</p>	There appear to be no major threats to this species that could cause widespread or imminent decline. It may be threatened in parts of its range by collection for food and disturbance within cave roosts. It is a species of the forest interior and thus is impacted by forest removal. Some roost caves have been lost in Australia (Woinarski et al. 2014).	It is generally a common species but there have not been comprehensive surveys of its population size in any part of its distribution. Some small-scale studies have been undertaken (e.g. Piter et al. 2015). There is evidence of population decline but not at a rate sufficient for listing (e.g. Woinarski et al. 2014).	Decreasing	This widespread species ranges from Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore (where it is possibly extinct), through the island of Sumatra and the Mentawai Islands (Indonesia), to the island of Borneo (Brunei, Indonesia and Malaysia), the Philippines (Mindanao and Palawan, Heaney et al. 1998), Sulawesi (Indonesia), several Moluccan Islands (Indonesia), the Kai Islands (Indonesia), the Aru Islands (Indonesia), Yapen Island (Papua Province, Indonesia), in scattered localities on the island of New Guinea (Indonesia and Papua New Guinea), the Bismarck Archipelago (Papua New Guinea), through the Trobriand Islands (Papua New Guinea), on Bougainville Island (Papua New Guinea), the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu (Jenkins and Hill 1981) to the Cape York Peninsula in north-eastern Queensland, Australia. Found at low elevation habitats between sea level to 1,400 m asl (Bonaccorso 1998).	The species is not known to be used or traded but may be hunted in some parts of its range.	Terrestrial	<span id="docs-internal-guid-e8741a20-7fff-c942-383d-3ae12c2bed12">Key conservation actions for this species are the protection of known roosting sites in caves, and the identification and protection of additional important roosting sites. Broadscale protection of forests will also help maintain population size in this species. Research into the species taxonomy, distribution, population size and trends are needed.	Australasian|Indomalayan		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 	Hipposideridae	Hipposideros		cervinus	Gould	1854	1	Mamm. Austr.	3: pl. 34	Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat	 celebensis Sody, 1936; <b>batchianus</b> Matschie, 1901; <b>labuanensis</b> Tomes, 1859; schneidersi Thomas, 1904; <b> misoriensis </b> Peters, 1906.	Australia, Queensland, Cape York and Albany Isl.	W Malaysia, Sumatra, Sarawak Borneo, and Mindanao (Philippines) to the Mollucca Isls, Vanuatu, and NE Australia. Specimens from Mansuar Isl (Prov. of Papua, Indonesia) may represent cyclotis (Meinig, 2002).	Not listed.	Least Concern	 bicolor species group. Distinct from galeritus; see Flannery (1995a, b). Also see Jenkins and Hill (1981) and Hill (1983).	Hipposideros cervinus	1004585	23	Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat	Fawn Horseshoe Bat|Fawn Roundleaf Bat|Fawn-colored Roundleaf Bat|Gould's Leaf-nosed Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	PTEROPODIFORMES	NA	NA	RHINOLOPHOIDEA	Hipposideridae	NA	NA	Hipposideros	NA	cervinus	Gould	1854	1	Rhinlophus_cervinus	Gould, J. (1854). The mammals of Australia. Taylor and Francis, London, v.3, pl. 34.	https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/197034#page/145/mode/1up	BM 1855.11.7.13		Cape York and Albany Island, Queensland, Australia.			cervinus (Gould, 1854)|labuanensis (Tomes, 1859)|batchianus Matschie, 1901|schneidersi O. Thomas, 1904|misoriensis (W. Peters, 1906)|celebensis Sody, 1936	NA	NA				Malaysia|Singapore?|Indonesia|Brunei|Philippines|Papua New Guinea|Australia|Solomon Islands|Vanuatu	Asia|Oceania	Indomalaya|Australasia/Oceania	LC	0	0	0	Hipposideros_cervinus	0	sciname match	Hipposideros_cervinus	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	Hipposideros_cervinus	1004585	23	Fawn-colored Roundleaf Bat	Fawn Horseshoe Bat|Fawn Roundleaf Bat|Fawn-colored Roundleaf Bat|Gould's Leaf-nosed Bat|Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	Chiroptera	Yinpterochiroptera	NA	NA	Rhinolophoidea	Hipposideridae	NA	NA	Hipposideros	NA	cervinus	J. Gould	1	Rhinolophus cervinus	Gould, J. 1854. [Part vi]. Pl. I-13, I-14, I-34, I-36, I-37, I-38, I-40, II-14, II-15, II-63, II-67, II-69, III-13, III-32, III-34 in Gould, J. 1845-1863. Mammals of Australia. In three volumes. John Gould, London.	https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/49706086	BMNH:Mamm:1855.11.7.13	holotype	https://data.nhm.ac.uk/object/eeae3122-fc60-4740-aaee-272ba4862d57	Cape York and Albany Island, Queensland, Australia.			NA	NA				Malaysia|Singapore?|Indonesia|Brunei|Philippines|Papua New Guinea|Australia|Solomon Islands|Vanuatu	Asia|Oceania (Continent)	Indomalaya|Australasia	LC	0	0	0	Hipposideros_cervinus	0	sciname match	Hipposideros_cervinus	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	Hipposideridae	Hipposideros		cervinus	Gould	1854	1	Mamm. Austr.	3: pl. 34	Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat	celebensis Sody, 1936; batchianus Matschie, 1901; labuanensis Tomes, 1859; schneidersi Thomas, 1904; misoriensis Peters, 1906.	Australia, Queensland, Cape York and Albany Isl.	W Malaysia, Sumatra, Sarawak Borneo, and Mindanao (Philippines) to the Mollucca Isls, Vanuatu, and NE Australia. Specimens from Mansuar Isl (Prov. of Papua, Indonesia) may represent cyclotis (Meinig, 2002).	<a href='https://cites.org/eng/app/appendices.php' target='_blank'>Not Listed</a>	<a href='https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/10118/22093732/' target='_blank'>Least Concern</a>	bicolorspecies group. Distinct from galeritus; see Flannery (1995a, b). Also see Jenkins and Hill (1981) and Hill (1983).		Mammal Diversity Database. (2025). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 2.2) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15007505	NA	Hipposideros cervinus; Hipposideros cervinus; Hipposideros cervinus; Hipposideros cervinus; Hipposideros cervinus; Hipposideros cervinus; cervinus; batchianus; labuanensis; misoriensis; celebensis; labuanensis - schneidersi; ceruinus; labuanensis; batchianus; labuanensis; misoriensis; celebensis; labuanensis - schneidersi; cervinus; labuanensis; batchianus; schneidersi; misoriensis; celebensis; Phyllorhine de Gould; Rehbraune Rundblattnase; Hiposidérido de Gould; awn Horseshoe Bat; awn Roundleaf Bat; Fawn-colored Roundleaf Bat; Gould's Leaf-nosed Bat; Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat; Fawn Horseshoe Bat; Fawn Roundleaf Bat; Fawn-colored Roundleaf Bat; Gould's Leaf-nosed Bat; Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat; Fawn-colored Leaf-nosed Bat; H. cervinus
