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line:xlsx:hash://sha256/181a039844a33e66a35a457b7ece741051086608e425a040051b79581d606b97!/Sheet1!/L764	application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium	Murina florium		[MSW2] Subgenus Murina.; [MSW3] Subgenus Murina. See Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso (1998). The three subspecies are poorly delimited.; [HMW] Murina florium Thomas, 1908 , “ Flores ,” Lesser Sunda Islands , Indonesia . Murina florium appears to be related to M. swilla, M. walstoni , and M. aenea based on very limited genetic data. Three subspecies have been named (nominotypical, lanosa , and toxopei), but they are not recognized here pending additional studies. Monotypic.; [batnames2022] Subgenus Murina . See Flannery (1995 a , b ) and Bonaccorso (1998). The three subspecies are poorly delimited.; [batnames2023] Subgenus Murina . See Flannery (1995 a , b ) and Bonaccorso (1998). The three subspecies are poorly delimited.; [batnames2025_1.7] Subgenus Murina. See Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso (1998). The three subspecies are poorly delimited.						lanosa, toxopei.		florium, lanosa, toxopei				florium, lanosa, toxopei		florium, lanosa, toxopei		florium, lanosa, toxopei		florium, lanosa, toxopei	florium, lanosa, toxopei	florium, lanosa, toxopei		florium O. Thomas, 1908|lanosa O. Thomas, 1910|toxopei O. Thomas, 1923|toxopeusi Laurie & J. Edwards Hill, 1954 [unjustified emendation]		Corbet, G.B. and Hill, J.E. 1980. A World List of Mammalian Species. British Museum (Natural History), London, 226 pp.	Flores tube-nosed bat	Lesser Sunda Is, S Moluccas	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.	Murina florium	Indonesia, Lesser Sunda Isis., Flores.	Thomas	1908	Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 8, 2:371.	Distribution: Ranging from Celebes and the Lesser Sundas to New Guinea and northeastern 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	Flores tube-nosed bat	Lesser Sunda Is, Sulawesi, Moluccas; New Guinea; Bismarck Arch., N Australia; ref. 4.12, 143, 150	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.	Thomas	1908	Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 8, 2:371.	Subgenus Murina.	Lesser Sunda Isis, Sulawesi, New Guinea, NE Australia.	Indonesia, Lesser Sunda Isis, Flores.		THOMAS	1908	Rostrum not particularly massive. Size fairly small (forearm length, 32-37 mm). Canines relatively long.	Distribution: Ranging from Celebes and the Lesser Sundas to New Guinea and northeastern Australia.	Three poorly marked subspecies are usually recognized.		132	species	M. florium	THOMAS	1908	Murina	subgenus	Murina florium				Rostrum not particularly massive. Size fairly small (forearm length, 32-37 mm). Canines relatively long.	Three poorly marked subspecies are usually recognized.		8. M.florium THOMAS 1908 [suilla group],	8	_M. f. florium_ Thomas, 1908; _M. f. lanosa_ Thomas, 1910; _M. f. toxopei_ Thomas, 1923			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	Vespertilionidae	Murininae		Murina florium	Murina	Murina	florium	Thomas		1908		Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 8	2		371		Flores Tube-nosed Bat	Indonesia, Lesser Sunda Isls, Flores.	Lesser Sunda Isls, Sulawesi, Moluccas, Seram, New Guinea including the Bismark Arch, and NE Australia.	IUCN 2003 and IUCN/SSC Action Plan (2001) – Lower Risk (lc).	lanosa Thomas, 1910; toxopei Thomas, 1923.	Subgenus Murina. See Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso (1998). The three subspecies are poorly delimited.	4C3D87E8FF606ADFFF5597A51D02B6AA	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	916	zip:hash://sha256/ec5fd314a06aba1a7b0b72f23e54ac625ae272bd98f82f1d01f4c09627d9e8e0!/treatments-xml-main/data/4C/3D/87/4C3D87E8FF606ADFFF5597A51D02B6AA.xml	Murina florium	Vespertilionidae	Murina	florium	Thomas	1908	Murine de Florés @fr | Flores-Rohrennase @de | Ratonero narizudo de Flores @es | Flute-nosed Bat @en | Tube-nosed @en | nsectivorous Bat @en	Murina florium Thomas, 1908 , “ Flores ,” Lesser Sunda Islands , Indonesia . Murina florium appears to be related to M. swilla, M. walstoni , and M. aenea based on very limited genetic data. Three subspecies have been named (nominotypical, lanosa , and toxopei), but they are not recognized here pending additional studies. Monotypic.	N & SE Sulawesi (including Peleng, Buton, and Kabaena Is), Lesser Sundas (Sumbawa, Flores Is), Moluccas (Bacan, Buru, Ambon , Seram Is), Gorong I, scattered localities in New Guinea , Bismarck Archipelago ( New Britain , Umboi Is), along with NE Australia (NE Queensland , N to Iran Range and S between Shiptons Flat-Cedar Bay area and Mt Zero near Paluma).	Head—body 38-56- 5 mm , tail 30-639 mm , ear 10- 5—14 mm , hindfoot 7- 6-9 mm , forearm 32-2-37- 1 mm ; weight 4-3-10- 9 g . Fur long and woolly. Dorsal pelage is gray-brown to orange rufous brown (hairs with darkto light gray bases); venter is paler (hairs with dark bases). Dorsal pelage extends sparsely onto wings, uropatagium, thumbs, and feet. Face is sparsely haired except for long protuberant naked nostrils. Ears are short, broad, and rounded, with smoothly convex anterior margins, distinct notch on posterior margins, and broadly rounded tips; tragusis long and narrow and tapers toward pointed tip. Wing attaches near base of claw on first toe. Skull is robust, I? is taller than I’, upper premolars are similar in size, and mesostyles of M' and M* are well developed.	Various tropical moist forests, including upland and lowland tropical rainforests with eucalypt understories ( Australia ), dry and wet sclerophyll woodlands, and disturbed forests from sea level up to elevations of ¢. 2800 m (generally more common at high elevations).	Flores Tube-nosed Bats forage in subcanopies and canopies, avoiding open areas. They are slow and maneuverablefliers and can hover in flight. While flying and foraging, they make drawn-out, loud, high-pitched whistles. Based on fecal analysis, diet consists of mostly beetles and spiders, with trace amounts of moths and flies, indicative of a gleaning foraging style.	Births of Flores Tube-nosed Bats most likely occur in October-November in Australia because lactating and post-lactating females have been caught in December. Males with enlarged testes have been caught in December in Australia .	Flores Tube-nosed Bats emerge from roosts at dusk to forage through the night. They hover briefly under their roosts before flying off. They typically roost under and among dead leaves or other foliage such as the curled dead bases of epiphytes,tree ferns, palm fronds, and abandoned nests of Australian warblers (e.g. fernwren, Oreoscopus gutturalis, and yellow-throated scrubwren, Sericornis citreogularis) but can occasionally be found in caves or abandoned buildings. One individual roosted in a nest of a sacred kingfisher (Todiramphus sanctus), which was in a termite mount in a tree. When roosting in foliage, they usually roost 1-8 m aboveground. Some individuals that were released during the day landed on broad leaves and wrapped leaves around them, holding leaves in position using their feet and thumb claws. Calls are low intensity steep FM sweeps, with short durations of 1-5-2 milliseconds and frequencies of ¢.60-120 kHz. These types of calls are effective at detecting sophisticated textures, allowing an individual to see stationary prey in cluttered environments. Unlike in many other echolocating bats, olfactory area of the brain of the Flores Tube-nosed Batis large, and large nostrils likely permit strong sense of smell, although this is uncertain in the genus Munna.	The Flores Tube-nosed Bat almost always roosts alone, with more than 80% of Australian roosts occupied by one individual. It can be found in small groups of up to a dozen individuals. It switches roosts often and will stay at the same roost for up to four days before moving to a new roost from a few meters to 1 km away. It might return to the same roost after a few days. It is found at low densities (20-30 ind/km?).	Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The Flores Tube-nosed Bat is widespread but generally uncommon. In New Guinea , only eight specimens were collected between 1959 and 1990, and it was first discovered in Australia in the early 1980s. It does not currently face any major threats, but it might be locally threatened in Sulawesi by forest clearing and agroforestry. The Flores Tube-nosed Bat is poorly known, and additional studies on its ecology and threats are needed.	Bonaccorso (1998) | Churchill (2008) | Clague (2000) | Clague et al. (1999) | Corbet & Hill (1992) | Csorba et al. (2011) | Flannery (1995a, 1995b) | Hill & Rozendaal (1989) | Hutson, Schlitter, Csorba, Bonaccorso & Hall (2008) | Koopman & Danforth (1989) | Kutt & Schulz (2000) | Ouwendijk et al. (2014) | Patterson et al. (2017) | Richards et al. (1982) | Schulz (1998a) | Schulz & Hannah (1996, 1998) | Schulz et al. (2008) | Van Deusen (1961) | Zeng Xiang et al. (2018)	https://zenodo.org/record/6398604/files/figure.png	351. Flores Tube-nosed Bat Murina florium French: Murine de Florés / German: Flores-Rohrennase / Spanish: Ratonero narizudo de Flores Other common names: Flute-nosed Bat , Tube-nosed Insectivorous Bat Taxonomy. Murina florium Thomas, 1908 , “ Flores ,” Lesser Sunda Islands , Indonesia . Murina florium appears to be related to M. swilla, M. walstoni , and M. aenea based on very limited genetic data. Three subspecies have been named (nominotypical, lanosa , and toxopei), but they are not recognized here pending additional studies. Monotypic. Distribution. N & SE Sulawesi (including Peleng, Buton, and Kabaena Is), Lesser Sundas (Sumbawa, Flores Is), Moluccas (Bacan, Buru, Ambon , Seram Is), Gorong I, scattered localities in New Guinea , Bismarck Archipelago ( New Britain , Umboi Is), along with NE Australia (NE Queensland , N to Iran Range and S between Shiptons Flat-Cedar Bay area and Mt Zero near Paluma). Descriptive notes. Head—body 38-56- 5 mm , tail 30-639 mm , ear 10- 5—14 mm , hindfoot 7- 6-9 mm , forearm 32-2-37- 1 mm ; weight 4-3-10- 9 g . Fur long and woolly. Dorsal pelage is gray-brown to orange rufous brown (hairs with darkto light gray bases); venter is paler (hairs with dark bases). Dorsal pelage extends sparsely onto wings, uropatagium, thumbs, and feet. Face is sparsely haired except for long protuberant naked nostrils. Ears are short, broad, and rounded, with smoothly convex anterior margins, distinct notch on posterior margins, and broadly rounded tips; tragusis long and narrow and tapers toward pointed tip. Wing attaches near base of claw on first toe. Skull is robust, I? is taller than I’, upper premolars are similar in size, and mesostyles of M' and M* are well developed. Habitat. Various tropical moist forests, including upland and lowland tropical rainforests with eucalypt understories ( Australia ), dry and wet sclerophyll woodlands, and disturbed forests from sea level up to elevations of ¢. 2800 m (generally more common at high elevations). Food and Feeding. Flores Tube-nosed Bats forage in subcanopies and canopies, avoiding open areas. They are slow and maneuverablefliers and can hover in flight. While flying and foraging, they make drawn-out, loud, high-pitched whistles. Based on fecal analysis, diet consists of mostly beetles and spiders, with trace amounts of moths and flies, indicative of a gleaning foraging style. Breeding. Births of Flores Tube-nosed Bats most likely occur in October-November in Australia because lactating and post-lactating females have been caught in December. Males with enlarged testes have been caught in December in Australia . Activity patterns. Flores Tube-nosed Bats emerge from roosts at dusk to forage through the night. They hover briefly under their roosts before flying off. They typically roost under and among dead leaves or other foliage such as the curled dead bases of epiphytes,tree ferns, palm fronds, and abandoned nests of Australian warblers (e.g. fernwren, Oreoscopus gutturalis, and yellow-throated scrubwren, Sericornis citreogularis) but can occasionally be found in caves or abandoned buildings. One individual roosted in a nest of a sacred kingfisher (Todiramphus sanctus), which was in a termite mount in a tree. When roosting in foliage, they usually roost 1-8 m aboveground. Some individuals that were released during the day landed on broad leaves and wrapped leaves around them, holding leaves in position using their feet and thumb claws. Calls are low intensity steep FM sweeps, with short durations of 1-5-2 milliseconds and frequencies of ¢.60-120 kHz. These types of calls are effective at detecting sophisticated textures, allowing an individual to see stationary prey in cluttered environments. Unlike in many other echolocating bats, olfactory area of the brain of the Flores Tube-nosed Batis large, and large nostrils likely permit strong sense of smell, although this is uncertain in the genus Munna. Movements, Home range and Social organization. The Flores Tube-nosed Bat almost always roosts alone, with more than 80% of Australian roosts occupied by one individual. It can be found in small groups of up to a dozen individuals. It switches roosts often and will stay at the same roost for up to four days before moving to a new roost from a few meters to 1 km away. It might return to the same roost after a few days. It is found at low densities (20-30 ind/km?). Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The Flores Tube-nosed Bat is widespread but generally uncommon. In New Guinea , only eight specimens were collected between 1959 and 1990, and it was first discovered in Australia in the early 1980s. It does not currently face any major threats, but it might be locally threatened in Sulawesi by forest clearing and agroforestry. The Flores Tube-nosed Bat is poorly known, and additional studies on its ecology and threats are needed. Bibliography. Bonaccorso (1998), Churchill (2008), Clague (2000), Clague et al. (1999), Corbet & Hill (1992), Csorba et al. (2011), Flannery (1995a, 1995b), Hill & Rozendaal (1989), Hutson, Schlitter, Csorba, Bonaccorso & Hall (2008), Koopman & Danforth (1989), Kutt & Schulz (2000), Ouwendijk et al. (2014), Patterson et al. (2017), Richards et al. (1982), Schulz (1998a), Schulz & Hannah (1996, 1998), Schulz et al. (2008), Van Deusen (1961), Zeng Xiang et al. (2018).	Simmons, N.B. and A.L. Cirranello. 2022B. Bat Species of the World: A taxonomic and geographic database. Accessed on 10/11/2022.	Vespertilionidae	Murina florium	Murina	Murina	florium	Thomas	1908	0	Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist.	ser. 8, 2: 371	Flores Tube-nosed Bat	<b> lanosa </b>Thomas, 1910; <b> toxopei </b>Thomas, 1923.	Indonesia, Lesser Sunda Isls, Flores.	Lesser Sunda Isls, Sulawesi, Moluccas, Seram, New Guinea including the Bismark Arch, and NE Australia.	Not listed.	Least Concern	Subgenus Murina . See Flannery (1995 a , b ) and Bonaccorso (1998). The three subspecies are poorly delimited.	Mammal Diversity Database. (2023). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 1.11) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7830771 released 15 April 2023	Murina florium	23	Flores Tube-nosed Bat	Flute-nosed Bat|Tube-nosed Insectivorous Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	VESPERTILIONIFORMES	NA	NA	VESPERTILIONOIDEA	VESPERTILIONIDAE	MURININAE	NA	Murina	NA	florium	O. Thomas	1908	0	Murina_florium	Thomas, O. (1908). New bats and rodents in the British Museum collection. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, ser. 8, 2, 371.	https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/85286#page/401/mode/1up	BM 1863.12.26.14		"Flores," Lesser Sunda Islands, Indonesia.			florium O. Thomas, 1908|lanosa O. Thomas, 1910|toxopei O. Thomas, 1923	NA	NA	Indonesia|Papua New Guinea|Australia	Asia|Oceania	Indomalaya|Australasia/Oceania	LC	0	0	0	Murina_florium	0	sciname match	Murina_florium	0	IUCN. 2022. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2022-1. https://www.iucnredlist.org. Accessed on [28 September, 2022].	13939	Murina florium	ANIMALIA	CHORDATA	MAMMALIA	CHIROPTERA	VESPERTILIONIDAE	Murina	florium	Thomas, 1908		20000000	Murina florium	Least Concern		2021	2021-07-27 00:00:00 UTC	3.1	English	This species is assessed as Least Concern because, although it remains very poorly known within its range, this species has a very wide distribution. Despite occurring at very low densities, it presumably has a population exceeding 10,000 mature individuals across its entire range. It also occurs in several protected areas, and although likely to be declining in some areas, it is unlikely to be declining fast enough within its range to qualify for listing in a threatened category.	This species is mostly recorded from a range of tropical moist forest types typically rainforest, but sometimes from dry or wet sclerophyll woodland where they adjoin rainforests. It roosts as solitary animals, or in small groups of up to a dozen individuals, amongst dead leaves and other foliage, in caves, or sometimes in disused buildings (Burgin 2019, Woinarski et al. 2014, Bonaccorso 1998). This species switches roosts frequently, usually staying in the same roost for 4 days or less before moving to the next roost which may be between a few meters and a kilometer away (Burgin 2019).	This species is likely to be threatened by forestry clearing, agroforestry and establishment of plantations in parts of its range, where it may be locally declining. However, across the entirety of its range the scale of these threats and rate of decline are believed to be below thresholds for listing in a threatened category.	The species is widespread but generally uncommon and typically occurring at low densities. In Australia a study in the Atherton Tablelands, Australia captured 34 individuals in 263 trap nights (Schulz and Hannah 1998) and Reardon et al. (2010) did not find the species in an extensive survey of Cape York Peninsular. In Papua New Guinea only eight specimens were taken between 1959 and 1990 (Bonaccorso 1998). Despite occurring at low densities, its population is estimated to exceed 10,000 mature individuals across its range. It is likely to be declining in some areas but is unlikely to be declining fast enough within its range to qualify for listing in a threatened category.	Unknown	This species has been recorded from north and southeast Sulawesi including Peleng, Buton and Kabena Islands, Flores and Sumbawa islands in the Lesser Sunda Islands, and on the Moluccan Islands of Bacan Batjan, Buru, Ambon, Ceram, and Gorong (all Indonesia). It has been recorded from scattered localities on the island of New Guinea (Indonesia and Papua New Guinea), including the islands of Umboi and New Britain in the Bismarck Archipelago (Papua New Guinea). In Australia, it is known from a number of localities in northern Queensland up to the Iron Range area and then south between the Shiptons Flat-Cedar Bay area and Mount Zero near Paluma (Burgin 2019; Woinarski et al. 2014; Flannery 1995a,b; Bonaccorso 1998). It has been documented from sea level to 2,800 meters asl.	The species is not known to be hunted, used, or traded.	Terrestrial	This species has been recorded from a number of protected areas including Rawa Aopa National Park, Kakanauwe Forest Reserve, and Lambusanga Forest Reserve (Sulawesi, Indonesia), Crater Mountain Wildlife Management Area in Papua New Guinea and several national parks in North Queensland Australia including Mt. Hypipamee, Cedar Bay, and Wallaman Falls National Parks. The species is generally very poorly known and additional information on the species ecology, threats, distribution and population size and trends would be beneficial.	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 	Vespertilionidae	Murina	Murina	florium	Thomas	1908	0	Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist.	ser. 8, 2: 371	Flores Tube-nosed Bat	<b> lanosa </b>Thomas, 1910; <b> toxopei </b>Thomas, 1923.	Indonesia, Lesser Sunda Isls, Flores.	Lesser Sunda Isls, Sulawesi, Moluccas, Seram, New Guinea including the Bismark Arch, and NE Australia.	Not listed.	Least Concern	Subgenus Murina . See Flannery (1995 a , b ) and Bonaccorso (1998). The three subspecies are poorly delimited.	Murina florium	1005329	23	Flores Tube-nosed Bat	Flute-nosed Bat|Tube-nosed Insectivorous Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	VESPERTILIONIFORMES	NA	NA	VESPERTILIONOIDEA	Vespertilionidae	MURININAE	NA	Murina	NA	florium	O. Thomas	1908	0	Murina_florium	Thomas, O. (1908). New bats and rodents in the British Museum collection. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, ser. 8, 2, 371.	https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/85286#page/401/mode/1up	BM 1863.12.26.14		"Flores," Lesser Sunda Islands, Indonesia.			florium O. Thomas, 1908|lanosa O. Thomas, 1910|toxopei O. Thomas, 1923	NA	NA				Indonesia|Papua New Guinea|Australia	Asia|Oceania	Indomalaya|Australasia/Oceania	LC	0	0	0	Murina_florium	0	sciname match	Murina_florium	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	Murina_florium	1005329	23	Flores Tube-nosed Bat	Flute-nosed Bat|Tube-nosed Insectivorous Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	Chiroptera	Yangochiroptera	NA	NA	Vespertilionoidea	Vespertilionidae	Murininae	NA	Murina	NA	florium	O. Thomas	0	Murina florium	Thomas, O. 1908-10-01. New bats and rodents in the British Museum collection. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (8)2(10):370-375.	https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/26494463	BMNH:Mamm:1863.12.26.14	holotype	https://data.nhm.ac.uk/object/f8697442-696f-47fb-90c4-5c4bb2dc9ea4	"Flores," Lesser Sunda Islands, Indonesia.			NA	NA				Indonesia|Papua New Guinea|Australia	Asia|Oceania (Continent)	Indomalaya|Australasia	LC	0	0	0	Murina_florium	0	sciname match	Murina_florium	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	Vespertilionidae	Murina	Murina	florium	Thomas	1908	0	Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist.	ser. 8, 2: 371	Flores Tube-nosed Bat	lanosa Thomas, 1910; toxopei Thomas, 1923.	Indonesia, Lesser Sunda Isls, Flores.	Lesser Sunda Isls, Sulawesi, Moluccas, Seram, New Guinea including the Bismark Arch, and NE Australia.	<a href='https://cites.org/eng/app/appendices.php' target='_blank'>Not Listed</a>	<a href='https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/13939/22094567/' target='_blank'>Least Concern</a>	Subgenus Murina. See Flannery (1995a, b) and Bonaccorso (1998). The three subspecies are poorly delimited.		Mammal Diversity Database. (2025). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 2.2) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15007505	NA	Murina florium; Murina florium; Murina florium; Murina florium; Murina florium; Murina florium; florium; lanosa; toxopei; lanosa; toxopei; florium; lanosa; toxopei; Murine de Florés; Flores-Rohrennase; Ratonero narizudo de Flores; Flute-nosed Bat; Tube-nosed; nsectivorous Bat; Flores Tube-nosed Bat; Flute-nosed Bat; Tube-nosed Insectivorous Bat; Flores Tube-nosed Bat; Flores Tube-nosed Bat; M. florium
