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line:xlsx:hash://sha256/181a039844a33e66a35a457b7ece741051086608e425a040051b79581d606b97!/Sheet1!/L852	application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis dasycneme		[MSW2] Subgenus Leuconoe. Probably includes surinamensis; see Carter and Dolan (1978:73).; [MSW3] Probably includes surinamensis; see Carter and Dolan (1978).; [HMW] Vespertilio dasycneme Boie, 1825 , Jutland, Denmark . Subgenus Myotis ; sole member of the dasycneme species group. The relationship of M. dasycneme to other species in the subgenus Myotis is relatively uncertain and there do not appear to be any species closely related to M. dasycneme , supporting the recognition of its monospecific species group. The forms major and lmnophilus are synonyms of dasycneme . Monotypic.; [batnames2022] Probably includes surinamensis ; see Carter and Dolan (1978).; [batnames2023] Probably includes surinamensis ; see Carter and Dolan (1978).; [batnames2025_1.7] Probably includes surinamensis; see Carter and Dolan (1978).				surinamensis		limnophilus, major.			ferrugineus, limnophilus, major, mystacinus, surinamensis, ferrugineus		major, limnophilus	dasycneme 	dasycneme - ferrugineus, limnophilus, major, mystacinus, surinamensis	ferrugineus, mystacinus, dasycneme, limnophilus, major, surinamensis		dasycneme 	dasycneme - ferrugineus, limnophilus, major, mystacinus, surinamensis (ferrugineus)	ferrugineus, mystacinus, dasycneme, limnophilus, major, surinamensis 	mystacinus, dasycneme, dasycnemus, ferrugineus, limnophilus, major, surinamensis	dasycneme	dasycneme- ferrugineus, limnophilus, major, mystacinus, surinamensis	dasycneme (F. Boie, 1825)|dasycnemus (von Keyserling & J. H. Blasius, 1839) [incorrect subsequent spelling]|ferrugineus (Temminck, 1840) [preoccupied]|limnophilus (Temminck, 1840)|major Ognev & Vorob'yev, 1923|surinamensis Husson, 1962 [nomen novum]		Corbet, G.B. and Hill, J.E. 1980. A World List of Mammalian Species. British Museum (Natural History), London, 226 pp.	Pond bat	E France – Manchuria	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.	Myotis dasycneme	Denmark, Jutland, Dagbieg (near Wiborg).	Boie	1825	Isis Jena, p. 1200.	Distribution: Ranging form northwestern Europe east to central Siberia and northeastern China.		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	Pond bat	E France – Manchuria; K	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.	Boie	1825	Isis Jena, p. 1200.	Subgenus Leuconoe. Probably includes surinamensis; see Carter and Dolan (1978:73).	France and Sweden east to Yenisei River (Russia), south to Ukraine and NW Kazakhstan; a single record from Manchuria (China).	Denmark, Jutland, Dagbieg (near Wiborg).		BOIE	1825	Size fairly large (forearm length, 43-48 mm). Foot relatively large. Margin of plagiopatagium attached near ankle. No fringe of hair on margin of uropatagium. Braincase fairly low. Rostrum relatively broad. Middle upper premolar displaced medially from toothrow.	Distribution: Ranging form northwestern Europe east to central Siberia and northeastern China.	No currently recognized subspecies.		109	species	M. dasycneme	BOIE	1825	Leuconoe	subgenus	Myotis dasycneme				Size fairly large (forearm length, 43-48 mm). Foot relatively large. Margin of plagiopatagium attached near ankle. No fringe of hair on margin of uropatagium. Braincase fairly low. Rostrum relatively broad. Middle upper premolar displaced medially from toothrow.	No currently recognized subspecies.		82. M. dasycneme (BOIE 1825) [dasycneme group].	82	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	Vespertilionidae	Myotinae		Myotis dasycneme	Myotis		dasycneme	Boie	y	1825		Isis Jena			1200		Pond Myotis	Denmark, Jutland, Dagbieg (near Wiborg).	France and Sweden east to Yenisei River (Russia), south to Ukraine, NW Kazakhstan; a single record from Manchuria (China).	IUCN 2003 and IUCN/SSC Action Plan (2001) – Vulnerable.	ferrugineus Temminck, 1840 [not Brehm, 1827]; limnophilus Temminck, 1839; major Ognev and Worobiev, 1923; mystacinus Boie, 1823 [not Kuhl, 1819]; surinamensis Husson, 1962 [replacement name for ferrugineus Temminck, 1840].	Probably includes surinamensis; see Carter and Dolan (1978).	4C3D87E8FF3A6A85FF8693F2183FBF37	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	955	zip:hash://sha256/ec5fd314a06aba1a7b0b72f23e54ac625ae272bd98f82f1d01f4c09627d9e8e0!/treatments-xml-main/data/4C/3D/87/4C3D87E8FF3A6A85FF8693F2183FBF37.xml	Myotis dasycneme	Vespertilionidae	Myotis	dasycneme		1825	Murin des marais @fr | Teichfledermaus @de | Ratonero lagunero @es | Pond Bat @en	Vespertilio dasycneme Boie, 1825 , Jutland, Denmark . Subgenus Myotis ; sole member of the dasycneme species group. The relationship of M. dasycneme to other species in the subgenus Myotis is relatively uncertain and there do not appear to be any species closely related to M. dasycneme , supporting the recognition of its monospecific species group. The forms major and lmnophilus are synonyms of dasycneme . Monotypic.	C & E Europe, from S Sweden to N France , Germany and Poland , and E to Yenisei River in C Russia ; isolated populations in Hungary , Romania , Ukraine , and N Kazakhstan .	Head—body 57-68 mm , tail 46-51 mm , ear 17-18 mm , hindfoot 11-12 mm , forearm 43-49 mm ; weight 13-18 g . Fur is shaggy. Dorsal pelage of the Pond Myotis is brown to grayish brown; ventral pelage is lighter gray to yellowish white. Bare face and arms are brown and ears and membranes are grayish brown; there are characteristic dark warts on sides of snout. Ears are relatively short with no notch on outer edge; tragus is shorter than one-half the ear height and is relatively broad compared to congeners. Wings attach at heel and feet are large and strong with long bristles (similar to the Long-fingered Myotis , M. capaccinii ). Calcar is straight but comparatively short, only extending one-third the way to tailtip. Skull has relatively flat forehead region and comparatively well-developed sagittal crest near posterior portion of cranium. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 44 and FNa = 52 ( Russia ).	The Pond Myotis occurs from sea level up to 1500 m , almost always strongly dependent on aquatic habitats, such as canals, rivers, streams, lakes or ponds; commonly by slow-flowing, broad rivers. During summerit occurs in lowland meadows and forests but it moves to the foothills during autumn and winter.	Commonly seen hunting on canals,rivers or lakes, especially those with open banks. The Pond Myotis is one of the few species specialized in feeding above open,still water surfaces using a trawling foraging strategy, involving the uropatagium. This foraging strategy allows it to capture prey straight off still water surfaces, even emerging chironomid midges. It tendsto fly a little higher and faster ( 7-9 m /s) than Daubenton’s Myotis ( M. daubentonii ) or the Long-fingered Myotis , thus preferring clutter-free banks. This species sometimes forages at forest edge and over meadows, and sporadically even over the sea, during the mass emergence of small crabs. It feeds mainly on aquatic insects such as gnats, mosquitoes and caddisflies over water, and beetles and moths at forest edge.	Maternity colonies usually harbor less than a hundred females, but in few cases, can number up to 750; males rarely form colonies of more than a few dozen. Females became sexually active during their second year. Sometimes, two young are born. Life span reported to be up to 21 years.	Roosts tend to be in houses or other old buildings, in attics, churches or empty cavities in roofs; only occasionally in trees, rock crevices, or bat boxes. Colonies of several thousand roosting together have occasionally been found in Denmark . Echolocation calls resemble the typical pulses of all European Myotis , with broadband FM signals,starting at 65-85 kHz and ending at 25-35 kHz.	Not a long-distance migrant, but it can migrate from lowlands to low mountains. During hibernation, it tends to shift roosts, and roosts either individually or in small clusters, in cellars, caves or bunkers. Winter roosts tend to be separated from summer ones by distances of 100-350 km ; for commuting between thesites the species needs quality forest for connecting corridors.	Classified as Near Threatened on The IUCN Red List. There are no estimates but populations are suspected to have slumped in recent decades, especially in the Netherlands ; now one of rarest bat species in Europe. Continued degradation of aquatic habitats, water pollution and destruction of riparian habitats might compromise its survival in the near future; roost disturbance and loss are also major threats, and many of the known maternity colonies have been lost in recent decades. More information is needed from the eastern part ofits distribution.	Britton et al. (1997) | Ciechanowski & Zapart (2012) | Ciechanowski, Sachanowicz & Kokurewicz (2007) | Ciechanowski, Zapart et al. (2017) | Hutson et al. (2001) | Krlger et al. (2012) | Kuijper et al. (2008) | Leeuwangh & Volte (1985) | Limpens et al. (2000) | Orlova & Zapart (2012) | Pacifici et al. (2013) | Piraccini (2016f) | Reinhold et al. (1999) | Roer (2001) | Van de Sijpe et al. (2004) | Verboom et al. (1999) | Volleth & Heller (2012) | Volte et al. (1974)	https://zenodo.org/record/6398857/files/figure.png	437. Pond Myotis Myotis dasycneme French: Murin des marais / German: Teichfledermaus / Spanish: Ratonero lagunero Other common names: Pond Bat Taxonomy. Vespertilio dasycneme Boie, 1825 , Jutland, Denmark . Subgenus Myotis ; sole member of the dasycneme species group. The relationship of M. dasycneme to other species in the subgenus Myotis is relatively uncertain and there do not appear to be any species closely related to M. dasycneme , supporting the recognition of its monospecific species group. The forms major and lmnophilus are synonyms of dasycneme . Monotypic. Distribution. C & E Europe, from S Sweden to N France , Germany and Poland , and E to Yenisei River in C Russia ; isolated populations in Hungary , Romania , Ukraine , and N Kazakhstan . Descriptive notes. Head—body 57-68 mm , tail 46-51 mm , ear 17-18 mm , hindfoot 11-12 mm , forearm 43-49 mm ; weight 13-18 g . Fur is shaggy. Dorsal pelage of the Pond Myotis is brown to grayish brown; ventral pelage is lighter gray to yellowish white. Bare face and arms are brown and ears and membranes are grayish brown; there are characteristic dark warts on sides of snout. Ears are relatively short with no notch on outer edge; tragus is shorter than one-half the ear height and is relatively broad compared to congeners. Wings attach at heel and feet are large and strong with long bristles (similar to the Long-fingered Myotis , M. capaccinii ). Calcar is straight but comparatively short, only extending one-third the way to tailtip. Skull has relatively flat forehead region and comparatively well-developed sagittal crest near posterior portion of cranium. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 44 and FNa = 52 ( Russia ). Habitat. The Pond Myotis occurs from sea level up to 1500 m , almost always strongly dependent on aquatic habitats, such as canals, rivers, streams, lakes or ponds; commonly by slow-flowing, broad rivers. During summerit occurs in lowland meadows and forests but it moves to the foothills during autumn and winter. Food and Feeding. Commonly seen hunting on canals,rivers or lakes, especially those with open banks. The Pond Myotis is one of the few species specialized in feeding above open,still water surfaces using a trawling foraging strategy, involving the uropatagium. This foraging strategy allows it to capture prey straight off still water surfaces, even emerging chironomid midges. It tendsto fly a little higher and faster ( 7-9 m /s) than Daubenton’s Myotis ( M. daubentonii ) or the Long-fingered Myotis , thus preferring clutter-free banks. This species sometimes forages at forest edge and over meadows, and sporadically even over the sea, during the mass emergence of small crabs. It feeds mainly on aquatic insects such as gnats, mosquitoes and caddisflies over water, and beetles and moths at forest edge. Breeding. Maternity colonies usually harbor less than a hundred females, but in few cases, can number up to 750; males rarely form colonies of more than a few dozen. Females became sexually active during their second year. Sometimes, two young are born. Life span reported to be up to 21 years. Activity patterns. Roosts tend to be in houses or other old buildings, in attics, churches or empty cavities in roofs; only occasionally in trees, rock crevices, or bat boxes. Colonies of several thousand roosting together have occasionally been found in Denmark . Echolocation calls resemble the typical pulses of all European Myotis , with broadband FM signals,starting at 65-85 kHz and ending at 25-35 kHz. Movements, Home range and Social organization. Not a long-distance migrant, but it can migrate from lowlands to low mountains. During hibernation, it tends to shift roosts, and roosts either individually or in small clusters, in cellars, caves or bunkers. Winter roosts tend to be separated from summer ones by distances of 100-350 km ; for commuting between thesites the species needs quality forest for connecting corridors. Status and Conservation. Classified as Near Threatened on The IUCN Red List. There are no estimates but populations are suspected to have slumped in recent decades, especially in the Netherlands ; now one of rarest bat species in Europe. Continued degradation of aquatic habitats, water pollution and destruction of riparian habitats might compromise its survival in the near future; roost disturbance and loss are also major threats, and many of the known maternity colonies have been lost in recent decades. More information is needed from the eastern part ofits distribution. Bibliography. Britton et al. (1997), Ciechanowski & Zapart (2012), Ciechanowski, Sachanowicz & Kokurewicz (2007), Ciechanowski, Zapart et al. (2017), Hutson et al. (2001), Krlger et al. (2012), Kuijper et al. (2008), Leeuwangh & Volte (1985), Limpens et al. (2000), Orlova & Zapart (2012), Pacifici et al. (2013), Piraccini (2016f), Reinhold et al. (1999), Roer (2001), Van de Sijpe et al. (2004), Verboom et al. (1999), Volleth & Heller (2012), Volte et al. (1974).	Simmons, N.B. and A.L. Cirranello. 2022B. Bat Species of the World: A taxonomic and geographic database. Accessed on 10/11/2022.	Vespertilionidae	Myotis dasycneme	Myotis	Unassigned-Myotis	dasycneme	Boie	1825	1	Isis Jena	p. 1200	Pond Myotis	 ferrugineus Temminck, 1840 [not Brehm, 1827]; limnophilus Temminck, 1839; major Ognev and Worobiev, 1923; mystacinus Boie, 1823 [not Kuhl, 1819]; surinamensis Husson, 1962 [replacement name for ferrugineus Temminck, 1840].	Denmark, Jutland, Dagbieg (near Wiborg).	France and Sweden east to Yenisei River (Russia), south to Ukraine, NW Kazakhstan; a single record from Manchuria (China).	Not listed.	Near Threatened	Probably includes surinamensis ; see Carter and Dolan (1978).	Mammal Diversity Database. (2023). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 1.11) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7830771 released 15 April 2026	Myotis dasycneme	23	Pond Myotis	Pond Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	VESPERTILIONIFORMES	NA	NA	VESPERTILIONOIDEA	VESPERTILIONIDAE	MYOTINAE	NA	Myotis	Myotis	dasycneme	Boie	1825	1						Jutland, Denmark.			ferrugineus (Temminck, 1823) [preoccupied]|mystacinus (Boie, 1823) [preoccupied]|dasycneme (Boie, 1825)|limnophilus (Temminck, 1839)|major Ognev & Worobiev, 1923|surinamensis Husson, 1962	NA	NA	France|Netherlands|Luxembourg|Belgium|Germany|Denmark|Sweden|Czech Republic|Croatia|Hungary|Slovakia|Serbia|Romania|Moldova|Ukraine|Poland|Estonia|Latvia|Lithuania|Belarus|Russia|Kazakhstan	Asia|Europe	Palearctic	NT	0	0	0	Myotis_dasycneme	0	sciname match	Myotis_dasycneme	0	IUCN. 2022. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2022-1. https://www.iucnredlist.org. Accessed on [28 September, 2022].	14127	Myotis dasycneme	ANIMALIA	CHORDATA	MAMMALIA	CHIROPTERA	VESPERTILIONIDAE	Myotis	dasycneme	(Boie, 1825)		20000000	Myotis dasycneme	Near Threatened		2016	2016-04-25 00:00:00 UTC	3.1	English	The species' range is wide but it is specialised to feeding above water courses and water bodies. Loss and degradation of aquatic habitats may threaten the species. There has been a rapid decline in the past in at least parts of Europe, and although this decline may now have slowed, it is nevertheless suspected to approach 30% over the last 15 years (3 generations). Consequently the species is assessed as Near Threatened (approaching A2c). Better knowledge on population trends, particularly in eastern parts of its range for which there is currently little information, might result in a downlisting to Least Concern.	This species feeds principally over open calm water, particularly canals, rivers and lakes, on small emerging and emergent insects, often taken from the water surface. It prefers water lined by open rough vegetation without trees. Most of the known summer maternity roosts are in buildings, often in large attics and church steeples, in groups of 40-600. Some tree and bat box roosts are recorded. It frequently hibernates in underground habitats ranging from natural caves to cellars and bunkers. It is a partial migrant, with winter and summer roosts often separated by more than 100 km (maximum recorded: 350 km, and it may need good habitat links between summer and winter roosts.	Threatened by habitat change, including renovation and maintenance of buildings with roosts involving the use of chemicals for remedial timber treatment that are toxic to mammals. Few nursery roost sites are known and many of these have been lost, although numbers in hibernation sites have shown a slower decline in The Netherlands. Water pollution may also be a threat; the species already has a relatively restricted foraging habitat of broad, open flat water of canals, rivers and lakes with relatively open banks, with possibly some further seasonal (summer) restriction within utilized habitat. Such restrictions in summer may be opportunistic rather than enforced, and it may be that the requirements for wider dispersal in spring, and possibly autumn, is more of a conservation problem than concentration in summer in good foraging habitat close to the roost. The requirements during migration are not known and may be a constraint (Limpens et al. 2000, Hutson et al. 2001)	It is rarely abundant, and ranks among the rarest bat species in Europe. Summer colonies usually less than 100, but can reach 500. In winter sites, usually roost singly or small groups of up to 10, few sites with more than 200 individuals (maximum 700). Although no quantitative data on population trends are available, the species is reported as seriously declining in much of Europe.	Decreasing	Myotis dasycneme occurs from north-west Europe (north-western France and southern Scandinavia) south to Serbia and Montenegro, Ukraine, and north Kazakhstan and east to the River Yenisey in central Russia, with a few records from China. Historic or subfossil records exist from Switzerland, Austria and the former Yugoslavia. It has been recorded from sea level to 1,500 m.		Terrestrial	Protected in all European range states, and in some other parts of its global range. In Europe it is included in Annex II of the EC Council Directive on the Conservation of Natural Habitats and of Wild Fauna and Flora 1992 (EC Habitats Directive) requiring full protection and designation of Special Areas of Conservation to maintain it and its habitats. Other international treaties of relevance are the Agreement on the Conservation of Bats in Europe (Bonn Convention 1994), Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats (the Bern Convention 1982) and Bern Convention Recommendation 36 (1992, Conservation of Underground Habitats). Most European range states are party to at least one of these treaties.	Palearctic		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	Myotis	Unassigned - Myotis	dasycneme	Boie	1825	1	Isis Jena	p. 1200	Pond Myotis	 ferrugineus Temminck, 1840 [not Brehm, 1827]; limnophilus Temminck, 1839; major Ognev and Worobiev, 1923; mystacinus Boie, 1823 [not Kuhl, 1819]; surinamensis Husson, 1962 [replacement name for ferrugineus Temminck, 1840].	Denmark, Jutland, Dagbieg (near Wiborg).	France and Sweden east to Yenisei River (Russia), south to Ukraine, NW Kazakhstan; a single record from Manchuria (China).	Not listed.	Near Threatened	Probably includes surinamensis ; see Carter and Dolan (1978).	Myotis dasycneme	1005394	23	Pond Myotis	Pond Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	CHIROPTERA	VESPERTILIONIFORMES	NA	NA	VESPERTILIONOIDEA	Vespertilionidae	MYOTINAE	NA	Myotis	Myotis	dasycneme	Boie	1825	1						Jutland, Denmark.			ferrugineus (Temminck, 1823) [preoccupied]|mystacinus (Boie, 1823) [preoccupied]|dasycneme (Boie, 1825)|limnophilus (Temminck, 1839)|major Ognev & Worobiev, 1923|surinamensis Husson, 1962	NA	NA				France|Netherlands|Luxembourg|Belgium|Germany|Denmark|Sweden|Czech Republic|Croatia|Hungary|Slovakia|Serbia|Romania|Moldova|Ukraine|Poland|Estonia|Latvia|Lithuania|Belarus|Russia|Kazakhstan	Asia|Europe	Palearctic	NT	0	0	0	Myotis_dasycneme	0	sciname match	Myotis_dasycneme	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	Myotis_dasycneme	1005394	23	Pond Myotis	Pond Bat	Theria	Placentalia	Boreoeutheria	Laurasiatheria	Chiroptera	Yangochiroptera	NA	NA	Vespertilionoidea	Vespertilionidae	Myotinae	NA	Myotis	Myotis	dasycneme	F. Boie	1	Vespertilio dasycneme	Boie, F. 1825. BeytrÃ¤ge zur Naturgeschichte europÃ¤ischer 4fÃ¼ÃŸiger Thiere. Isis von Oken 1825:1199-1206.	https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/27509441				Jutland, Denmark.			NA	NA				France|Netherlands|Luxembourg|Belgium|Germany|Denmark|Sweden|Czech Republic|Croatia|Hungary|Slovakia|Serbia|Romania|Moldova|Ukraine|Poland|Estonia|Latvia|Lithuania|Belarus|Russia|Kazakhstan	Asia|Europe	Palearctic	NT	0	0	0	Myotis_dasycneme	0	sciname match	Myotis_dasycneme	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	Myotis	Myotis	dasycneme	Boie	1825	1	Isis Jena	p. 1200	Pond Myotis	ferrugineus Temminck, 1840 [not Brehm, 1827]; limnophilus Temminck, 1839; major Ognev and Worobiev, 1923; mystacinus Boie, 1823 [not Kuhl, 1819]; surinamensis Husson, 1962 [replacement name for ferrugineus Temminck, 1840].	Denmark, Jutland, Dagbieg (near Wiborg).	France and Sweden east to Yenisei River (Russia), south to Ukraine, NW Kazakhstan; a single record from Manchuria (China).	<a href='https://cites.org/eng/app/appendices.php' target='_blank'>Not Listed</a>	<a href='https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/14127/22055164/' target='_blank'>Near Threatened</a>	Probably includes surinamensis; see Carter and Dolan (1978).		Mammal Diversity Database. (2025). Mammal Diversity Database (Version 2.2) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15007505	NA	Myotis dasycneme; Myotis dasycneme; Myotis dasycneme; Myotis dasycneme; Myotis dasycneme; Myotis dasycneme; ferrugineus; limnophilus; major; mystacinus; surinamensis; ferrugineus; major; limnophilus; ferrugineus; limnophilus; major; mystacinus; surinamensis; ferrugineus; mystacinus; dasycneme; limnophilus; major; surinamensis; Murin des marais; Teichfledermaus; Ratonero lagunero; Pond Bat; Pond Myotis; Pond Bat; Pond Myotis; Pond Myotis; M. dasycneme
