Northern long-eared bat

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Northern long-eared bat is a common name for several flying mammals, species of Chiroptera

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gould's long-eared bat</span> Species of bat

Gould's long-eared bat is a microbat found in southern regions of Australia. It occurs in eastern Australia, from Queensland to Victoria, and in a smaller isolated range in the south-west of Western Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brown bat</span> Index of animals with the same common name

Brown bat may refer to:

<i>Nyctophilus arnhemensis</i> Species of bat

Nyctophilus arnhemensis, known as the northern or Arnhem long-eared bat, is a species of Chiroptera (bats) native to northern regions of Australia. The distribution range is from north-western Queensland to northern Western Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eastern long-eared bat</span> Species of bat

The eastern long-eared bat, species Nyctophilus bifax, is a small flying mammal, a vespertilionid bat. It is found in eastern Australia and Papua New Guinea.

<i>Nyctophilus geoffroyi</i> Species of bat

Nyctophilus geoffroyi is a vespertilionid bat. a flying nocturnal mammal found in Australia, The species is relatively common. They have been referred to as the lesser long-eared bat.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lord Howe long-eared bat</span> Species of mammal

The Lord Howe long-eared bat was a vespertilionid bat known only by a single specimen, a skull found on Lord Howe Island in 1972. A mammalian insectivorous species resembling the long-eared Nyctophilus, with an elongated head that is comparatively larger, about which almost nothing is known. The bat may have been casually observed in flight during the twentieth century, but is likely to have become extinct since the island's discovery and occupation. The demise of N. howensis is possibly the result of shipwrecked rats and the owls introduced to control them.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Small-toothed long-eared bat</span> Species of bat

The small-toothed long-eared bat is a species of vespertilionid bat found only in Papua New Guinea.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Southeastern long-eared bat</span> Species of bat

The south-eastern long-eared bat or Corben's long-eared bat, is a species of bat found in Australia. It occurs in the woodlands of the Murray Darling Basin and adjacent areas.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pygmy long-eared bat</span> Species of bat

The pygmy long-eared bat is a vesper bat, found in the north of the Australian continent. An insectivorous flying hunter, they are one of the tiniest mammals in Australia, weighing only a few grams and one or two inches long.

<i>Myotis macropus</i> Species of bat

The southern myotis, also known as large-footed myotis, is a species of vesper bat (Vespertilionidae) in genus Myotis. The southern myotis is one of only two Australian "fishing" bats and feeds by trawling its specially adapted feet along the water's surface for aquatic invertebrates and fish.

The New Caledonian long-eared bat is a vesper bat found in New Caledonia. They are only recorded at Mount Koghis, near Nouméa, and the population is decreasing.

Western long-eared bat may refer to the following bat species:

Nyctophilus daedalus is a species of bat in the family Vespertilionidae, a flying mammal endemic to northern Australia. They are also referred to as the pallid long-eared bat or northern long-eared bat.

<i>Nyctophilus major</i> Species of bat

Nyctophilus major, referred to as a western long-eared bat, is a species found in forests and woodlands of Southwest Australia.