Great roundleaf bat

However, the great roundleaf bat is larger and possesses four, not three, lateral accessory leaflets on each side of the main noseleaf.

Females have been found pregnant from January to early May, while the young were seen attached to their mothers from February to June.

[1][2] The bat is insectivorous, with its diet mainly being composed of beetles, butterflies and moths, flies, and Hymenoptera.

It has been observed foraging in cleared woodland, gardens, between avenues of trees, and around street lights.

It has been recorded in Northern and Northeastern India, along with Central, Eastern and Western Nepal in South Asia.

It is found south of the Yangtze river in China, and has also been recorded on the islands of Hong Kong and Taiwan.