[3] This species of stripe-faced fruit bat is known only from the type locality in western Mindoro Island, Philippines.
L. cadenai was found only on the central Pacific coastal plain, Valle del Cauca, southwestern Colombia.
[12] This new species inhabits the xeric mountain ranges in Central Asia (Afghanistan, China, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Tajikistan).
[15] A new genus and species in the tribe Lonchophyllini, subfamily Glossophaginae (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae) was described based on the analysis of 4 specimens collected in 3 different localities in a semiarid area of northeastern Brazil.
[19] A very small Subsaharan Myotis, with a forearm length of 37 mm, brown dorsal and greyish ventral pelage.
It differs from all other Murina species by its second upper incisor being shorter than the first, and from all but one by the insertion of its tail membrane on the base of the first toe.
[23] This species was caught in northern Madagascar and consists of two typical colour morphs, a reddish one and a medium chocolate brown one.
It is characterized by the combination of its large size – it is larger than most other Asiatic Kerivoula species – and its unique flattened skull.
[25] This new dwarf bat from Libya differs from its nearest relatives P. pipistrellus and P. pygmaeus chromosomally, and by its larger skull and teeth, and a number of other characters.
[28] A new species from the Pacific coast of northwestern Ecuador (Esmeraldas, Los Ríos, and Pichincha provinces).
[30] This species was discovered in Lore Lindu National Park in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia.
[39] Was described as the smallest of Australian Pteropus species, but in 2004 Helgen found that the specimens on which P. banakrisi is based are all subadult individuals of the Black Flying Fox (P. alecto).
It is characterized by its long upper and lower canines and distinguished from its close and sympatric relative P. raptor by its larger size and stronger built.
[46] This new butterfly bat from Cameroon and the Democratic Republic of Congo is distinct from other African species of its genus by the combination of the characters size, skull shape, fur colour, and the absence of spotting or reticulation.