Myotinae

Myotinae is a subfamily of vesper bats. Submyotodon is the second extant genus included in the subfamily Myotinae. Before the description of Submyotodon and analysis of its phylogenetics, the only member of Myotinae was the genus Myotis.[1]

Myotinae
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Chiroptera
Family: Vespertilionidae
Subfamily: Myotinae

Species

Notes

  1. Split from M. nigricans (Moratelli et al., 2017).
  2. Split from M. mystacinus (Mayer et al., 2007).
  3. A new species (Happold, 2005).
  4. Split from M. nattereri (Ibáñez et al., 2006).
  5. Split from M. formosus (Jiang et al., 2010).
  6. Split from M. brandtii (Ohdachi et al., The Wild Mammals of Japan, 2009).
  7. Split from M. simus (Moratelli & Wilson, 2014).
  8. Split from M. martiniquensis (Larsen et al., 2012).
  9. Split from M. daubentonii (Matveev et al., 2005). Includes M. abei (Tsytsulina, 2004, as daubentonii).
  10. A new species (Borisenko et al., 2008).
  11. Split from M. adversus (Han et al., 2010).

References

  1. Ruedi, Manuel; Csorba, Gábor; Lin, Liang-Kong; Chou, C-H (2015-02-20). "Molecular phylogeny and morphological revision of Myotis bats (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) from Taiwan and adjacent China". Zootaxa. 3920 (2): 301–342. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3920.2.6. PMID 25781252.
  2. Moratelli, Ricardo; Peracchi, Adriano L.; Dias, Daniela; De Oliveira, João A. (2011). "Geographic variation in South American populations of Myotis nigricans ( ) (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae), with the description of two new species". Mammalian Biology. 76 (5): 592–607. doi:10.1016/j.mambio.2011.01.003.
  3. Ziegler, Reinhard (2003). "Bats (Chiroptera, Mammalia) from Middle Miocene karstic fissure fillings of Petersbuch near Eichstätt, Southern Franconian Alb (Bavaria)". Geobios. 36 (4): 447–490. doi:10.1016/S0016-6995(03)00043-3.
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