AMRI scientists recently collected DNA samples from bats at Coolah Tops, NSW – the results of which have led to the discovery of a new bat species, endemic to the forests of far south-west Western Australia.

Scientific discovery rarely unfolds in a straight line. While surveying the vertebrate fauna of Coolah Tops in central NSW, AMRI scientists collected DNA samples from several species of long-eared bat (Nyctophilus species). In order to help identify these morphologically similar bats to species, we compared them genetically to samples from other long-eared bats collected decades earlier from across Australia. The analysis, using mitochondrial DNA genes, showed that one species sampled at Coolah Tops was Gould’s Long-eared Bat (N. gouldi), but that the individuals from WA (used for comparison), previously thought to also be Gould’s Long-eared Bat, were genetically highly distinct and represented a separate species.


Holt’s Long-eared bat

Holt’s Long-eared bat (Nyctophilus holtorum sp. nov) showing the ear and nose-leaf features characteristic of the genus.

Image: Ron Lovatt
© Australian Museum

Holt’s Long-eared bat

Holt’s Long-eared bat (Nyctophilus holtorum sp. nov) is confined to the forests of southwest Western Australia.

Image: Terry Reardon
© Terry Reardon

Gould’s Long-eared Bat is a small (~12g) insect-eating bat that is widely distributed along the eastern Australian seaboard. In the 1970s it was realised that an isolated population, thought to be the same species, also occurred in far south-west WA over 2,000 km to the west. Our genetic analysis has shown that this WA population is not closely related to eastern Gould’s Long-eared Bat populations. Previous morphological comparisons found relatively minor but consistent differences between these eastern and western Australian populations; however, morphological differences amongst microbat species are often subtle. Taken together, the genetic and morphological data indicate that the WA population represents a species new to science.

We therefore had the honour of giving this species a scientific name. It is now known as Holt’s Long-eared Bat (Nyctophilus holtorum sp. nov), in honour of Mrs Mary Holt and the late Dr John Holt who funded our original research at Coolah Tops through a donation to the Australian Museum Foundation, and have been generous long-term supporters of biodiversity research and conservation in Australia.

Holt’s Long-eared Bat has one of the most restricted distributions of the three dozen Australian bat species of the family Vespertilionidae and, along with the Western Falsistrelle (Falsistrellus mackenziei) discovered in 1986, is endemic to south-west WA. Holt’s Long-eared Bat is restricted to the forests of the far south-west, an area of some 20,000 square km – one third the size of the Sydney Basin. Not a lot is known of the ecology of Holt’s Long-eared Bat but it seems to prefer forests with a shrubby understory and a higher density of potential roost sites in old tree hollows.


Nyctophilus timoriensis

Gould’s long-eared bat (Nyctophilus gouldi) from eastern Australia looks similar to the new species Holt’s Long-eared Bat from south-west WA.

Image: G B Baker
© Australian Museum

The famous British bat taxonomist Robert Tomes was way ahead of his time when he named Gould’s Long-eared Bat in 1858. He thought it was a very distinct species, but his successors disagreed. They thought the differences were too trivial to justify a new species and it wasn’t until 1979 that scientists recognised Gould’s Long-eared Bat really was a valid species. This demonstrates that “cryptic” is a relative term – that is, relative to the knowledge of the time and skill of the observer. Further morphological studies (such as overall skull shape and wing morphology) are likely to identify more differences between Holt’s and Gould’s Long-eared Bats, and in future they may no longer be viewed as “cryptic” species.

This taxonomic research has significant implications for bat conservation. The recognition of Holt’s Long-eared Bat as another range-restricted endemic WA mammal species encourages a greater focus on conservation priorities for a species that was previously thought to have a wide distribution on both sides of Australia. It also clearly demonstrates that we have not yet identified all of the unique species that occur in Australia, even in comparatively well studied groups such as mammals. Since many species in Australasia occur nowhere else, ongoing taxonomic research of our unique biodiversity remains a priority.


Dr Mark Eldridge, Principal Research Scientist, Mammalogy Collection, Australian Museum Research Institute.

Andrew King, Research Assistant, Australian Centre for Wildlife Genomics, Australian Museum Research Institute.

Dr Harry Parnaby, Research Associate, Mammalogy Collection, Australian Museum Research Institute.


More information:

  • Parnaby, Harry E., Andrew G. King, and Mark D. B. Eldridge. 2021. A new bat species from southwestern Western Australia, previously assigned to Gould’s Long-eared Bat Nyctophilus gouldi Tomes, 1858. Records of the Australian Museum 73(1): 53–66. https://doi.org/10.3853/j.2201-4349.73.2021.1766