North American Yellow Bats, 'Dasypterus,' and a List of the Named Kinds of the Genus Lasiurus Gray

audiobook

North American Yellow Bats, 'Dasypterus,' and a List of the Named Kinds of the Genus Lasiurus Gray

by E. Raymond (Eugene Raymond) Hall, J. Knox Jones

EN·~51 minutes

Chapters

Description

This insightful study takes listeners on a clear‑cut journey through the tangled history of North America’s yellow bats. Beginning with the earliest descriptions of the small and large species, it follows the shifting scientific labels—from Nycticejus and Atalapha to the now‑favored Dasypterus—while explaining why those changes mattered to researchers. The authors weave in fascinating anecdotes about 19th‑century naming battles, giving a vivid sense of how early naturalists wrestled with classification.

The second half offers a concise, well‑organized catalogue of every named member of the genus Lasiurus, setting each species in its geographic and taxonomic context. Along the way, listeners learn about the “law of priority” that governs zoological nomenclature and how it reshaped bat taxonomy in the early 1900s. Whether you’re a seasoned chiropterologist or simply curious about the meticulous world of scientific naming, this work provides a compelling snapshot of bat diversity and the scholarly effort to bring order to it.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~51 minutes (49K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow, Joseph Cooper and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2010-03-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the authors

E. Raymond (Eugene Raymond) Hall

E. Raymond (Eugene Raymond) Hall

1902–1986

A leading American mammalogist, he helped shape how readers and researchers understand the mammals of North America. His books and scientific work combined careful field observation with a deep interest in natural history and conservation.

View all books
J. Knox Jones

J. Knox Jones

1929–1992

A leading American mammalogist and academic leader, he helped shape Texas Tech University into a stronger research institution while producing an impressive body of work on mammals and natural history.

View all books

You may also like