Every spring, Mexican long-nosed bats traverse a lengthy migratory path north from Mexico into the southwestern U.S., ...
This means that the armadillo found in Texas and the United States should be called the Mexican Long-nosed Armadillo, according to the authors of the study who also got to choose the name for the ...
Those noses help them detect the scent of blooming flowers, but it’s their impressive tongues that make lesser long-nosed bats such valuable pollinators: Measuring about three inches ...
Researchers at Bat Conservation International and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have verified the presence of the Mexican long-nosed bat in southeastern Arizona, expanding the habitat range ...
PHOENIX — The endangered Mexican long-nosed bat has been detected in Arizona through the utilization of citizen science from residents in southeastern Arizona and southwestern New Mexico ...