EQUATORIAL GUINEA, —
Laura Torrent did not know that the tiny brown bat she caught in early 2024 would become a global milestone for biodiversity and conservation.
She had suspected the small creature, caught during an expedition in Equatorial Guinea, could match a mysterious bat specimen collected more than 30 years ago, but it would take months of work and scientific review to confirm.
That bat — which Torrent dubbed Pipistrellus etula — marks the 1,500th species of bat to be discovered.
Bats are the second-most diverse group of mammals. Of the more than 6,800 mammal species known to scientists today, bats make up 22%. They are surpassed only by rodents, which have about 2,790 distinct species.
Bats are the only mammals that can fly (sorry, flying squirrels). Flight and their relati

KCRA News

The Washington Post
AlterNet