{"taxonConcept":{"guid":"9271244","parentGuid":"5720","nameString":"Vulcanops","nameComplete":"Vulcanops Hand, Beck, Archer, Simmons, Gunnell, Scofield, Tennyson, De Pietri, Salisbury & Worthy, 2018","nameFormatted":"<span class=\"scientific-name rank-genus\"><span class=\"name\">Vulcanops<\/span> <span class=\"author\">Hand, Beck, Archer, Simmons, Gunnell, Scofield, Tennyson, De Pietri, Salisbury &amp; Worthy, 2018<\/span><\/span>","author":"Hand, Beck, Archer, Simmons, Gunnell, Scofield, Tennyson, De Pietri, Salisbury & Worthy, 2018","nomenclaturalCode":null,"taxonomicStatus":"accepted","nomenclaturalStatus":null,"rankString":"genus","nameAuthority":"GBIF Backbone Taxonomy","rankID":6000,"nameAccordingTo":null,"nameAccordingToID":null,"namePublishedIn":"Hand, Suzanne J., R. M. D. Beck, Michael Archer, Nancy B. Simmons, Gregg F. Gunnell, R. P. Scofield, Alan J. D. Tennyson, Vanesa L. De Pietri, Steven W. Salisbury & Trevor H. Worthy. 2018. A new, large-bodied omnivorous bat (Noctilionoidea: Mystacinidae) reveals lost morphological and ecological diversity since the Miocene in New Zealand. Scientific Reports 8: 235.","namePublishedInYear":null,"namePublishedInID":null,"taxonRemarks":null,"provenance":null,"favourite":null,"infoSourceURL":null,"datasetURL":null},"taxonName":[],"classification":{"kingdom":"Animalia","kingdomGuid":"1","phylum":"Chordata","phylumGuid":"44","class":"Mammalia","classGuid":"359","order":"Chiroptera","orderGuid":"734","family":"Mystacinidae","familyGuid":"5720","scientificName":"Vulcanops","guid":"9271244","genus":"Vulcanops","genusGuid":"9271244"},"synonyms":[],"commonNames":[],"imageIdentifier":null,"conservationStatuses":{},"extantStatuses":[],"habitats":[],"categories":[],"simpleProperties":[],"images":[],"identifiers":[],"variants":[]}