(Costa Rica) Like both its common name and specific epithet suggest, the Honduran white bat has bright white fur. The tips of individual hairs are gray, with the grayish coloration more pronounced towards the bat's posterior. This species, along with four
Diclidurus species and the
ghost bat (
Macroderma gigas), is among the only currently known species of bat—more than 1,300 species have been described—where the pelage is all white. Its large nose-leaf easily distinguishes it from the
northern ghost bat (
Diclidurus albus), however, which is the only white bat with which it is
sympatric (having an overlapping geographic range). Its
wing membranes are black. Its ears,
tragi (the cartilaginous projections in front of the ear openings), nose-leaf, and lips are a bright, yellowish orange. A 2019 study found that while the brightness of the yellow pigment of the ears did not vary significantly between adults and juveniles, the yellow chroma (
colorfulness relative to
brightness) of the ears did differ with age. Adult bats had higher yellow chroma in their ears than did juveniles. The yellow of the nose-leaf, however, had more variation. Adult males' nose-leaves are a brighter yellow than those of adult females; juveniles of each sex did not differ in nose-leaf brightness. Adult males also had significantly brighter nose-leaves than juvenile males. Similarly to the ears, the yellow chroma of the nose-leaf was greater in adults than in juveniles, though not different between the sexes. The authors suggested that the color difference of male and female nose-leaves is indicative of
sexual dichromatism, meaning that females may select for males with brighter nose-leaves. This conclusion was supported by the trend that males with brighter yellow nose-leaves tended to have better body conditions. Females could thus use nose-leaf color as an
honest signal of male fitness when selecting a mate. Another 2019 study found that the distinctive yellow pigment may have been
selected for as a result of the bat's tent-roosting. Reconstructions of ancestral states showed that the yellow coloration coevolved with tent-roosting. As sunlight passes through the green leaves of the tents, it results in a yellowish light; any bats with yellowish coloration would have had more effective
camouflage, and thus be more likely to survive, reproduce, and pass on these genes to their offspring. It is a small species, with a head and body length of , a forearm length of , and an ear length of . Individuals weigh only . ==Biology and ecology==