The Sulawesi stripe-faced fruit bat was
first described in 1866 by the British zoologist
John Edward Gray, Keeper of Zoology at the
British Museum. He gave it the name
Pteropus wallacei, naming it in honour of the British naturalist
Alfred Russel Wallace who had collected the first specimen in
Sulawesi in Indonesia. Although Wallace was sure that the specimen he had found was a new species, his announcement was met with scepticism, and others thought the bat was a juvenile
masked flying fox (
Pteropus personatus). In 1899, the bat was moved to the new genus
Styloctenium by the German zoologist
Paul Matschie. This genus was believed to be
monotypic, but in 2007, a single bat found on the island of
Mindoro in the Philippines was described by Jacob Esselstyn and added to the genus as
Styloctenium mindorensis, the
Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat. ==Description==