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Mammals described in 1937

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Bos sauveli
The kouprey (Bos sauveli), also known as the forest ox and grey ox, is a possibly extinct species of forest-dwelling wild bovine native to Southeast Asia. It was first scientifically described in 1937. The name kouprey is derived from the Khmer language and means "forest ox". The kouprey was defined as the national mammal of Cambodia in 2005.
Shepherd's beaked whale
species of mammal
Black-spotted cuscus
species of mammal
Bobrinski's jerboa
species of mammal
Roach's Mouse-tailed Dormouse
species of mammal
Kadarsanomys sodyi
species of mammal
Ussuri Shrew
species of mammal
Katinka's Shrew
species of mammal
Newfoundland Wolf
extinct subspecies of mammal
Northern Rocky Mountains wolf
subspecies of mammal
Northern Broad-nosed Bat
species of mammal
Meriones zarudnyi
species of mammal
Vernay's Climbing Mouse
species of mammal
Macinnes's Mouse-tailed Bat
species of mammal
Dneper common shrew
species of mammal
Malagasy slit-faced bat
species of mammal
Labrador Wolf
subspecies of grey wolf
Eastern broad-nosed bat
species of mammal
Alexander Archipelago wolf
subspecies of mammal
Southern Rocky Mountains Wolf
Extinct subspecies of the gray wolf
Texas Wolf
extinct subspecies of mammal
Cuanza vlei rat
species of mammal
Mogollon mountain wolf
extinct subspecies of mammal
Gregory's wolf
subspecies of mammal
Tragoportax
Tragoportax is an extinct genus of bovid ungulate. It lived from the upper Miocene to the earliest Pliocene, and its fossils have been found in southeastern Europe, parts of Africa, and the Indian Subcontinent. Tragoportax was formerly considered a close relative of the extant nilgai, though more recent studies suggest that it, and several other Miocene "boselaphins", formed a tribe of their own. The number of Tragoportax species has varied over the years, and some have been reassigned to the related genus Miotragocerus. The first Tragoportax specimens were discovered in Greece, and were origi