| HORSESHOEBAT | Large-eared, insectivorous, flying mammal with a fleshy growth around the nostrils (9,3) |
| TAPIR | Mammal with a fleshy snout (5) |
| SUCCULENT | Uncle cuts out a fleshy growth (9) |
| BAT | Insectivorous flying mammal |
| HEELSPUR | Bony growth around the foot |
| BATMAN | Academic in pursuit of flying mammal with name of a cartoon character (6) |
| VAMPIREBAT | Flying mammal with sharp teeth |
| MICHAELMOUSE | Big-eared funnies character |
| PEACOMB | Three rows of fleshy growth, from the beak backwards, on the head of a hen (3-4) |
| BATEAREDFOX | Also called the Cape fox or big-eared fox, this large-eared canine is found in open, arid areas of eastern and southern Africa. It has 48 teeth, 6 more than any other canid. |
| RADISH | Cruciferous plant with a fleshy pungent root eaten raw especially in salads |
| CHIMPANZEES | Large-eared African primates with mainly black colouration and lighter skin on the face (11) |
| TAREE | Large growth around a city (5) |
| ACORUNA | Source of mighty growth around university, a Spanish city (1,6) |
| PAPAW | Tree with a fleshy fruit |
| SEALION | Large eared seal such as the Californian ---, Zalophus californianus (3,4) |
| LOP | British ___, a rare, large-eared, white pig... in Llandeilo pigsty (3) |
| CERE | In birds such as the parrot, the waxy structure at the base of the beak that contains the nostrils (4) |
| SINUS | A cavity of bone or tissue especially in the skull connecting with the nostrils |
| SEPTUM | A partition separating two chambers, such as that between the nostrils or the chambers of the heart |