Rhinolophidae
Author
Burgin, Connor
text
2019
2019-10-31
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Editor
Wilson, Don E.
Editor
Mittermeier, Russell A.
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats
280
332
book chapter
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3748525
6384b520-7e9f-4874-a414-76c2e9b01d74
978-84-16728-19-0
3748525
33
.
GreaterJapanese
Horseshoe
Bat
Rhinolophus nippon
French:
Rhinolophe
nippon
/
German:
Grosse
Japan-Hufeisennase /
Spanish:
Herradura de
Japón
Other
common
names
:
Japanese
Greater Horseshoe Bat
Taxonomy.
Rhinolophus nippon
Temminck, 1835
,
Japan
.
Rhinolophus nippon
is in the Jèmmeçwtnutn species group and sister to a clade including A
clivosus
and
R ferrumequinum
.
Rhinolophus
nippon
m previously included in
R ferrumequinum
,
but genetic data have shown that the two are distinct species. Distributional limits between
R nippon
and
R ferrumequinum
are still uncertain because there have been no genetic assessments of specimens from central and southern Asia. Which species
tragatus
is best included under has
yet
to be determined, but
it
is included as a subspecies here. Taxon
korai
is here synonymized under nominate nippon, although genetic and morphometric testing is needed to support this
view
. Two subspecies recognized.
Subspecies and Distribution.
R
n.
nippon
Temminck, 1835
—
C
& E
China
(from
Jilin
SW
to
Sichuan
and S to N
Guangxi
,
Hunan
,
Jiangxi
, and
Fujian
), Korean Peninsula, andJapan (including some offshore islands).
R
n. tragatus
Hodgson
, 1835 — N
India
(
Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand,
West
Bengal, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh
, and
Nagaland
),
Nepal
,
Bhutan
, N
Bangladesh
, and
SW
China
(
Yunnan
and
Guizhou
).
Descriptive
notes.
Head—body
55—79 mm
, tail
25-44 mm
, ear
18—29 mm
, hindfoot
10—14 mm
, forearm
49—64 mm
. The GreaterJapanese Horseshoe
Bat
is similar to the Greater Horseshoe Bat (
A
ferrumequinum
),
but it seems to have somewhat darker pelage. Nominate subspecies has forearm lengths of
49—59 mm
and tibia lengths of less than
25 mm
;
tragatus
has forearm lengths of
58—64 mm
and tibia lengths of more than
25 mm
, being significantly larger than
nippon
with little overlap. Dorsal pelage is smoky gray-brown, pale brown, or chestnut-brown, with variable levels of red tinge (some individuals apparently look dark orange-brown); venter is pale buff. There are possibly orange-morph individuals in
Japan
. Males lack axillary tufts. Ears are relatively short (
c
.46% of forearm length on average). Noseleaf has subtriangular lancet, becoming slightly concave near bluntly pointed tip; connecting process is rounded and much higher than
sella
tip; sella is naked,
relatively
small, and curved forward, making front surface strongly concave while sides are only slightly concave and tip is pointed; and horseshoe is narrow, does not cover muzzle, and has lateral leaflets (although sometimes inconspicuous) and deep median emargination. Lower lip has one or three grooves, although lateral grooves can be inconspicuous if present.
Wings
and uropatagium are grayish brown. Detailed morphological comparisons between the GreaterJapanese Horseshoe Bat and the Greater Horseshoe Bat are required to differentiate the two species based on skull
differences
. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 58 and FN = 62.
Habitat.
Variety
of temperate forested habitats in montane and lowland regions from sea level to elevations of
c
.
3500 m
.
Food and Feeding.
Greater Japanese Horseshoe Bats forage by fly-catching from a perch (most often), slow hawking, and gleaning prey from the ground and vegetation. They forage in open forests, woodland paths, and forest edges, generally preferring open areas to cluttered areas.
They
generally prey on species of
Diptera
,
Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Trichoptera, Plecoptera, Odonata, and Hemiptera
, but
Lepidoptera
, o leoptera, and
Diptera
make up the largest proportion of diets. During winter hibernation, they are known to awake and feed almost
exclusively
on troglophilic moths in hibernacula and occasionally outside when
it
is warm enough.
Breeding. GreaterJapanese Horseshoe Bats are
seasonally
monoestrous, with delayed fertilization. Copulation occurs in late summer and early autumn before hibernation, and sperm is stored in females’ reproductive tracts. Births of single young occur synchronously in early summer. Mothers recognize their young by vocal communication, and their supersonic calls are synchronized.
Young stay
attached to their mothers’ underside and suckle. They begin to forage by themselves at
c
.32 days old, and weaning occurs at 40 days old. Juvenile mortality has been reported at 3-6%. Female Greater Japanese Horseshoe Bats generally take 2
-
4 years before rearing their first offspring, with fertility increasing with each year of life: one year
(
13
-1%
fertility
),
two years
(
49
*
5
%),
three years
(
95
-
2
%),
and four years
(
100
%)
in
Ishikawa Prefecture
and one (0-0%), two (27-2%), and three (93-4%) in
Yamaguchi Prefecture
. Females less than a year old generally do not produce any offspring,
but
it is possible. Females possess a strong loyalty to their natal sites for giving birth and raising their young. GreaterJapanese Horseshoe Bats are very long-lived; the oldest individual recorded was a 23-yearold female fromJapan.
Activity patterns.
GreaterJapanese Horseshoe Bats are nocturnal and forage throughout the night. During the day, they can enter torpor, and during winter, they hibernate in more temperate parts of their distribution.
They
might not hibernate in southern parts of the distribution (e.g.
India
). Most roosts are in caves and roofs of abandoned or unused buildings. Call shape is
FM
/CF/FM, with F component of 65-69-8 kHz throughoutJapan. In
China
, resting frequencies (
RF
)
vary
considerably (c.68—76 kHz) and are correlated with geographical location and mean annual temperature (higher temperatures are correlated with larger
RF
values).
Movements, Home range and Social
organization. Greater Japanese Horseshoe Bats roost alone, in small groups, or in large colonies. Colonies can have hundreds of individuals. During mating season, females form
tightly
knit maternity colonies that average 85 individuals on central Honshu and 132 individuals (range 10-200) in western Honshu. Non-breeding and male individuals also can be found in these colonies, albeit in low numbers because they generally create their own roosts separate from
maternity
colonies. One maternity roost in
Ishikawa Prefecture
had 75-2% adult females, 24-2% subadult females, and 0-6% males. During hibernation, Greater Japanese Horseshoe Bats form mixed roosts with dense clusters of individuals.
Weights
increase 25-8-28-2% in late autumn before hibernation on
Kyushu
,
Japan
. Individuals will travel
fairly
long distances between summer roosts and hibernacula; distances of up to
130 km
have been reported on
Kyushu
. Home ranges of adult females in summer averaged 1-5 ha in one study.
Status and Conservation.
Not
assessed on
TAe IUCN ed
List. The Greater Japanese Horseshoe Bat was previously included in
R ferrumequinum
,
which is classified as Least Concern. It has a wide distribution and is considered common throughout much of its distribution. It is probably not threatened overall but might be locally threatened by habitat destruction from logging and agricultural expansion and roost disturbance from cave tourism and human cohabitation in building roosts.
Bibliography.
Benda &Vallo (2012), Funakoshi & Maeda (2003),
Koh
Hung-Sun eta/. (2014), Matsumura (1979, 1981), Matsuta
eta
/. (2013),
Mori
eta/. (1982), OhYung-Keun eta/. (1983, 1985), Ohdachi eta/. (2009),
Sano
(2000a, 2000b), Smith & XieYan (2008), Stoffberg eta/. (2010), Sun
Keping
eta/. (2013),Taniguchi (1985).