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
78
. New Guinea Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat
Rhinolophus euryotis
French:
Rhinolophe euryote I
German:
Neuguinea-Hufeisennase
/
Spanish:
Herradura de Nueva
Guinea
Other common names:
Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat, New
Guinea
Horseshoe Bat
Taxonomy.
Rhinolophus euryotis
Tem
-
minck, 1835
,
Ambon Island
,
Molucca Islands
,
Indonesia
.
Rhinolophus euryotis
is placed in the
euryotis
species group. It appears to be sister to an undescribed species from the central highlands of Sulawesi that is usually considered a population of
R. arcuatus
.
Only populations from mainland New
Guinea
have been studied genetically; the forms from a number of islands between New
Guinea
and
Sulawesi
still need to be tested, including the
type
locality of
R. euryotis
;
the validity and relationships of the various races is still unclear. Five subspecies
recognized
.
Subspecies and
Distribution.
R.e. euryotis
Temminck, 1835
— C
Moluccas
Is (
Ambon
and Seram) and Tanimbar Is.
R.e. aruensis
K. Andersen, 1907
— Aru Is.
R. e. burius
Hinton, 1925
— C
Moluccas
Is (Buru).
R. e. praestans
K.Andersen, 1905
— Kai Is.
R. e. timidus
K. Andersen, 1905
- N
Moluccas
Is (Halmahera and Bacan), New
Guinea
(including
Waigeo
, Batanta, and
Yapen
Is),
Bismarck Archipelago
(
New Britain
and
New Ireland
), and Trobriand Is (Kiriwina).
Descriptive
notes.
Head—body
54-73 mm
, tail
16—28 mm
, ear 19—26-
5 mm
, hindfoot
11—15 mm
, forearm
50—60 mm
;
weight
14-1—27-
5 g
. Dorsal pelage is brown (hairs paler drab basally), whereas ventral pelage is lighter brownish or wood brown. Ears are moderately long. Noseleaf has more or less straight-sided and densely haired
lancet
; connecting process is semicircular and hairy; sella is wide but
relatively
short and almost parallel-sided, with convex outlined tip; horseshoe has longitudinal groove with raised edges extending from median edge to intemarial region, is dark in color with exception of whitish stripe on median longitudinal groove, is very wide (10-
2—13 mm
), covers muzzle and even projects slighdy beyond it, and has very shallow median emargination. Lower lip has three mental grooves. Skull is large but
relatively
slender in build (zygomatic breadth is
only
slighdy larger than mastoid breadth); anterior median swellings are prominent and bulbous; posterior swellings are reduced; frontal depression extends anteriorly to medium swellings and is elongated and moderately deep; supraorbital crests are conspicuous but not
very
sharp; sagittal
crest
is moderately developed. C1 is long and strong; P2 is medium-sized and within tooth row or halfway extruded from it; P is small and completely extruded from tooth row, or is sometimes missing entirely; P, and P4 are usually very close to one another or touching. Dental formula is the usual of 32 teeth for the genus or
only
30 teeth when a lower premolar is missing.
Habitat.
Known to forage in both
primary
and secondary rainforest from sea level up to elevations of
2050 m
.
Food and
Feeding. The New
Guinea
Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat forages for insects by substrate-gleaning.
Breeding.
Pregnant
females were reported in late August on
New Britain
, and four pregnant and one lactating females were captured in late October on Batanta Island; based on these data, females
probably give
birth in late October. Each pregnant female carried
only
a single embryo.
Activity
patterns. New
Guinea
Broad-eared Horseshoe Bats roost by day in caves and tunnels. Call shape is FM/CF/FM, with peak frequencies of 52-58 kHz recorded in New
Guinea
.
Movements, Home range and Sodai organization.
Colonies can reach over 1000 individuals (e.
g
. a
maternity
colonywith over 1000 bats was reported in November on New
Guinea
).
Status and
Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on
The
IUCN
Red List.
The New
Guinea
Broad-eared Horseshoe Bat is widespread but is
likely
to be threatened by roost disturbance, as well as habitat destruction and alteration.
Bibliography
.
Armstrong
&
Aplin
(2017h),
Bonaccorso
(1998), Csorba
et
al. (2003), Flannery (1995a, 1995b),
Leary
& Pennay (2011), Patrick et al. (2013), Robson et al. (2012).