Vespertilionidae
Author
Don E. Wilson
Author
Russell A. Mittermeier
text
2019
2019-10-31
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats
716
981
book chapter
56755
10.5281/zenodo.6397752
45351c32-25dd-422c-bdb2-00e73deb4943
978-84-16728-19-0
6397752
493.
Zenati Myotis
Myotis zenatius
French:
Murin zénéte
/
German:
Zenati-Mausohr
/
Spanish:
Ratonero zenate
Other common names:
Zenati Bat
Taxonomy.
Myotis zenatius Ibanez et al
. in
Juste et al, 2019
,
“Mizou Cave, Tetouan, Moraceo (ca.
35°30' 42"N
,
5°19'33"W
), at an altitude of
330 m
a.s.1.”
Subgenus
Myotis
;
myotis
species group.
See
M. nattereri
. The name
M. escalerai cabrerae
was recently proposed by E. Coraman and colleagues in 2019 based on populations that are now included under this species; the name is considered a nomen nudum as the publication did not include a proper description for the name. Monotypic.
Distribution.
NW Africa, including
Morocco
,
Algeria
; also possibly in
Tunisia
.
Descriptive notes.
Head—-body
44-48 mm
, tail
38-42 mm
, ear 15-3-17-
3 mm
, hindfoot 7-9-8-7, forearm 38-
2—40 mm
. The Zenati
Myotis
is very similar to the other species in the
M. nattereri
species complex, which makesits identification complicated. As in Escalera’s
Myotis
(
M. escalerai
), plagiopatagium is inserted in mid-metatarsus, making it clearly distinguishable from the Cryptic
Myotis
(M. crypticus) and Natterer’s
Myotis
(
M. nattereri
), which have wings attached to bases oftoes. Line of hair at edge of uropatagium is similar to that of Escalera’s
Myotis
, with two lines of bristles, one pointing outward and the another pointing inward, with thicker aspect than in the Cryptic
Myotis
and Natterer’s
Myotis
. Dorsal and ventral fur color is similar among all these species, but dorsum is generally much darker on the Zenati
Myotis
. Hairs also seem distinctly tricolored: black bases, brown middles, and white tips. Other morphological traits are common among all species in this species complex: relatively long ears, with several folds on outer edges that make them foldable; long, pointed, and straight tragus surpassing one-half the ear length;hairless face; narrow, long, and pointed muzzle; comparatively short feet, less than one-half the tibia length; and naked wings,ears, and tail membrane. Uropatagium is also enclosed by S-shaped long calcar. Skull is small and delicate with high braincase and strongly concave forehead regions; there are no sagittal or occipital crests; very similar to Escalera’s
Myotis
, although it can be distinguished byits broader and more globose braincase, generally more delicate skull structure, and slightly smaller dimensions (except for wider postorbital constriction). P? is more than one-half height and about three-quarters crown area of P* and is within tooth row; lower molars are myotodont.
Habitat.
Known from northern slopes of the Riff to dry mountains and several different lowland habitats from sea level up to relatively high mountains.
Food and Feeding.
The Zenati
Myotis
is probably a gleaner, with the capacity to hover, and probably forages in dense cluttered habitats and close to the ground. It probably hunts arthropods on surfaces of leaves or directly from the ground.
Breeding.
The Zenati
Myotis
breeds in caves.
Activity patterns.
Along with Escalera’s Myotis, Zenati
Myotis
seem to be strictly cave dwelling.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
No information.
Status and Conservation.
Not
assessed on The [UCN Red List. Zenati
Myotis
is one of the rarest bats in the Mediterranean region.
Bibliography.
Coraman et al. (2019), Juste et al. (2019), Puechmaille, Allegrini et al. (2012), Ruedi et al. (2019), Salicini et al. (2011, 2012, 2013).