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
139.
Collared Sprite
Thainycteris aureocollaris
French:
Farfadet du
Laos
/
German:
Goldkragen-Elfenfledermaus
/
Spanish:
Tainicterio
de
Laos
Other common names:
Collared Pipistrelle
,
Siam
Goldnecklet
,
Thai Golden-throated Bat
Taxonomy.
Thainycters awreocollaris Kock & Storch, 1996
,
Doi (= Mount) Pha Hom Pok,
20°08'N
,
99°10'E
, 1,500: m, Amphoe {= Dis trict) Mae Ai,
Chiang Mai Province
,
Thailand
.
Thainycteris
differs from
Arielulus
in larger size, broader, heavier skull, and distinctive fur coloration, with buff collar but without pale rims to ear; further work is needed that includes all species of both genera in a phylogenetic study to confirm relationships.
Thainycteris aureocollaris
was originally placed in its own genus but this was later treated as a synonym of
Arielulus
, based on similar craniodental features; however, recent molecular data indicate that
Arielulus
and
Thainycteris
are genetically distinct. Some authors consider 7.
aureocollaris
to be sister to la io; others suggest its closest relative to be 1.
torquatus
. In 2019, the molecular-phylogenetic study of T. Gorfol and colleagues found 7.
aureocollaris
and TI:
torquatus
to be sister species in a clade including 1. i0 and an undefined
Eptesicus
; they were only distantly related to A.
circumdatus
, which clustered with
Hesperoptenus blanfordi
. Monotypic.
Distribution.
NW
Thailand
(
Chiang Mai Province
), N
Laos
, N & C
Vietnam
, and S
China
(
Guizhou
); it may occur in
Cambodia
.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body 60-68 mm, tail 43-58 mm, ear 14-2-18 mm, hindfoot 9-12-2 mm, forearm 47-5-51-8 mm; weight 13-18 g. Pelage of the Collared Spriteis relatively long (c.
10 mm
), almost black with silvery and pale gold tips, giving frosted appearance reminiscent of
Vespertilio
; underparts are similar with white to golden tips; throat, chin, and sides of neck have pale yellowish “collar,” contrasting with otherwise dark underparts. Thai and Vietnamese specimens appear to differ slightly in color, with collar of latter having copper-gold hue. There is a transversal, irregularly broad streak of buffy hairs on top of head between ear conches. Ears, nose, wings, and uropatagium are dark gray. Ears are fleshy, broadly triangular with rounded tip; tragus is moderately short, broadened at top one-half, and angled forward. There are scattered light-tipped hairs on hindfeet and toes. Tail is 67-87% of head-body length; it has seven vertebrae, with distal vertebra free of uropatagium. Baculum is small and triangular, with elongated main shaft, ventrally concave, without basal notch. Skull is very broad with high, massive rostrum; supraorbital crests are well developed, with deep medial depression between them; sagittal, occipital, and lambdoid crests are low; zygomatic arches are robust in anterior section but become slenderer behind a median dorsal projection. Condylo-canine lengths are 16-2—17-6 mm; maxillary tooth row lengths are 6-7-7-3 mm. Dentition is similar to, but more massive than, that of the Bronze Sprite (
Arielulus circumdatus
); number of upper premolars is variable; P* is very small and completely displaced inward, sometimes missing; I” is tiny and hard to see; C' has no posterior cusp on cutting edge. Dental formula for both species of Thainycterisis 12/3, C1/1.P1-2/2,M 3/3 (x2) =32-54.
Habitat.
Probably confined to primary or moderately disturbed forests in mountains. In
Vietnam
, found in limestone and non-limestone forest; all Vietnamese specimens (males) were captured over streams. In
Thailand
, found at
2000 m
in hill evergreen forest. In
Guizhou
, southern
China
, captured at
650 m
in secondary subtropical broadleaf forest on low karstic mountains, close to agriculturalfields of a village. Elevational range is 200-2000 m.
Food and Feeding.
The Collared Sprite is considered a fast-flying aerial insectivore.
Breeding.
No information.
Activity patterns.
Collared Sprites are nocturnal.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
No information.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red Lust.
Bibliography.
Bates, Francis, Csorba & Furey (2008), Boitani et al. (2006), Borisenko et al. (2001), Csorba & Lee Lingling (1999),
Eger
&Theberge (1999), Francis (2008a), Francis et al. (2010), Gorfol et al. (2019), GuoWeijian et al. (2017), Hassanin et al. (2018), Kingsada et al. (2011), Kock & Storch (1996), Koubinova et al. (2013), Kruskop (2013), Pearch & Writer (2009), Roehrs et al. (2010), Simmons (2005).