Pteropodidae
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
16
162
book chapter
88683
10.5281/zenodo.6448815
bbbf94d9-a910-4cda-97df-7eca124163ed
978-84-16728-19-0
6448815
30.
Sulawesi
Black-capped Fruit Bat
Chironax tumulus
French:
Cynoptere de
Sulawesi
/
German:
Sulawesi-Schwarzkappenflughund
/
Spanish:
Chironax de
Sulawesi
Other common names:
Sulawesian Black-capped Fruit Bat
Taxonomy.
Chironax melanocephalus tumulus Bergmans & Rozendaal, 1988
,
Sungei Moinakom, Dumoga-Bone National Park,
North Sulawesi
,
Indonesia
.
Chironax tumulus
was described as a
Sulawesi
subspecies of
C. melanocephalus
but considered full species following W. Bergmans in 2011. Monotypic.
Distribution.
NE, CE & SE
Sulawesi
.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body 55:
6 mm
(tailless), ear
9-10 mm
, hindfoot
9-10 mm
, forearm
43-48 mm
; weight
12-17 g
. Head has moderately elongated muzzle and is blackish and almost hairless; nostrils are shortly tubular and divergent; and philtrum is divided into two parallel grooves; and lowerlip pads are large. Eyes are large;iris is dark brown. Ears are short, rounded, and black. Head pelage is short, dense, and very dark, blackish brown; pelage is dark grayish brown on nape and dorsum. Uropatagium is undeveloped at center and densely covered dorsally with soft brown hairs, calcar is small, and foot claws are whitish. Throatis sparsely haired. Cheeks, sides of neck, and shoulders are strongly demarked against dark head and dorsum. Fur on shoulders, breast, and belly is light yellowish white; thin yellowish ruff occurs on some adult males. Flanks and post-genital areas are grayish. Underside of uropatagium is densely haired. Wing membranes are black from sides of body and attach on second toe; index claw is present. Skull is small and delicate, with no basicranial deflection; rostrum is relatively long, with fused premaxillae, gently sloping into forehead; orbit is large; zygomatic root is only slightly above upper alveolar line; zygoma is very thin and arched posteriorly; and braincase is globose. Dorsally, rostrum is relatively wide; paranasal recesses are slightly inflated reaching root of blunt, short, triangular postorbital processes; postorbital constriction is not obvious; braincase is oval without noticeable sagittal crest; and nuchal crest is inconspicuous. Ventrally, palate is flat, tooth rows gently diverge, teeth are spaced, post-dental palate is long and convergent, end of post-dental palate is flat, sphenoid crest is present, ectotympanic is small, wide anteriorly, and internally edged by adpressed and wide entotympanic. Mandible is thin, coronoid is long and sloping, condyle is level with lower alveolar line, and angle is indistinct. There are 9-10 arched interdental palatal ridges, with the more posterior ones divided at middle, followed by 1-2 irregular denticulate ridges and one arched denticulate ridge near end of post-dental palate. Upper dentition has two pairs of crowded,relatively short incisors; C' is thin, short, and slightly decurved; P! is a spicule; next premolar (P°) lacks additional anteroexternal cusp; and all posterior cheekteeth decrease in size and have rectangular outlines. Lower dentition has two pairs of small incisors, C, is weak and barely curved, Pp, has pointed crown, posterior cheekteeth are anteriorly almost as high as C, and decrease in size, and M,is minute.
Habitat.
[Lowland rainforest up to elevations of
960 m
.
Food and Feeding.
The
Sulawesi
Black-capped Fruit Bat is presumably frugivorous.
Breeding.
Pregnant
Sulawesi
Black-capped Fruit Bats were recorded in March-April.
Activity patterns.
No information.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
No information.
Status and Conservation.
Not
assessed on The IUCN Red List. The
Sulawesi
Blackcapped Fruit Bat was included under the Sundaic Black-capped Fruit Bat (
C. melanocephalus
), which was classified as Least Concern. Populations are not fragmented.
Bibliography.
Bergmans (2011), Bergmans & Rozendaal (1988), Hutson, Kingston & Suyanto (2008), Maharadatunkamsi (2012), Wiantoro et al. (2017).