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
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6397752
45351c32-25dd-422c-bdb2-00e73deb4943
978-84-16728-19-0
6397752
426.
Temminck's. 3
Myotis
Myotis tricolor
French:
Murin tricolore
/
German:
Temminck-Mausohr
/
Spanish:
Ratonero tricolor
Other common names:
Cape
Hairy Bat
,
Cape
Myotis
,
Temminck’s Hairy Bat
,
Temminck’s Mouse-eared Bat
,
Threecolored Bat
Taxonomy.
Vespertilio tricolor Temminck
in
Smuts, 1832
,
Cape
Town,
Western Cape Province
,
South Africa
.
Subgenus
Chrysopteron
. Recent genetic studies place this species as sister to
M. emarginatus
, these two being close to
M. goudotii
and
M. scotti
; this subclade is related to another consisting of
M. bocagii
,
M. formosus
, and M.
welwitschii
. A recent study revealed two clades within
M. tricolor
, which might be taxonomically separable. The form loveni (Mount Elgon,
Kenya
) is currently treated as a synomym. Monotypic.
Distribution.
Patchily distributed in sub-Saharan Africa: NW uplands of
Liberia
; E & S
DR Congo
and
Rwanda
; and more widely from
Ethiopia
to S
South Africa
.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body
51-65 mm
, tail
35-56 mm
, ear
13-19 mm
, hindfoot
10-13 mm
, forearm
47-53 mm
; weight
8-16 g
. Greatest lengths of skulls are 16-9- 19-
1 mm
, maxillary tooth row 6:6-8-
2 mm
. Females are slightly larger than males. Long individual hairs stand away from the body, giving fur a soft feel; upperparts coppery-brown to rufous (dark hair bases and coppery-red tips); ventrally paler (hairs tricolored, creamy-fawn, with blackish-brown base and pale brown tip). Muzzle blackish brown. Ears brown and medium-sized,slightly emarginated in middle of outerside, with pointed tip; tragus long and narrow, about one-half ear length. Wing membranes blackish brown; sometimes particolored in
Malawi
, where they are blackish brown with reddish brown over finger bones and adjacent to body; these markings are faint compared to striking black-and-orange ones of Welwitsch’s
Myotis
(M.
welwitschii
); elsewhere, the wings are reported to have no markings. Membranesare attached to base of first toe; interfemoral membrane reddish brown and naked, posterior margin without fringe of bristle-like hairs; tail fully enclosed in uropatagium. Baculum is small and triangular, with indentation on basal side; tip rounded, not distinct from shaft, narrower than base, very slightly turned ventrally; basal lobe V-shaped, small, and rounded. Skull 1s comparatively large and robust, with weak zygomatic arches; braincase clearly inflated and rises well above rostrum, forming right angle at forehead; sagittal and lambdoid crests are weak or absent. P? and P? are small to very small, and internal to tooth row; P° reduced (reaching only slightly above cingulum of P?, and much less than half crown area of P?), partly to fully displaced lingually, P? and P* separated or in contact. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 44 and FN = 52.
Habitat.
Rather variable: often in montane habitats including forest; also at lower elevations in rainforest, miombo woodland,
Acacia
—
Commiphora
(
Fabaceae
and
Burseraceae
, respectively) bushland and thicket, woodland savanna, and drier grassland savanna. Occurs up to elevations of
2600 m
in
Ethiopia
. In
South Africa
, only present in regions with annual rainfall of over
500 mm
; distribution is probably limited by rainfall and occurrence of suitable roosting sites (humid caves and mines). Sometimes found near open water.
Food and Feeding.
Diet consists of
Coleoptera
,
Hemiptera
,
Diptera
,
Neuroptera
, and
Hymenoptera
. The species probably forages for flying insects in open spaces close to trees. Itis a clutter-edge forager, with relatively broad wings, intermediate wing loading and low aspect ratio; wing morphology is intermediate between those of a typical aerial forager, a gleaner, and a trawler (taking prey from water surface).
Breeding.
In
KwaZulu-Natal
, copulation was in April, followed by period of sperm storage by female until fertilization in September and parturition in November-December. Lactation period lasts c.6 weeks. Females congregate at maternity roosts, each with one young.
Activity patterns.
Nocturnal, roosting in moist caves and mines, hanging freely from ceilings or clinging to walls; it is mostly found in caves with pools of water where disturbance is minimal. The species typically produces FM calls with peak frequency of c.50 kHz, large bandwidth (c.50 kHz), and short duration (2-4 milliseconds).
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
In parts of
South Africa
, Temminck’s
Myotis
migrates hundreds of kilometers between warmer summer maternity caves and colder winter hibernation caves. It roosts gregariously, and may congregate in groups of up to 2000 individuals. It often shares roosts with
Cape
Horseshoe Bats (
Rhinolophus capensis
), Geoftroy’s Horseshoe Bats (R. clivosus), Lesser Long-fingered Bats (
Miniopterus
fraterculus), and Natal Long-fingered Bats (M. natalensis).
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. Generally uncommon to rare throughout its range, but more abundant in eastern
South Africa
. No major threats are known, but roost sites in caves are locally disturbed by tourism and some traditional ceremonies. Habitat loss around roost sites due to agricultural expansion may also be of some significance, as may alien and invasive plant infestations, which can deplete insect biomass. In parts ofits range (e.g.
Mpumalanga
,
South Africa
), the speciesis threatened by mining, both legal and illegal.
Bibliography.
ACR (2018), Allen (1939), Amador et al. (2018), Baeten et al. (1984), Bernard (1982b, 2013b), Csorba, Chou Cheng-Han et al. (2014), Dobson (1879), Findley (1972), Hayman & Hill (1971), Hayman et al. (1966), Jordaan & Jacobs (2009), Kearney etal. (2002), Koopman (1989, 1994), Koopman etal. (1995), Monadjem & Jacobs (2017b), Monadjem, Jacobs et al. (2016), Monadjem, Taylor et al. (2010), Rautenbach et al. (1993), Ruedi et al. (2013), Schlitter & Aggundey (1986), Schoeman & Jacobs (2003, 2008), Simmons (2005), Skinner & Chimimba (2005), Stadelmann, Jacobs et al. (2004), Stadelmann, Lin Liangkong et al. (2007), Stoffberg & Jacobs (2004), Tate (1941d), Taylor (1999, 2000).