Emballonuridae
Author
Bonaccorso, Frank
text
2019
2019-10-31
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Editor
Wilson, Don E.
Editor
Mittermeier, Russel A.
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats
350
373
book chapter
10.5281/zenodo.3740269
34e4a5a6-881c-4a1a-b64d-6868e12df7fb
978-84-16728-19-0
3740269
22
. New Guinea Sheath-tailed Bat
Emballonura furax
French: Grande Emballonure /
German:
Neuguinea-Freischwanzfledermaus I
Spanish:
Embalonuro grande
Other common
names:
Greater
Sheath-tailed Bat, New
Guinean
Sheath-tailed Bat
Taxonomy
.
Emballonura furax
Thomas, 1911
,
Whitewater Camp, Kapare River, south of Charles Louis Range
,
West
Papua Province
,
Indonesia
.
A record from Passam, East Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea, was tentatively reassessed as
E. serii
.
Monotypic.
Distribution.
Papua New Guinea (
Western
, Southern Highlands, Chimbu, and Gulf provinces), and Biak and Yapen Is in Indonesia.
Descriptive
notes.
Head-body 54—61 mm, tail 10-19 mm, ear 16-9—19-4 mm, hindfoot 6 9-5 mm, forearm 48-53 mm; weight 9-5-14 g. Long (11-13 mm) dorsal hair of the New Guinea Sheath-tailed Bat is bicolored and blackish brown or dark red-brown for most of its length over white base. Hairs on venter are tricolored, with white bases, medium red-brown centers, and indistinct white tips.
Flight
membranes and all bare skin are blackish brown, except pale lips. Claws are white. Ear is long and narrow and tapers acutely. Skull is dome-shaped, with inflated rostrum.
Habitat
.
Lowland rainforests, hill forests, and lower montane forests from sea level to elevations of c.1500 m. Acoustic
surveys
and wing morphology of the New
Guinea
Sheath-tailed Bat suggest that it forages in open areas, probably over and among canopies.
Food and Feeding
.
New Guinea Sheath-tailed Bats are insectivorous.
Breeding
. No information.
Activity
patterns.
The New Guinea Sheath-tailed Bats is crepuscular and roosts in limestone caves and tunnels. It emerges before sunset and forages in open areas and forest understories until darkness, and then it can move above forest canopies.
Movements, Home range and
Social
organization.
New
Guinea
Sheath-tailed Bats roost in groups of several to a few dozen individuals clinging to vertical walls in
twilight
zones of caves and tunnels. They often cohabit roosts with Large-eared Sheath-tailed Bats
(
E. dianae
)
and Raffray’s Sheath-tailed Bats (E.
raffrayana
).
Acoustic survey data
suggest
that they can be locally common.
Status and Conservation
.
Classified as Least Concern on
The
IUCN
Red List.
The New Guinea Sheath-tailed Bat has a large distribution and presumably large and stable overall population. Although there are no population estimates,
new
site locations are being found with acoustic surveys,
particularly
in
Western
and
Gulf
provinces of
Papua
New Guinea. Additional surveys in
West
Papua might increase known distribution of the New Guinea Sheath-tailed Bat. Deforestation for timber harvest and establishment of plantations is a threat. Destruction and disturbance of roost sites are potential threats. Fortunately, a
significant
part of the distribution is rugged karst terrain that is
unlikely
to experience large-scale clearing or disturbance.
Bibliography.
Armstrong &
Aplin
(2017a), Bonaccorso (1998), Flannery (1994, 1995a, 1995b), McKean (1972).