Rhinolophidae
Author
Burgin, Connor
text
2019
2019-10-31
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Editor
Wilson, Don E.
Editor
Mittermeier, Russell A.
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats
280
332
book chapter
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3748525
6384b520-7e9f-4874-a414-76c2e9b01d74
978-84-16728-19-0
3748525
61
. Malayan Horseshoe
Bat
Rhinolophus malayanus
French:
Rhinolophe de
Malaisie
/
German:
Malaya-Hufeisennase
/ Spanish:
Herradura de
Malasia
Taxonomy.
Rhinolophus malayanus
Bonhote
in Annandale & H.. Robinson, 1903,
“
Biserat,Jalor,
”
Thailand
.
Tentatively included in the
megaphyllus
group but its placement here is uncertain; further genetic work is needed.
Rhinolophus malayanus
is generally considered to be close to.
stheno
,
but they do not cluster together in genetic studies. Exact placement of.
malayanu
s in relation to other
Rhinolophus
is still uncertain but the most
recent
genetic study placed it as sister to
R. acuminatus
,
forming a clade sister to much of the
megaphyllus
,
pusillus
,
philippinensis
,
and
macrotis
groups. Monotypic.
Distribution.
Myanmar
,
Thailand
,
Laos
,
Vietnam
,
Cambodia
, and N Peninsular
Malaysia
along with Tarutao and Langkawi Is.
Descriptive notes. Head-body 36-1-55-
8 mm
, tail 15-26-
9 mm
, ear 12-7-19-
3 mm
, hindfoot 5-8—9-
6 mm
, forearm 38-
2—44 mm
; weight 4-5—9-
7 g
. Dorsal pelage is either brown (brown morph) or bright cinnamon (orange morph), whereas ventral pelage is either buff or whitish. Ears are of medium size. Noseleaf has triangular lancet with concave or nearly parallel lateral margins and elongated tip; connecting process is rounded; sella is
relatively
wide with broadly rounded top, and lateral margins are almost parallel; horseshoe is
relatively
broad (6-
6-9 mm
) and nearly completely covers muzzle, has moderately developed lateral leaflets, and a shallow
but
present median emargination. Lower lip has three mental grooves. Skull is moderately robust and zygomatic width is only slightly larger than mastoid width; anterior median swellings are well developed and wider than they are long; posterior compartments are well inflated; sagittal crest is rather weak; frontal depression is
relatively
elongate but shallow; supraorbital crests are more or less distinct P2 is of medium size, with distinct cusp, and is within tooth row, separating C1 and P4;
P
3 is small and slightly to almost completely extrudes labially from tooth row, which allows P2 and P4 to touch. Chromosomal
complement
has 2n = 62 and FNa = 60.
Habitat
Mainly recorded from areas with limestone karst and sandstone mountains for roosting. Malayan Horseshoe Bats have been recorded in lowland mixed deciduous forest, hill evergreen forest, highly disturbed dry dipterocarp forest, and agricultural areas, indicating that the species is
resilient
in response to disturbance. It is found at elevations from sea level up to c.
1400 m
.
Food and
Feeding. No information.
Breeding.
Pregnant
females were captured in late February in
Cambodia
.
Activity patterns.
The Malayan Horseshoe Bat is nocturnal, roosting in limestone caves during the day. Torpid individuals have been captured in day roosts during July, in western
Thailand
. Call shape is FM/CF/FM with peak F recorded at 72—80 kHz in northern
Thailand
,
82—86 in
central
Thailand
, 83—91 kHz in southern
Thailand
, 75— 82 kHz in
Cambodia
, 76-79 kHz in
Myanmar
, and 77—80 kHz in
Laos
.
Movements, Home range and Social
organization. Malayan Horseshoe Bats roost in colonies, with up to 3000 individuals recorded in one cave in western
Thailand
.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Least Concern on
The IUCN Red List.
There do not seem to be any major threats currently affecting this widespread species.
Bibliography.
Bates, Bumrungsri & Csorba (2008b), Csorba eta/. (2003), Francis (2008a), Harada, Minezawa
et al.
(1982),
Kruskop
(2013a),
Soisook
(2008),
Soisook
et
al.
(2008), Stoffberg
et al.
(2010), Zhang Lin et
al.
(2018).