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
112.
Keast’s Tube-nosed Fruit Bat
Nyctimene keasti
French:
Nyctimene de Keast
/
German:
Keast-Rohrennasenflughund
/
Spanish:
Nyctimeno de Keast
Taxonomy.
Nyctimene albiventer keasti Kitchener
in
Kitchener et al., 1993,
“Near Taman Anggrek,
12 km
N.Tual, Pulau Dullah, closely associated with Pulan Kai Reeil, (
5°38’S, 132°44'E
) ... at sea level,”
Moluccas
,
Indonesia
.
Nyctimene keasti
is currently in the
cephalotes
species group. It was originally described as a subspecies of N.
albiventer
but subsequently elevated to a species and is considered more closely related to N.
cephalotes
on morphological grounds. Limited genetic data showed that N.
keasti
from the Kai Islands, Bandaneira Island, and Yamdena Island were not genetically distinct from N.
cephalotes
, indicating that N.
keasti
might be best recognized as a subspecies or synonym of N.
cephalotes
with which it is morphologically very similar. Nevertheless, ongoing revision of
Nyctimene
is currently underway, and more thorough sampling is needed before any conclusion can be made regarding these species. Three subspecies recognized.
Subspecies and Distribution.
N.k.keastiKitchener,1993—KaiIs(Kur,KaiBesar,KaiKecil,andDullah).
N.k.babariBergmans,2001—ELesserSundaIs(Babar).
N. k. tozeri Kitchener, 1995
— Tanimbar Is (Larat, Yamdena, and Salaru).
The species also probably exists on
Flores
and Timor Is, although this has yet to be confirmed and there is also apparently a record from Gag I (Raja Ampat Is).
Descriptive notes.
Head-body 69-3-89-
3 mm
, tail 18-25-
4 mm
, ear 14-2-16-
9 mm
, hindfoot 11:3-13-
9 mm
, forearm 40-7-45-
7 mm
; weight 29-
5-30 g
. Females generally have considerably paler dorsum than males. Head of Keast’s Tube-nosed Fruit Bat is broad, with deep face, broad, bluntly pointed ears, and tubular divergent nostrils. Eyes are large, with amber irises. Pelage is thick and woolly. Dorsal pelage is yellowish brown (males) to buffy yellowish brown (females), with distinctive thin dark blackish brown gradually widening mid-dorsal stripe (0-5-
1-5 mm
thick at top and 2-5-
3-5 mm
at lower end) stretching from neck to rump. Ventral pelage is buffy yellowish or yellowish brown (in some males). Wings are dark brown, with irregular darker and yellow spots throughout (more yellow spotting is on digits). Ears are light yellowish brown, with some yellow spotting. Second digit of wing has a claw, and wing attaches at second digit of foot. Tail is short, black, and wrinkled, and narrow uropatagium connects at base and stretches to calcar at ankles. Claws are brown. Skull and mandible are robust; rostrum is short; zygomatic breadth is wide; sagittal and lambdoidal crests are moderately developed; posterior palate extends well beyond M' and margin varies from U-shaped to sharply rectangular; and condylo-basal length is generally shorter relative to both rostrum height, interorbital breadth, and cranial height compared with Pallas’s Tube-nosed Fruit Bat (N.
cephalotes
). Single lower incisor is completely deciduous, falling out before adulthood; lower molars are broad and rounded in dorsal view; C, replaces incisors and is long and powerful; P, is elongated and longer than P, and P,; and C' has moderately developed secondary labial cusp.
Habitat.
Primary tropical moist forests, dominated by
Ficus (Moraceae)
,
Erythrina (Fabaceae)
,
Podocarpus (Podocarpaceae)
, and
Albizia (Fabaceae)
, and vine forest from sea level up to elevations ¢.
1000 m
.
Food and Feeding.
No information.
Breeding.
No information.
Activity patterns.
No information.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
No information.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Vulnerable on The IUCN Red List. Keast’s Tubenosed Fruit Bat has a restricted distribution and is threatened by deforestation. Additional research is needed to validate its taxonomic status and to understand its ecology and threats.
Bibliography.
Bergmans (2001), Helgen & Hutson (2008), Kitchener, Packer & Maryanto (1993), Kitchener, Packer & Suyanto (1995), Newbound et al. (2008).