Mammals of Korea: a review of their taxonomy, distribution and conservation status
Author
Jo, Yeong-Seok
Author
Baccus, John T.
Author
Koprowski, John L.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-11-19
4522
1
1
216
journal article
27944
10.11646/zootaxa.4522.1.1
58e0c7c5-75ec-4b1b-beb0-d01527f710f9
1175-5326
2610198
C24EFA8A-A5A0-4B06-A0A9-632F542B9529
Myotis rufoniger
(
Tomes, 1858
)
—Red and Black
Myotis
Ƒespertilio rufo-niger
Tomes, 1858 p.82
;
Type
locality-
Shanghai
,
China
.
Myotis tsuensis
Kuroda, 1922 p.43
;
Type
locality-
Tsushima
,
Japan
.
M. chofukusei
Mori, 1928 p.359
;
Type
locality- Haeju,
Korea
;
Kishida & Mori, 1931 p.378
;
Tate, 1947 p.82
.
M. formosus tuensis
:
Kuroda, 1938 p.97
;
Won, 1967 p.317
;
Won, 1968 p.99
;
Corbet, 1978 p.50
;
Yoon, 1992 p.38
;
Yoon, 2010 p.32
.
M. formosus chofukusei
:
Kuroda, 1938 p.97
;
Ellerman & Morrison-Scott, 1951 p.146
;
Won, 1958 p.455
.
M
.
sicarius tsuensis
?:
Tate, 1941 p.548
.
M. formosus
:
Ellerman & Morrison-Scott, 1951 p.146
;
Won, 1968 p.98
;
Corbet, 1978 p.50
;
Han, 1994 p.45
;
Won & Smith, 1999 p.12
Son, 2001 p.92
;
Yoon 2004 p.60
;
Yoon, 2010 p.31
;
Jo
et al
., 2012 p.251
.
Range:
The distribution of
M. rufoniger
extends over the Korean Peninsula with most records coming from
Jeollanam Province
(southwestern
Korea
) and
Jeju
Island (
Fig. 23
).
Remarks:
Myotis formosus
forms a taxonomic complex with several related species.
Tomes (1858)
based his evaluation of
V
.
rufoniger
on color differences (pinna edge black, dorsal and ventral hairs tipped with bright rufous) but hesitated in classifying it as a distinct species or a ‘‘variety’’ of
V
.
formosus
(
Csorba
et al.
2014
)
.
Kuroda (1922)
depicted
M
.
tsuensis
as having reddish-brown fur dorsally and ventrally but only made a comparison with
M
.
macrodactylus
and
M
.
nattereri bombinus
. He identified
M
.
tsuensis
as a distinct species.
Kishida (1924)
defined
M
.
watasei
from
Taiwan
as matching the ‘‘rufoniger-type’’ based on red-brown ear color at the base edged with black, the basal dorsal and ventral pelage brown-yellow and terminal one-third brown and feet black.
Mori (1928)
differentiated
M
.
chofukusei
from
M
.
bechsteinii
by the ‘‘capucine orange’’ dorsal fur and ears emarginated with dark margins.
Imaizumi (1970)
, however, regarded
M
.
tsuensis
as ‘‘indistinguishable from
M
.
chofukusei
described from Korea’’ and gave its range as Tsushima and the Korean Peninsula.
Yoshiyuki (1989)
and
Yoon (2010)
also regarded the Korean population as belonging to the Subspecies
M
.
formosus tsuensis
.
Kim
et al
. (2011c)
published the complete mitochondrial genome of the species (
M. formosus
) in
Korea
.
Csorba
et al.
(2014)
split
M. formosus
into six species:
M. bartelsi
in Java and Bali;
M. formosus
in
Afghanistan
,
India
,
Nepal
,
China
,
Taiwan
, and
Vietnam
;
M. hermani
in Sumatra,
Thailand
, and
Malaysia
;
M. rufoniger
in
Korea
,
Japan
,
China
,
Taiwan
,
Laos
, and
Vietnam
;
M. rufopictus
in the
Philippines
; and
M. weberi
in Sulawesi. The species from
Korea
grouped with the
rufoniger
group, not the
formosus
group (
Csorba
et al.
2014
).
FIGURE 23.
Range map of
Myotis rufoniger
in Korea.
Mori (1928)
reported
M. chofukusei
on the Korean Peninsula and treated it as a synonym of
M. formosus tsuensis
Kuroda, 1922
from Tsushima,
Japan
(
Yoon 2010
). Since
M. f.
tsuensis
had priority and represented a subspecies for
Korea
and Tsushima Island, we suggest assignment of
M. rufoniger tsuensis
as the subspecies for
Korea
.
Conservation status:
The Ministry of Environment designated
M. formosus
(=
M. rufoniger
) as an endangered species in 1998 and the Cultural Heritage Administration listed it as a Natural Monument in 2005. Although the IUCN has not assigned a conservation status of this species, the Red Data Books for populations in
South Korea
and
North Korea
list
M. rufoniger
as ‘Vulnerable’ (NIBR 2012) and ‘Rare’ (MAB
National Committee of DPR
Korea
2002
), respectively.