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
56755
10.5281/zenodo.6397752
45351c32-25dd-422c-bdb2-00e73deb4943
978-84-16728-19-0
6397752
494.
Peking
Myotis
Myotis pequinius
French:
Murin de
Pékin
/
German:
Peking-Mausohr
/
Spanish:
Ratonero de
Pekin
Taxonomy.
Myotis (Leuconoe) pequinius Thomas, 1908
,
“Cave
30 miles
[=
48 km
] W. of
Peking
[Hopeh,
China
]. 600° [=
183 m
].”
Subgenus
Myotis
;
myotis
species group.
Myotis pequinius
appears to be related to M.
bombinus
and
M. nattereri
tschuliensis based on limited genetic data. There might be at least two species under
M. pequinius
as currently defined, based on genetic data showing that there are two highly divergent clades within the species. Additional studies are needed. Monotypic.
Distribution.
E
China
(from
Beijing
to
Sichuan
in the SW and
Anhui
in the SE).
Descriptive notes.
Head—body
62 mm
, tail
42 mm
, ear 14:9-19-
9 mm
, hindfoot 8-
4— 12 mm
, forearm 43-8-52-
7 mm
. Fur of the
Peking
Myotisis short and velvety. Dorsal pelage is gray reddish brown; venter is off-white. Ears are short, with notch on posterior borders a little below tips; tragusis relatively short at ¢.50% the ear length. Wings attach to ankle, and posterior margin of uropatagium is hairless orslightly fringed with hairs; feet are large. Skull has short and distinctly upturned rostrum; frontal region is very low and flat: and P? and P, are both very small and in tooth row, occasionally absent. Dental formula usually has 38 teeth or rarely 36 when an upper or lower premolar is missing.
Habitat.
Forested areas.
Food and Feeding.
Feces from
Shanxi
contained
Coleoptera
(80% by volume),
Hemiptera
(10%),
Lepidoptera
(5-2%),
Diptera
(3:5%), lepidopteran larvae (0-6%), Odonata (0-6%), and Acari (0-1%). Diet, wing shape, and call design suggest that
Peking
Myotis
gleans prey off of vegetation in cluttered habitats, butthis has yet to be confirmed.
Breeding.
No information.
Activity patterns.
The
Peking
Myotis
roosts in caves and houses. Calls are steep FM sweeps, with average start frequency of 84-2 kHz (62-4-99-2 kHz), end frequency of 16-9 kHz (13-6-19-2 kHz), peak frequency of 32-8 kHz (23-2-40 kHz), interpulse interval of 93-4 milliseconds (56-6—144-4 milliseconds), and duration of 5-7 milliseconds (3-9-7-5 milliseconds) in
Shanxi
.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
Holotype and one other specimen were collected in a cave that also included a species of
Miniopterus
.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The
Peking
Myotis
is not particularly common and was regionally listed in
China
as near threatened.
Bibliography.
Jiang Tinglei, Sun Keping et al. (2010), Jones et al. (2006), Puechmaille, Allegrini et al. (2012), Ruedi et al. (2013), Smith & Xie Yan (2008), Smith, Johnston, Jones & Rossiter (2008h).