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
282.
Schreber’s Yellow Bat
Scotophilus nigrita
French:
Scotophile de Schreber
/
German:
SchreberHausfledermaus
/
Spanish:
Scotofilo de Schreber
Other common names:
Giant House Bat
,
Giant Brown House Bat
,
Brown House Bat
,
Great Brown House Bat
,
Giant Yellow House Bat
,
Great Brown Bat
,
Giant Brown Bat
,
Schreber’s Brown Bat
Taxonomy.
Vespertilio nigrita Schreber, 1774
,
Senegal
.
Scotophilus nigrita
was mostly referred to as S. gigas until in 1978 when it was concluded that it is the senior name for the taxon; prior to 1978, specimens called
nigrita
should be
dinganii
. Based on cytochromeb analyses, S.
nigrita
is paraphyletic with respect to S. colias, S. dinganui, S.
nigritellus
, and S.
viridis
. Populations of S.
nigrita
from West and southern Africa differ genetically by 7-6-8-1%), suggesting that
nigrita
might be distinct from alvenslebeni, but more extensive genetic sampling and morphological analyses are needed to take any taxonomic conclusion. Two subspecies recognized.
Subspecies and Distribution.
S.n.nigritaSchreber,1774—savannasofWAfrica(Senegal,IvoryCoast,Ghana,NTogo,SENigeria,andNCameroon)andSCSudan.
S. n. alvenslebeni Dalquest, 1965
— savannas of E & SE Africa (E
DR Congo
, SE
Kenya
, NE
Tanzania
, S
Malawi
, E
Zimbabwe
,
Mozambique
, and NE
South Africa
.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body ¢.
103-123 mm
,tail 64-92-
3 mm
, ear
20-24 mm
, hindfoot
17-19 mm
, forearm
78-83 mm
(males) and
80-88 mm
(females); weight
88-91 g
. Female forearm lengths are usually longer than in males. Schreber’s Yellow Bat is much larger than any other species of
Scotophilus
and is the largest African vespertilionid. Mid-dorsal hairs are
6-7 mm
. Dorsal pelage is blackish brown, sepia-brown, greenish brown, rusty brown, or grayish brown suffused with yellow; dorsal hairs are unicolored. Ventral pelage is pale yellow to pale yellowish gray. Wings and uropatagium are blackish brown. Ears are comparatively short, separated, and blackish brown, with inner margin strongly convex and lobe at base and outer margin fairly straight with semicircular fleshy antitragus. Tragus has rounded tip and concave anterior margin. Skull is large (greatest skull lengths 27-8-32-
1 mm
) for
Scotophilus
and has welldeveloped sagittal crest and helmet. Canines are particularly strong.
Habitat.
Relatively dry woodland savannas and miombo woodland savannas, usually close to rivers and riverine forests. There is one record each from dry semideciduous forest in
Ghana
, woodland and riverine forest mosaic in
Tanzania
, and rainforest zone in
Nigeria
. One individual was mist-netted over an almost dry river in
Togo
, and the individual from
Tanzania
was mist-netted over a pool.
Food and Feeding.
Schreber’s Yellow Bats probably forage high aboveground. Occlusal cusp pattern of molar teeth suggests that they are strictly carnivorous, but other teeth characters suggest that their function is to crush rather than to slice, suggesting insectivory.
Breeding.
No information.
Activity patterns.
Schreber’s Yellow Bat was found roosting under a corrugated iron roof where midday temperatures exceeded 40°C in
Sudan
, in a hollow of a dead
Hyphaene (Arecaceae)
palm in
Malawi
, and in a house in
Zimbabwe
. Echolocation call has peak frequency of 32-9 kHz. African goshawks (Accipiter tachiro) prey on Schreber’s Yellow Bat and possible lannerfalcons (Falco biarmicus), peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus), and bat hawks (Macheiramphus alcinus).
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
Ectoparasites include the bedbug
Cacodmus
villosus (
Hemiptera
,
Cimicidae
) and the mite Spinturnix scotophili (Acari,
Spinturnicidae
).
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List.
Bibliography.
Freeman (1984), Happold, M. (2013bj), Kock (1969d), Mikula et al. (2016), Robbins (1978), Thiagavel et al. (2017), Vallo etal. (2015).