A review of bat research in Thailand with eight new species records for the country
Author
Bumrungsri, Sara
Department of Biology, Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Songkhla, Thailand, 90112 E-mail: sara. b @ psu. ac. th
Author
Harrison, David L.
Harrison Institute, Bowerwood House, 15 St Botolph’s Road, Sevenoaks, Kent, TN 13 3 AQ, Great Britain
Author
Satasook, Chutamas
Department of Biology, Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Songkhla, Thailand, 90112 E-mail: sara. b @ psu. ac. th
Author
Prajukjitr, Amorn
Department of Biology, Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Songkhla, Thailand, 90112 E-mail: sara. b @ psu. ac. th
Author
Thong-Aree, Siriporn
Peat Swamp Forest and Hala-Bala Wildlife Research Station, P. O. 6, Wang, Narathiwat, Thailand, 90160
Author
Bates, Paul J. J.
Harrison Institute, Bowerwood House, 15 St Botolph’s Road, Sevenoaks, Kent, TN 13 3 AQ, Great Britain
text
Acta Chiropterologica
2006
2006-12-01
8
2
325
359
journal article
21492
10.3161/1733-5329(2006)8[325:arobri]2.0.co;2
91cacb4e-dc01-4157-af9a-ebdc303ce86f
1733-5329
3944593
Murina suilla
(Temminck, 1840)
Brown tube-nosed bat
Vespertilio suillus
Temminck, 1840: 224, pl. 56;
Tapos, Java.
New Material
PSU-M 05.4 (field no. SB030519.23),
♂
,
19 May 2003
,
Bala Forest
,
Hala-Bala Wildlife Sanctuary
,
Wang
District,
Narathi- wat
Province,
05°48’09”N
,
101°49’45”E
.
PSU-M 05.5 (field no. SB031019.4),
♂
,
19 October 2003
,
Namsai Ranger Station
,
Hala Forest
,
Hala-Bala Wildlife Sanctuary
,
Yala Province
,
06°04’00”N
,
101°22’00”E
.
PSU-M 05.13 (field no. SB041217.2),
♂
,
17 December 2004
,
Headquarters of Ton Nga-chang
Wildlife Sanctuary
,
Song- khla
Province,
06°56’N
,
100°14’E
. All specimens collected by
S. Bumrungsri
and members of the Hala-Bala bat research team.
Taxonomic Notes
This is a small, tube nosed bat with a forearm length in
Thailand
of 30.4–30.8 mm (Table 4). The dorsal pelage is brown, intermixed with golden hair tips; the roots are dark grey. Ventrally, the hair roots and tips are very pale, almost white (Fig. 2c). There is a well developed emargination on the posterior margin of each ear. Each wing is attached to a point close to the base of the claw of the outer toe. The dorsal aspect of the tail membrane and the toes are hairy, buffy brown to orange buff in colour. The skull has a small, shallow rostrum relative to the size of the braincase. The sagittal and lambdoid crests are scarcely evident. The first upper incisor (I
2
), which has a second- ary cusp, is small with a crown area about one third that of the second (I3). I3 is situat- ed postero-lateral to I2, such that I2, which is the same height as I3, is visible when viewed laterally. The upper canine (C1) ex- ceeds the second upper premolar (P4) in height and is about two thirds the crown area. The first upper premolar (P2) is much reduced, its crown area is one third and its height about half of P4. The lower canine (C
1
) is about equal in height and slightly ex- ceeds the crown area of the second lower premolar (P
4
). The first lower premolar (P
2
) is about one third the crown area of the sec- ond (P
4
). The talonids of the first (M
1
) and second (M
2
) lower molars are about equal in crown area to the trigonids.
Species
n
GTL CBL CCL ZB BB PC C–M
3
M 3 – M 3 C
1
– C 1 C–M
3
M
Hipposideros
ridleyi 1♂ 20.1 18.1 17.5 9.6 9.0 2.9 6.6 6.4 – 7.0 12.6
Myotis
hermani 1 ♀ 21.2 20.2 19.1 14.1 9.2 4.3 8.7 9.1 6.3 9.7 16.5
Pipistrellus
stenopterus 1♂ 16.2 15.9 15.4 11.9 9.1 5.0 5.8 7.8 6.2 6.3 13.2 Hesperoptenus tomesi 1? 21.2 20.5 20.0 15.3 10.6 5.6 7.9 9.9 7.8 9.0 16.4 Murina suilla 3♂♂ 14.5 – 14.8 13.0 – 13.7 12.6 – 13.0 8.3 – 8.5 7.1 – 7.3 4.0 – 4.4 4.7– 5.1 5.0 –5.4 3.4 – 3.5 5.0 – 5.3 10.0 – 10.1 14.8, 0.3 13.4, 0.3 12.8, 0.2 8.4, 0.1 7.2, 0.1 4.2, 0.2 4.9, 0.2 5.2, 0.2 3.5, 0.1 5.2, 0.2 10.1, 0.1
Murina
aenea
2 ♀♀ 17.2, 17.8
15.8
, 16.0 15.0, 15.4 9.7, 10.2 7.8, 8.0 4.5, 4.6 5.7, 6.1 5.9, 6.2 4.5, 4.8 6.1, 6.3 11.9, 12.7
Kerivoula
pellucida 1♂ 14.6 13.3 12.9 8.2 7.1 3.0 5.5 5.1 3.1 5.8 10.4
Mops
mops
1♂ 21.5 19.1 18.4 13.4 10.4 4.7 7.4 9.6 5.3 8.0 15.2
|
TABLE
5. Eleven cranial and dental measurements (in mm) of 11 specimens of eight bat species recently collected in
Thailand
, including the greatest length of skull (GTL), condylo-basal length (CBL), condylo-canine length (CCL), zygomatic breadth (ZB), breadth of braincase (BB), postorbital constriction (PC), maxillary toothrow length (C–M
3
), palatal breadth (M 3 – M 3), anterior palatal breadth (C
1
– C
1
), mandibular toothrow length (C–M), mandibular length (M). For
Murina
suilla
,
3
the range, mean and standard deviation are given
Distribution
and Ecological Notes
Murina suilla
is found in
Malaysia
, Su- matra, Nias Island, Java and Borneo. Its dis- tribution in Sulawesi, Peleng Island and New
Guinea
is doubtful (
Corbet and Hill, 1992
). These are the first records from
Thailand
.
The specimen from Bala Forest was cap- tured using a harp trap set across a trail in primary lowland evergreen forest. Three further individuals (forearm length of
30.1–31.7 mm
), which were not taken as voucher specimens, were collected in adja- cent areas, both along trails and over streams (
5–12 m
wide). A single individual was collected in Hala Forest on the edge of pristine forest, which was adjacent to the large dam of a reservoir. In Ton Nga-chang,
M. suilla
was captured along a nature trail in late successional forest that had been se- lectively logged 20–30 years previously. The elevations of these sites were less than
200 m
a.s.l.