Mammalian Diversity And Matses Ethnomammalogy In Amazonian Peru Part 4: Bats
Author
Velazco, Paúl M.
Author
Voss, Robert S.
Author
Fleck, David W.
Author
Simmons, Nancy B.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2021
2021-08-27
2021
451
1
201
https://bioone.org/journals/bulletin-of-the-american-museum-of-natural-history/volume-451/issue-1/0003-0090.451.1.1/Mammalian-Diversity-and-Matses-Ethnomammalogy-in-Amazonian-Peru-Part-4/10.1206/0003-0090.451.1.1.full
journal article
10.1206/0003-0090.451.1.1
0003-0090
5415316
Choeroniscus minor
(Peters, 1868)
Figure 10B
VOUCHER MATERIAL (TOTAL = 9): Jenaro
Herrera
(MUSM 862, 5586), Nuevo
San Juan
(AMNH 273066, 273106; MUSM 13195, 15171– 15173), Quebrada Lobo (MUSA 15127); see table 21 for measurements.
UNVOUCHERED OBSERVATIONS: None.
IDENTIFICATION: Before the revision by Simmons and Voss (1998), specimens of
Choeroniscus minor
were referred to several species (
C. inca
,
C. minor
, and
C. intermedius
) that were diagnosed primarily by the length of the rostrum (Koopman, 1978). After reviewing specimens (including
holotypes
) throughout the distribution of these nominal taxa, Simmons and Voss (1998) concluded that they represent a single species for which
C. minor
(Peters, 1868)
is the oldest available name.
Choeroniscus minor
is distinguished from other congeners by the following combination of characteristics: rostrum shorter than braincase, posterolateral margin of palate unnotched, pterygoids moderately inflated, forearm ≤
38 mm
, greatest length of skull>
21 mm
, and maxillary toothrow>7.5 mm (Simmons and Voss, 1998; Griffiths and Gardner, 2008a; Solmsen and Schliemann, 2008). This species exhibits marked sexual size dimorphism, with females being larger than males (Husson, 1962; Brosset and Charles-Dominique, 1990; Simmons and Voss, 1998; Solmsen, 1998; Solmsen and Schliemann, 2008). Additional descriptions and measurements of
C. minor
have been provided by Goodwin and Greenhall (1961), Husson (1962), Swanepoel and Genoways (1979), Brosset and Charles-Dominique (1990), Lim et al. (2005), and Solmsen and Schliemann (2008). No subspecies are currently recognized (Simmons and Voss, 1998; Griffiths and Gardner, 2008a; Solmsen and Schliemann, 2008).
The Jenaro
Herrera
specimens were originally identified as
Choeroniscus intermedius
by Ascorra et al. (1993), but Fleck et al. (2002) and Medina et al. (2015) correctly identified their specimens from Nuevo
San Juan
and Quebrada Lobo, respectively, as
C. minor
. The voucher material we examined from the Yavarí-Ucayali interfluve conforms to previous descriptions of
C. minor
, with measurements that fall within the range of size variation now documented for the species. However, it is noteworthy that
one specimen
(MUSM 15172) possesses an extra pair of lower molars.
5
REMARKS: The only specimens of
Choeroniscus minor
accompanied by ecological data from our region were collected at two roosts near Nuevo
San Juan
. The first, encountered on
8 September 1999
, consisted of
two adult
females under the buttresses of a fallen tree in secondary growth at the edge of a Matses swidden. The second roost, encountered on
20 September 1999
, consisted of
two adult
males and
one adult
female perched on the underside of an unmodified frond of the stemless palm
Attalea racemosa
, about
1 m
above the ground, in primary hilltop forest.
Our discovery of
Choeroniscus minor
roosting in foliage represents atypical behavior; all previously described roosts of this species have been
5
Supernumerary teeth usually occur unilaterally in glossophagines, but supernumerary teeth are known to occur bilaterally in numerous other bat taxa, especially nectarivorous and frugivorous species (Slaughter, 1970; Phillips, 1971; Bergmans and Van Bree, 1972; Bergmans, 1976; Giannini and Simmons, 2007).
found under fallen trees or inside hollow logs (Sanborn, 1954; Patterson, 1992; Simmons and Voss, 1998; Rengifo et al., 2013).