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
324.
Hairy-winged Bat
Harpiocephalus harpia
French:
Murine a ailes velues
/
German:
Haarfllgelfledermaus
/
Spanish:
Ratonero de alas pilosas
Other common names:
Lesser Hairy-winged Bat
Taxonomy.
Vespertilio harpia Temminck, 1840
, “
I'lle de
Java
[
Indonesia
] ... les caverns de la partie sud du Volcan de Guédé [= caves of the southern part of Mount Gede].” Based on lectotype selection, restricted by A. M. Husson in 1955 10.*S.E. side of Mount Gede, W.
Java
.”
Genetically,
Harpiocephalus
appears to be sister to the rest of Murininae or imbedded within
Murina
and related to M. kontumensis, or to M.
leucogaster
and
M. shuipuensis
; exact placement currently uncertain. The form
mordax
is a synonym; it has sometimes been considered a distinct species based on differing skull size, but this difference actually represents sexual dimorphism, the name
mordax
having been applied to the larger females. Four subspecies recognized.
Subspecies and Distribution.
H.h.harpiaTemminck,1840—MalayPeninsula,Sumatra,Java,Bali,Lombok,andthePhilippines(Luzon,Leyte,Negros,Mindanao,andPalawan).
H.h.lasyurusHodgson,1847—NEIndia(Sikkim,WestBengal,Assam,Meghalaya,andMizoram),Bhutan,andNWMyanmar.
H.h.madrassiusThomas,1923—SIndia(KeralaandTamilNadu).
H. h. rufulus G. M. Allen, 1913
— SC & SE
China
(
Yunnan
,
Guangdong
, and
Fujian
),
Vietnam
(including Cat Ba I), N
Laos
, C
Myanmar
, and
Thailand
.
Also
Taiwan
(subspecies as yet undetermined).
Descriptive notes.
Head—body
57-75 mm
, tail
40-50 mm
, ear
15-18 mm
, hindfoot
10-14 mm
, forearm 44-54-
9 mm
; weight 12-30-
2 g
. Males are distinctly smaller than females. Fur is thick and soft; dorsally bright orange (with dark-based hairs) to dull orangish brown (with gray-based hairs), with bright orange individuals commoner in
Malaysia
and the
Philippines
; ventrally lighter and grayer. Dorsal pelage extends densely onto wing bases, legs, and feet, and entire uropatagium and rest of wings and forearmsis lightly haired. Entire face is furred except long, protuberant nostrils (similar to those of
Murina
); ears and face are dark brown whereas membranes are blackish brown. Ears are evenly rounded on anterior and posterior borders and generally funnel-shaped; tragus is long, pointed, slightly convex anteriorly, concave on posterior border, and with posterior basal notch. Baculum is forked distally a little before midpoint, the two prongs resembling curved plier handles, being broadest in the middle; main shaft is short with a dorsal ridge and ventral groove. Skull is robust with short, broad, deep rostrum; zygomata are long and relatively strong, with a slight jugal bone; lambdoidal crests are well developed; tympanic bullae and cochleae are small; basioccipital pits are shallow; dentition is robust with massive canines; upper molars are modified and reduced, essentially missing mesostyles, the metacone being the largest cusp; M” is extremely small, being represented by a small “scalelike” tooth that lies against M?; talonids of all three lower molars are reduced. Dental formulais12/3,C1/1,P 2/2, M 3/3 (x2) = 34. Chromosomal complement has 2n = 44 and FN = 52 (
Vietnam
,
Taiwan
, and
Guangdong
,
China
) and apparently n = 40 (
Thailand
).
Habitat.
Understory of lowland dipterocarp and hill forests and some disturbed areas in South-east Asia; also montane forests and valleys with tall trees near water in South Asia. In the
Philippines
, the species occurs in primary and disturbed lowland, montane, and mossy forests. Recorded at elevations of
300-2480 m
in the
Philippines
, and
185-1538 m
in
India
.
Food and Feeding.
Hairy-winged Bats are known to feed on beetles.
Breeding.
No information.
Activity patterns.
Call shape is a steep FM sweep with start frequency of 111-5 kHz, end frequency 32-5 kHz, peak frequency 57 kHz, and duration 1 millisecond, based on single recording in
Vietnam
. Peak frequency of 78-3 kHz was recorded in
Guangdong
,
China
.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
No information.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The Hairywinged Bat is widespread butis suffering habitat destruction from agricultural expansion and deforestation throughout its range.
Bibliography.
Bates & Harrison (1997), Chen Bocheng etal. (2015), Csorba, Bumrungsri, Francis, Bates, Rosell-Ambal et al. (2008), Das (1986b), Francis (2008a), Francis et al. (2010), Heaney, Balete, Dolar et al. (1998), Heaney, Balete & Rickart (2016), Hill & Francis (1984), Husson (1955), Kruskop (2013a), Lin Liangkong et al. (2006), Matveev (2005), McBee etal. (1986), Nguyen Truong Son etal. (2015), Smith & Xie Yan (2008), Zhou Quan et al. (2014).