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
302.
Kachin
Woolly Bat
Kerivoula kachinensis
French:
Kérivoule du
Kachin
/
German:
Kachin-Wollfledermaus
/
Spanish:
Querivoula
de
Kachin
Taxonomy.
Kerivoula kachinensis Bates et al., 2004
,
“Namdee Forest, Bhamo Township,
Kachin State
,
Myanmar
,
24°34.203'N
,
97°07.501'E.
”
See
K. hardwickii
.
Kerivoula kachinensis
appears to be close to
K. depressa
and
K. hardwickii
or
K. furva
in some analyses. Monotypic.
Distribution.
N
Myanmar
, N
Thailand
,
Laos
, N & C
Vietnam
, and SE
Cambodia
.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body 44.753.6 mm, tail 52:
3-61 mm
, ear 11:
9-16 mm
, hindfoot 8:6-9-
7 mm
, forearm 40-1— 43-
2 mm
; weight 6-3-9-
5 g
. Fur is long and dense. Dorsal pelage is brown (hairs with dark gray bases, gray-brown middles, and whitish brown tips); venter is a little paler. Face is covered in hair, except naked nostrils. Ears are large and naked, with convex anterior borders, rounded tips, and distinctly concave partjust below tips on posterior borders; tragus is tall and narrow, with virtually straight anterior margin and slight convexity below tip and concave posterior margin with small basal lobe. Wings are attached at base of toes, and membranes are dark grayish brown; there is no definite fringe of hairs on posterior margin of uropatagium. Fleshy callosity occurs at base of each thumb on wings that is centrally smooth and rugged near edge. Skull has distinctly flattened and broad braincase; rostrum has large V-shaped narial pit; basioccipital pits are shallow; and postorbital constriction is narrower than posterior part of rostrum. I? and I? are unicuspid and equal in crown area; M’ is reduced, missing metastyle; I, and I, are tricuspid; I, is smaller and has well-developed central cusp; and M, has reduced talonid that is ¢.70% the size of trigonid.
Habitat.
Primarily evergreen and mixed deciduous forests but also deciduous dipterocarp forests near bamboo (
Cambodia
), transition zone between lower montane and mixed deciduous forests (
Thailand
), disturbed semi-evergreen and evergreen forests, sometimes near limestone escarpments (
Laos
), at elevations of
100-1300 m
.
Food and Feeding.
No information.
Breeding.
Pregnant Kachin Woolly Bats were captured in mid-April and lactating females in late May in
Laos
.
Activity patterns.
The Kachin Woolly Bat might use narrow crevices as day roosts, as suggested by flattened braincase. In
Loei Province
, northern
Thailand
, call shape is steep FM sweep, with peak frequencies of 123-124-9 kHz (mean 123-9 kHz) and durations of 1-5-2-3 milliseconds.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
No information.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The Kachin Woolly Bat appears to be locally common in
Thailand
,
Laos
, and
Cambodia
. Little 1s known aboutits ecology and threats.
Bibliography.
Bates & Francis (2008b), Bates, Struebig et al. (2004), Douangboubpha et al. (2016), Khan et al. (2010), Kruskop (2013a), Kuo Haochih et al. (2017), Soisook et al. (2007), Struebig et al. (2005), Thong Vu Dinh et al. (2006), Tu Vuong Tan et al. (2018).