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
283.
Robbins’s Yellow Bat
Scotophilus nucella
French:
Scotophile de Robbins
/
German:
Robbins-Hausfledermaus
/
Spanish:
Scotofilo de Robbins
Other common names:
Robbins’'s House Bat
,
Lesser Nut-colored House Bat
,
Rainforest House Bat
,
Nucella House Bat
,
Little Nut-colored House Bat
Taxonomy.
Scotophilus nucella Robbins,
1983
,
1 mile [=
1-6 km
] north of Nkawkaw, Eastern region,
Ghana
.
Scotophilus nucella
was treated as a subspecies of
leucogaster
but now as a distinct species
. Monotypic.
Distribution
.
Known only from SE
Ivory Coast
, S
Ghana
, extreme WC
Uganda
, and Kambai Forest Reserve in East Usambara Mts of
Tanzania
.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body c¢.74
78 mm
, tail
41-47 mm
, ear
15-16 mm
, hindfoot
10-12 mm
, forearm
49-53 mm
. Pelage is soft and sleek. Dorsal pelage is dark rusty brown to blackish brown; dorsal hairs are unicolored or have paler bases. Ventral pelage is slightly paler and dark brown to reddish orange. Ears are short, widely separated, and dark brown, with strongly convex inner margin and lobe at base; outer margin is fairly straight, with semicircular fleshy antitragus. Tragus has pointed tip and concave anterior margin. Wings and uropatagium are sepia-brown. Braincase is relatively inflated, and sagittal crest forms a helmet.
Habitat.
Rainforests. Robbins’s Yellow Bat is known from high forest vegetation zone in
Ghana
and
Uganda
and might occur in high forest areas of West, Central, and East Africa.
Food and Feeding.
No information.
Breeding.
No information.
Activity patterns.
No information.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
No information.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Data Deficient on The IUCN Red List.
Bibliography.
Grubb et al. (1998), Koopman (1993, 1994), Robbins (1983), Simmons (2005).