Philippine bats of the genus Kerivoula (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae): Overview and assessment of variation in K. pellucida and K. whiteheadi
Author
Sedlock, Jodi L.
Author
Heaney, Lawrence R.
Author
Balete, Danilo S.
Author
Ruedi, Manuel
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-03-25
4755
3
454
490
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4755.3.2
580ab198-5063-495c-942a-ded7411b93ea
1175-5334
3736817
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:582379EA-AC62-4699-94BB-43039D068C11
Kerivoula pellucida
Waterhouse 1854
Type
locality:
Philippines
.
Specimens examined
. Given in
Appendix A
.
Distribution
. Borneo, Java, the Malay Peninsula, the
Philippines
(
Cebu
, Jolo, Mindanao, Mindoro, and
Palawan
), and Siberut (
Fig. 2
; see also
Corbet & Hill 1992: 154
).
Description.
Total length
83–97 mm
, tail
43–50 mm
, ear
16–18.5 mm
, forearm
31.1–35.2 mm
, tibia 16.6–19.4, mass 4.0–
5.7 mm
(
Table 4
). Dorsal pelage is long and soft with a slightly woolly appearance, and pale reddish-
brown buff; hairs slightly paler at base than at tips, lacking distinct color bands; ventral pelage paler (
Fig. 5D, E
). The ears are pale brown, and unusually large (
Fig. 5A, B
). A thin scattering of inconspicuous hairs is present over the dorsal surface of the interfemoral membrane, some of which project over its posterior edge (
Fig. 5A
). The wing and tail membranes are very pale brown, nearly translucent (
Fig. 5A, C
). Tragus long and slender (
Fig. 5B
). Skin is nearly transparent giving the face, wing- and leg bones a reddish-pink hue in live animals. The wing membrane inserts onto the side of the outer toe well above the base, not at its base (
Fig. 5C
). There do not appear to be striking regional differences within the
Philippines
in appearance; however, specimens from
Bohol
are slightly darker brown than those from Mindanao and
Cebu
; those from
Palawan
are palest.
Palawan
specimens have more reddish-brown tips on the dorsum than those from
Bohol
and
Cebu
.
FIGURE 5.
Photograph composite of
K. pellucida
showing the nearly translucent wing membranes (A), pelage color, and ears with tapered tragus (B), membrane attachment on foot and membrane with male gland (C), dorsal (D) and ventral (E) pelage lacking distinct color bands. A: Bohol I. (no voucher); B–C: FMNH 205817, Cebu I.; D–E: FMNH 202785, Bohol I.
Skull as shown in
Figure 6
. GTL14.06–15.03, CCL
12.75–13.44 mm
, GBB
7.04–7.55 mm
, BH
5.69–6.33 mm
, PC 2.98–3.15, C–M
3
5.63–6.05 mm
, M
2
–M
2ext
4.88–5.16 mm
, C
1
–C
1
1.62–1.86 mm
, C–M
3
6.05–6.50 mm
, MDL
10.19–11.16 mm
(
Table 1
). The skull is narrow with a highly inflated braincase that forms a steep forehead. The post-palatal region extends far posterior to the molar tooth row, and the bullar cochleae are moderately large. The upper tooth rows are slightly convergent anteriorly. Infraorbital canal is short, above P
3
to middle of M
1
. The upper incisors are conical; the first upper incisor is more than twice the height of the second upper incisor, which is often separated from the canine by a narrow space. The first lower incisor (
Fig. 7B
) usually has four cusps (occasionally three), the second has three cusps, and the third has two prominent cusps and usually a third (at the posterior edge). The upper and lower canines are high and conical with a cingulum that extends from the anterior edge lingually to the posterior margin, about twice the height of the first premolars. The first upper premolar is nearly circular in outline, and the second is slightly compressed laterally (
Fig. 7A
). The third upper premolar is partially molariform, with a broad lingual shelf. The first lower premolar is roughly circular in outline only slightly compressed laterally; the second and third are more compressed laterally, but not strongly so. The upper and lower molars are typical for the genus (
Hill 1965
). Philippine specimens are slightly larger than a small series from
Malaysia
(
Fig. 3
;
Tables 1
,
4
).
Comparisons
.
Kerivoula pellucida
differs from
K. whiteheadi
in having dorsal and ventral pelage that is paler at the base than at the tips (
Fig. 5D, E
) (rather than dark at the base), reddish-brown at the tips, and slightly paler at mid-shaft, giving a tri-banded appearance. The wing and interfemoral membranes of
K. pellucida
are pale and nearly transparent, rather than moderately dark brown as those of
K. whiteheadi
. The tail membrane of
K. pellucida
has shorter, less conspicuous hairs (though still few and scattered) than that of
K. whiteheadi
. The wing membrane inserts up onto the side of the toe (
Fig. 5C
), rather than at the base of the outer toe. Most individuals of
K. pellucida
have greater total length than in
K. whiteheadi
, but much of this is due to having a longer tail (at least
43 mm
, rather than
41 mm
or less). The forearm is typically longer (usually 32 or more, rather than
31 mm
or less), and the ear averages longer, though there is overlap (
Table 4
). The rostrum, palate, and braincase of
K
.
pellucida
are proportionately broader than those of
K. whiteheadi
(
Fig. 6
), the upper and lower premolars are less laterally compressed, there is more space between the molars lingually in
K. pellucida
, and the toothrows are typically longer (
Fig. 7
). The posterior palatal extension in
K
.
pellucida
is longer and narrower.
Kerivoula pellucida
differs from the Philippine
K
.
hardwickii
(i.e.,
K.
“
hardwickii
A” and
K.
“
hardwickii
B”) in having larger and more pointed ears (rather than smaller and rounded;
Heaney
et al.
2010
,
2016
). The pelage of
K. pellucida
is paler at the base of each hair (
Fig. 5D, E
), rather than much darker at the base. Wing membranes of
K. pellucida
are pale and nearly transparent (
Fig. 5A
), rather than moderately dark brown and not transparent. Skin over the wing bones on individuals in the
K. hardwickii
group are darkly pigmented, not nearly transparent giving the bones the appearance of white stripes in preserved specimens and a pinkish hue in live animals, as in
K. pellucida
. Hairs on the tail membrane of Philippine
K. hardwickii
are very sparse and short, but a fringe of short hairs is often visible along the posterior edge. The wing membranes attach at the base of the outer toe, not part way up as in
K. pellucida
(
Fig. 5C
). The average total length of
K. pellucida
(
91.4 mm
) is longer than
K. “
hardwickii
A” (
82.8 mm
) and
K.
“
hardwickii
B” (85.0 mm); but the average forearm length of
K. pellucida
(
32.9 mm
) is similar to
K.
“
hardwickii
A” (33.0 mm) and smaller than
K.
“
hardwickii
B” (35.0 mm) (
Table 4
;
Heaney
et al.
2010
; unpublished data). The skull in
K. pellucida
is generally proportionately longer and narrower than Philippine
K. hardwickii
(
Fig. 8
). The post-palatal extension of Philippine
K. hardwickii
is broader and shorter than that of
K. pellucida
. Finally, the palate is proportionately narrower in
K. pellucida
than in Philippine
K. hardwickii
.
Kerivoula pellucida
differs from Philippine
K. papillosa
in being much smaller in all respects (
Fig. 3
;
Heaney
et al.
2010
,
2016
); the average forearm length of
K. pellucida
is
32.9 mm
compared to
42.6 mm
in
K. papillosa
(
Heaney
et al.
2010
; unpublished data). The pelage of
K. pellucida
is much paler overall than
K. papillosa
, which is a dark brown. The skull is smaller and more delicate, with conspicuously narrower rostrum, palate, and braincase (
Figs. 6
,
9
). The second upper incisor reaches only one-third toward the tip of the first incisor, rather than more than halfway (
Figs. 7A, B
,
10A, B
). All of the premolars and molars are proportionately more massive.
Echolocation
. Philippine
K. pellucida
(4 individuals from Bohol, 1 from Cebu) have extremely broadband (132 kHz), short duration (2 ms), high frequency (peak = 138 kHz) calls similar to those recorded in Peninsular
Malaysia
(
Fig. 11
;
Table 5
;
Kingston
et al.
1999
,
Schmieder
et al.
2010
). They are also similar to those of Philippine
K. whiteheadi
with respect to peak frequency, although
K. pellucida
calls had a broader bandwidth (
Table 5
). Both species’ calls start at a similarly high frequency (194 kHz), but
K. pellucida
calls terminate at a lower frequency.
Ecology
. In the
Philippines
,
K. pellucida
occupies a broad range of elevations (sea level to about
1200 m
), though most records are from below
700 m
.
They also occupy a wide range of habitats; examples include an isolated patch of second growth forest surrounded by vegetable farms on
Cebu
Island, disturbed second growth forest on limestone on
Bohol
Island, and pristine montane forest on Mindanao Island. Its roosting habits are poorly known in the
Philippines
, but one adult female with a suckling young was captured by hand from dried banana leaves on
Palawan
Island (J. Esselstyn, pers. com.).
Payne
et al.
(1985)
also reported it roosting in dried banana leaves, and
Kingston (2006)
reported a group roosting in a clutter of dead understory leaves. In Peninsular
Malaysia
, they roost in small groups of up to 15 individuals and appear to have small home ranges, evidenced by short recapture distances (<
100 m
) and distinct “hot spots” of high genetic autocorrelation among individuals (
Rossiter
et al.
2012
). On Bohol Island, on three occasions, multiple individuals were captured either in the same or adjacent harp traps simultaneously, usually a male and a female (Sedlock
et al.
2014). In Peninsular
Malaysia
,
K. pellucida
exhibits asynchronous reproduction giving birth throughout the year, although the highest proportion of pregnant individuals was captured during the rainy season when insect abundance was highest (
Nurul-Ain
et al.
2017
). In the
Philippines
, five lactating females were captured in July, during the rainy season (Sedlock
et al.
2014), and one female was captured with a suckling young in late March (J. Esselstyn, pers. com.). Its echolocation behavior is highly adapted for distinguishing prey from background clutter at close range allowing it to forage within the forest understory (
Schmieder
et al.
2012
).