Hipposideros halophyllus Hill and Yenbutra, 1984
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1371/journal.pone.0179555 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4343593 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F3F77F-FF8F-FF91-FDB4-D5FEBA33FC3B |
treatment provided by |
Tatiana |
scientific name |
Hipposideros halophyllus Hill and Yenbutra, 1984 |
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Hipposideros halophyllus Hill and Yenbutra, 1984 View in CoL
Hipposideros halophyllus Hill and Yenbutra, 1984: 77 View in CoL ; Khao Sa Moa Khon (= Khao Sa Moa Khon), Tha Woong (= Ta Woong), Lop Buri, THAILAND (Kitti Thonglongya, collector; TNRC 54–3694 ) [ 115].
Common English name: Thai Roundleaf Bat
Barcode Index Number: BOLD:AAX1220 (1 DNA barcode from Peninsular Malaysia; Fig 4 View Fig 4 )
Remarks: The BIN also contains a DNA barcode labelled as H. ater from India which was originally mined from Genbank. The DNA barcode of “ H. ater ” is likely to be a case of misidentification as H. halophyllus and H. ater are distinct species. H. halophyllus has a kidneyshaped internarial septum whereas H. ater has a slightly inflated and triangular internarial septum [ 30]. It is unlikely that H. ater occurs in Peninsular Malaysia due to the lack of any records, however, Peninsular Malaysia is included in the distribution range of H. ater in some literature [ 1, 9].
IUCN status: Vulnerable
Recorded at: Perak: Bukit Jerneh Cave and Tumang Lembing Cave [ 30] .
H. halophyllus has been recorded in and nearby limestone caves in Peninsular Malaysia and Thailand [ 14, 30]. It is unknown whether H. halophyllus is strictly confined to limestone areas or this association is an effect of limited sampling but it is likely that the species requires specialised roosting habitat [ 30].
Hipposiderosbicolor speciescomplex. Hipposiderosbicolor wasfirstrecognisedasacryptic species complex by Kingston et al. [ 16] who discovered two phonic types under H. bicolor sensu lato with individuals echolocating at 131 kHz (= H. bicolor 131) or at 142 kHz (= H. bicolor 142). The two phonic types are 6.5–6.8% divergent in mtDNA [ 16] yet morphologically similar and overlap in size [ 16]. Although the phonic types have been widely recognised as distinct species, some recent reports still use H. bicolor to represent both phonic types [ 50, 61, 67, 111] which leads to ambiguity regarding the occurrence of the species. The two phonic types were recently formalised under Latin names: H. bicolor (= bicolor131) and H. atrox (= bicolor142) [ 17]. However, our search of DNA barcodes on BOLD coupled with recent DNA barcoding suggested that the H. bicolor complex is even more complicated ( Fig 4 View Fig 4 ).
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Hipposideros halophyllus Hill and Yenbutra, 1984
Voon-Ching Lim, Rosli Ramli, Subha Bhassu & John-James Wilson 2017 |
Hipposideros halophyllus
Hill and Yenbutra 1984: 77 |