Rhinolophus, LACEPEDE, 1799
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.2478/if-2019-0026 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FF8F57-F32F-FFB5-D3AC-6435FB7A1EF6 |
treatment provided by |
Diego |
scientific name |
Rhinolophus |
status |
|
Rhinolophus View in CoL cf. delphinensis GAILLARD, 1899
Text-fig. 2g, h View Text-fig
M a t e r i a l. Erkertshofen 1: BSP 1962 XIX 4150, left
C inf.; BSP 1962 XIX 4152, left mnd with m1–2; BSP 1962
XIX 4153, left mnd with m1–3; BSP 1962 XIX 4155, left
mnd with m3; BSP 1962 XIX 4156, right m1; BSP 1962 XIX 4158, left m2; BSP 1962 XIX 4160, left C sup.; BSP 1962 XIX 4166, left M1; BSP 1962 XIX 4167, left M1; BSP 1962 XIX 4171, left M2 sin.
Erkertshofen 2: BSP 1974 XIV 1099, right C inf.; BSP 1974 XIV 1142, left p4; BSP 1974 XIV 1145, right p4.
Petersbuch 2: BSP 1976 XXII 5522, right mxl with P4; BSP 1976 XXII 5524, right mxl with P4.
M e a s u r e m e n t s. See Tab. 4.
D e s c r i p t i o n a n d c o m p a r i s o n. The preserved fossil jaw fragments bear all the morphological traits typical of Rhinolophus species and morphologically correspond to R. delphinensis already described in detail (see Ziegler 2003: 451–456). As was reported above many fossil Rhinolophus species known from Europe have significant differences in size (see also Ziegler 2003: 456, tab. 2). The middle-sized Rhinolophus from Petersbuch 2, Erkertshofen 1 and Erkertshofen 2 ( Tab. 4) is significantly smaller than R. aff. lemanensis ( Tab. 3) and larger than other small forms of Rhinolophus from Petersbuch 2, Erkertshofen 1 and Erkertshofen 2 ( Tab. 4). The Rhinolophus from Petersbuch 2, Erkertshofen 1 and Erkertshofen 2 compares well in morphology with R. delphinensis from both the type locality La Grive 7 (see Text-fig. 2g –h View Text-fig ; Gaillard 1899; for more detailed measurements see Mein 1964) and the middle Miocene sites of Petersbuch 6, 10, 18 and 31 ( Ziegler 2003: fig. 1(1–6)). However, there are only a few fossils of this middle-sized Rhinolophus from Petersbuch 2, Erkertshofen 1 and Erkertshofen 2 and we assign them to R. cf. delphinensis. The other small-sized forms of Rhinolophus from Petersbuch 2, Erkertshofen 1 and Erkertshofen 2 are significantly smaller than the form of R. cf. delphinensis (see below; Tab. 4).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.