Nyctophilus microtis, Thomas, 1888

Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier, 2019, Vespertilionidae, Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions, pp. 716-981 : 804

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6397752

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6581240

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4C3D87E8-FFD5-6A6A-FF4C-9B56145DB29C

treatment provided by

Conny

scientific name

Nyctophilus microtis
status

 

85. View Plate 58: Vespertilionidae

Papuan Long-eared Bat

Nyctophilus microtis View in CoL

French: Nyctophile & petites oreilles / German: Papua-Langohrfledermaus / Spanish: Nictofila de orejas pequenas

Other common names: New Guinea Long-eared Bat, Small-eared Nyctophilus

Taxonomy. Nyctophilus microtis Thomas, 1888 View in CoL ,

“Sogere, South-east New Guinea [= Papua New Guinea].”

Nyctophilus microtis is in the microtis group, which tentatively also includes N. walker . Nyctophilus macrotis probably is a species complex because there is excessive morphological variation among regionally sympatric forms. Up to three subspecies have been recognized (including bicolor and lophorhina). Monotypic.

Distribution. Mostly in E New Guinea with one record in West Papua Province and one record each from Salawati and New Ireland Is; possibly on New Britain and SudestIs; there was a recent acoustic record from Manus I that probably is a member of this species complex, but this needs confirmation with a specimen, and the species is most likely widespread in W New Guinea. View Figure

Descriptive notes. Head-body 42-5-63 mm,tail 36-49 mm, ear 14-19-4 mm, hindfoot 7-10 mm, forearm 37-41-6 mm; weight 6-10-5 g. The Papuan Long-eared Bat has relatively large ears and unique simple noseleaf consisting of two ridges, one further on muzzle and another immediately above nostrils, with vertical groove in middle and furred trough between them. Dorsal pelage is medium brown (hairs bicolored blackish brown basally and medium brown distally); venter is pale brown. Wing membranes are blackish brown. Rostrum is short and blunt, with ridge across muzzle over nostrils thatis well developed with deep but thin medial notch. Ears are large and broad, with bluntly rounded tips, but are much smaller, narrower, and more tapered at tip compared with other species of Nyctophilus , have horizontal ribbing on inner surfaces, inward curved anterior edges, and smooth posterior edges (ears can fold back at top of thick part of anterior edge); interauricular membrane typical of genus is either missing or barely present and covered by fur; tragus is almost rectangular, being straight or very slightly convex on anterior margin. Glans penis consists of a pair of relatively small, narrow urethral lappets and subspherical distal nob, which is broad. Baculum has distinct distal notch, curves downward at base, is bifurcated basally, and is straight for rest of shaft. Skull is robust, tympanic bullae are small, and M?® and lower molars are not reduced.

Habitat. Various forest types including lowland rainforests, hill forests, lower and upper montane forests, and secondary forests from sea level up to elevations of ¢. 2600 m (on mainland New Guinea). The Papuan Long-eared Bat is rarely recorded in heavily disturbed habitats or agricultural areas and is probably sensitive to habitat alteration.

Food and Feeding. Papuan Long-eared Bats are insectivorous, likely foraging on the ground and aerially.

Breeding. Lactating Papuan Long-eared Bats have been captured in July in Sandaun Province, and a post-lactating female was captured in August near Madang.

Activity patterns. Papuan Long-eared Bats are nocturnal and roost during the day predominantly in dried bamboo and otherfoliage; they have occasionally been found roosting on interior walls of caves. They probably enter torpor in extreme temperatures to save energy. Call shape is steep FM sweep, with characteristic frequency of ¢.40 kHz on New Guinea and ¢.55 kHz on Manus Island (if that recording represented this species).

Movements, Home range and Social organization. Papuan Long-eared Bats usually roost in small groups.

Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The Papuan Long-eared Batis widespread across New Guinea and is the most commonly captured long-eared bat in New Guinea. Nevertheless, compared with other bats,it is captured relatively infrequently and might be less abundant than its relatives in Australia. Its only major threat could be large-scale forest clearing and conversion to monocultures becauseit is not found in most disturbed habitats.

Bibliography. Aplin & Armstrong (2017a), Armstrong & Aplin (2014), Armstrong, Novera & Aplin (2015), Bonaccor so (1998), Flannery (1995a, 1995b), Helgen, Opiang &Thomas (2009), Parnaby (2002a, 2009), Robson et al. (2012).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Chiroptera

Family

Vespertilionidae

Genus

Nyctophilus

Loc

Nyctophilus microtis

Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier 2019
2019
Loc

Nyctophilus microtis

Thomas 1888
1888
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