Scotonycteris bergmansi Hassanin et al., 2015

Cakenberghe, Victor Van, Tungaluna, Guy-Crispin Gembu, Akawa, Prescott Musaba, Seamark, Ernest & Verheyen, Erik, 2017, The bats of the Congo and of Rwanda and Burundi revisited (Mammalia: Chiroptera), European Journal of Taxonomy 382 (382), pp. 1-327 : 24

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2017.382

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FA508A12-9BDB-4A2B-9B0C-98FDD161443C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3861781

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03898787-980B-5A07-D866-FACFD047FE8C

treatment provided by

Carolina (2020-05-27 14:55:02, last updated 2024-11-25 21:51:45)

scientific name

Scotonycteris bergmansi Hassanin et al., 2015
status

 

Scotonycteris bergmansi Hassanin et al., 2015 View in CoL

Fig. 9 View Fig E–F

Scotonycteris bergmansi Hassanin, Khouider, Gembu, Goodman, Kadjo, Nesi, Pourrut, Nakouné & Bonillo, 2015: 206 View in CoL .

* Scotonycteris zenkeri Matschie, 1894: 202 View in CoL .

Hassanin et al. (2015) reviewed the Scotonycterini tribe, which contained four species: Scotonycteris zenkeri Matschie, 1894 , Casinycteris argynnis Thomas, 1910 , C. campomaanensis Hassanin, 2014 , and C. ophiodon (Pohle, 1943) . Their analyses of cytochrome b and nuclear DNA revealed that S. zenkeri should be split up into four clades representing three species: the extralimital (to CRB) S. zenkeri and S. occidentalis Hayman, 1947 , and S. bergmansi Hassanin et al., 2015 occurring in the rainforests of Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Republic of Congo, southern Central African Republic, and eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. Hassanin et al. (2015) also found sufficient differences between the population from the western part of the distribution area ( Gabon to Central African Republic) and the eastern part of the DRC to recognize two subspecies: the western S. b. bergmansi and the eastern S. b. congoensis Hassanin et al., 2015.

Hayman et al. (1966: 21) reported this species (as S. zenkeri ) from Beni and Kiloboze (with the erroneous number RMCA 3145), in the extreme eastern part of the DRC. The new records extend the occurrence of the species much more to the west, up to the region around Boende in Tshuapa Province. Kipalu (2009) reported a specimen of S. zenkeri from near Mbanza-Ngungu (Kongo Central Province), but no details were given on voucher specimens.

Hassanin A., Khouider S., Gembu G. - C., Goodman S. M., Kadjo B., Nesi N., Pourrut X., Nakoune E. & Bonillo C. 2015. The comparative phylogeography of fruit bats of the tribe Scotonycterini (Chiroptera, Pteropodidae) reveals cryptic species diversity related to African Pleistocene forest refugia. Comptes Rendus Biologies 338 (3): 197 - 211. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. crvi. 2014.12.003

Hayman R. W., Misonne X. & Verheyen W. N. 1966. The bats of the Congo and of Rwanda and Burundi. Annalen van het Koninklijk Museum voor Midden Afrika, Zoologische Wetenschappen, Ser. 8, 154: 1 - 105.

Kipalu P. 2009. Ecology, Distribution, Status and Protection of Three Congolese Fruit Bats, DRC (2005). Final Report. BP Conservation Programme (CLP) 2005. Project No. 101405: 1 - 21. Available from http: // www. conservationleadershipprogramme. org / project / ecology-distribution-status-protectionthree-congolese-fruit-bats / [accessed 29 Nov. 2017].

Gallery Image

Fig. 9. Distribution maps. A–B. Rousettus aegyptiacus (E. Geoffroy St.-Hilaire, 1810). C–D. Casinycteris argynnis Thomas, 1910. E–F. Scotonycteris bergmansi Hassanin et al., 2015. A, C, E. Distribution in the CRB area. B, D, F. Pan-African distribution.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Chiroptera

SubOrder

Pteropodiformi

Family

Pteropodidae

SubFamily

Rousettinae

Tribe

Scotonycterini

Genus

Scotonycteris