Scoteinus balstoni caprenus Troughton, 1937c

Parnaby, Harry E., Ingleby, Sandy & Divljan, Anja, 2017, Type Specimens of Non-fossil Mammals in the Australian Museum, Sydney, Records of the Australian Museum 69 (5), pp. 277-420 : 399

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3853/j.2201-4349.69.2017.1653

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:68F315FF-3FEB-410E-96EC-5F494510F440

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5238097

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DD87C8-FFC3-734F-188D-FB75FAAA9634

treatment provided by

Felipe (2021-08-21 08:43:27, last updated 2024-11-24 23:13:46)

scientific name

Scoteinus balstoni caprenus Troughton, 1937c
status

 

Scoteinus balstoni caprenus Troughton, 1937c

Aust. Zool. 8(4): 279. (12 March 1937).

Common name. Broad-nosed Bat.

Current name. Scotorepens greyii (J. Gray, 1843) ; following Simmons (2005) and Jackson & Groves (2015). Status unresolved, a comprehensive generic revision is required ( Parnaby, 2008).

Holotype. M.1322 by original designation. Male adult, skull, body in alc., collected by Dr K. Dahl, received in 1898 from Christiania Museum (now NHMO), registered in July 1898. Collection date not given.

Condition. Cranium with left zygomatic arch missing; cranium and dentaries otherwise complete. Body in alc. with hole in ventral surface and fur slip, broken left humerus and hole in left wing membrane between 4th and 5th digit.

Type locality. Roebuck Bay , Western Australia .

Paratype. M.2688 by original designation. Male, skull, study skin, King Sound, Kimberley district , WA, collected by Dr Herbert Basedow, registered 24 April 1917 .

Comments. Kitchener & Caputi (1985) provide detailed measurements of the holotype and photographs of the holotype skull (as Scotorepens greyii (J. Gray, 1843)) . This entity is usually regarded as a synonym of S. greyii , following Kitchener & Caputi (1985). Koopman (1984), who examined the types, placed caprenus with balstoni ( Thomas, 1906c) rather than greyii . An extensive examination of skull morphology within the genus by HEP also suggests that caprenus more closely resembles S. balstoni than S. greyii in skull proportions and morphology, as originally proposed by Troughton.

Gray, J. E. 1843. List of the Specimens of Mammalia in the Collection of the British Museum. London: British Museum. xxviii + 216 pp.

Koopman, K. F. 1984. Taxonomic and distributional notes on tropical Australian bats. American Museum Novitates 2778: 1 - 48.

Parnaby, H. E. 2008. Inland Broad-nosed Bat Scotorepens balstoni. In The Mammals of Australia, ed. S. Van Dyck and R. Strahan, pp. 552 - 553. Sydney: Reed New Holland.

Simmons, N. B. 2005. Order Chiroptera. In Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference, ed. D. E. Wilson and D. M. Reeder, pp. 312 - 529. Baltimore, USA: The Johns Hopkins University Press.

Thomas, O. 1906 c. On mammals collected in south-west Australia for Mr. W. E. Balston. In Anonymous, Abstracts of the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 31: 2.

Troughton, E. L. G. 1937 c. Six new bats (Microchiroptera) from the Australasian region. Australian Zoologist 8 (4): 274 - 281.

NHMO

Natural History Museum, University of Oslo

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Chiroptera

Family

Vespertilionidae

Genus

Scoteinus