Chiroderma gorgasi Handley, 1960

Lim, Burton K., Loureiro, Livia O. & Garbino, Guilherme S. T., 2020, Cryptic diversity and range extension in the big-eyed bat genus Chiroderma (Chiroptera, Phyllostomidae), ZooKeys 918, pp. 41-63 : 41

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.918.48786

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8C780A96-9353-4F34-8892-64822D8E2932

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FFD367BC-610F-510F-B5C9-4C7F370CFDE3

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scientific name

Chiroderma gorgasi Handley, 1960
status

 

Chiroderma gorgasi Handley, 1960

Chiroderma gorgasi Handley, 1960:464

Chiroderma trinitatum gorgasi Barriga-Bonilla, 1965:246

Material examined.

Holotype. - USNM 309903 (Field number COH 5436), adult male with skin, skull and partial skeleton. Collected on March 6, 1959, by C. O. Handley, Jr, and B. R. Feinstein in Tacarcuna Village (8°05'N, 77°17'W), 3200 feet [975 meters], Río Pucro, Darién, Panama.

Geographic distribution.

Chiroderma gorgasi is distributed west of the Andes in northwestern Ecuador ( Albuja 1989), western Colombia ( Gardner 2008), Panama ( Handley 1960), Costa Rica ( LaVal and Rodríguez-Herrera 2002), and Honduras ( Turcios-Casco et al. 2020) (Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ).

Description.

Chiroderma gorgasi is a small species of Chiroderma (FA 37.0-40.5; GLS 20.2-22.5) that is similar in size to C. trinitatum (sensu stricto) (Table 2 View Table 2 ). Overall, the dorsal pelage is tricolor varying from light to dark brown (Fig. 7 View Figure 7 ). The dorsal hairs have a dark brown band at the base, a buff coloration in the middle, and brown tips. A white medial stripe extends from the interscapular region to the base of the rump. Proximal two-thirds of forearm hairy. Basal third of uropatagium hairy. Conspicuous white facial stripes extend from the noseleaf to the inner base of the ears, and from the posterior part of the upper lip to the base of the ears. The uropatagium is medium brown. The skull has an elongated braincase with an undeveloped sagittal and lambdoidal crest. The nasal aperture is short, not extending beyond the second premolar. The occipital is rounded in posterior view. The upper incisors are thin and elongated with parallel or convergent tips, which may or may not touch apically. The second lower premolar lacks a third cusp (Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ). The postorbital processes are undeveloped and rounded (Fig. 8 View Figure 8 ).

Comparisons.

Chiroderma gorgasi is morphologically very similar to C. trinitatum . Both species have a small cranial and body size for the genus (Table 2 View Table 2 , Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ), an undeveloped sagittal and lambdoidal crest, a rounded occipital complex, a short nasal aperture, and undeveloped supraorbital region. However, C. trinitatum has a third posterior cusp on the second lower premolar, which is absent in C. gorgasi (Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ). This cusp in C. trinitatum may vary from very pointed and developed to rounded and less marked, but is always present. In addition, C. gorgasi tends to have a broader braincase (Table 4 View Table 4 ) and a flatter supraorbital region, which tends to be deeper in C. trinitatum .

Chiroderma gorgasi is easily distinguished from other species of the genus by its smaller cranial and body size (Table 2 View Table 2 ). C. villosum shares with C. gorgasi an elongated braincase, rounded occipital region in dorsal view, and absence of a third cusp on the second lower premolar. However, C. gorgasi has an undeveloped postorbital processes, a short nasal aperture, and conspicuous white stripes on the face and back, whereas C. villosum has a very developed and pointed postorbital processes, a long nasal aperture, which extends beyond the first molar, a conspicuous posterior palatine spine, and usually incipient white stripes on the face and back. Chiroderma salvini resembles C. gorgasi in the undeveloped sagittal and lambdoidal crest and by the rounded postorbital processes, but a set of other cranial characters distinguish both species, such as a triangular occipital complex and a long nasal aperture. In the dentition, C. gorgasi can be readily distinguished from C. salvini and C. villosum by having a tall first lower premolar, with a crown height approximately 2/3 the height of the crown of the second lower premolar, and placed approximately in the middle of the distance between the canine and the second lower premolar. In C. salvini and C. villosum , this tooth is much smaller, usually with a low crown, shorter than the mesiodistal length of the tooth, and is nearer to the canine than to the second lower premolar.

Chiroderma doriae and C. improvisum are the largest species of the genus, and unlike C. gorgasi have a triangular occipital complex in dorsal view, a pointed and developed supraorbital region, a relatively more developed sagittal and lambdoidal crest, and a long nasal aperture. In addition, C. doriae also tends to have a relatively broader braincase than C. gorgasi and the presence of an undeveloped third cusp in the second lower premolar. We were not able to examine specimens of the more recently described C. vizottoi , but it is larger than C. gorgasi and most similar to C. doriae in qualitative craniodental traits.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Chiroptera

Family

Phyllostomidae

Genus

Chiroderma

Loc

Chiroderma gorgasi Handley, 1960

Lim, Burton K., Loureiro, Livia O. & Garbino, Guilherme S. T. 2020
2020
Loc

Chiroderma gorgasi

Handley 1960
1960