Nyctimene rabori, Heaney & Peterson, 1984

Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier, 2019, Pteropodidae, Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions, pp. 16-162 : 121

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6448815

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6788896

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD87FA-FFFB-F615-8963-3272F902FD5A

treatment provided by

Conny

scientific name

Nyctimene rabori
status

 

110. View Plate 6: Pteropodidae

Philippine Tube-nosed Fruit Bat

Nyctimene rabori View in CoL

French: Nyctimene des Philippines / German: Philippinen-Réhrennasenflughund / Spanish: Nyctimeno de las Filipinas

Taxonomy. Nyctimene rabori Heaney & Peterson, 1984 View in CoL ,

6 km W of Dumaguete City, Balinsasaye: (9°21'N, 123° 10°E), 835 m, Sibulan Municipality, Negros Oriental Province, Negros Islands, Philippines. GoogleMaps

Nyctimene rabori is in the cephalotes species group. Some authors have speculated that it is a synonym of N. cephalotes , but it is retained as a distinct species here until additional research is conducted. Monotypic.

Distribution. Visayas on C Philippines (Sibuyan, Cebu, Negros, and probably Panay Is), and tentatively on Talaud Is (Karakelong I), and Sangihe Is ( Siao and Greater Sangihe); it may have a much wider distribution across much of the Philippines. View Figure

Descriptive notes. Head—body c. 113-124 mm, tail 19-30 mm, ear 18-21 mm, hindfoot 16-21 mm, forearm 73-81 mm; weight 60-74 g. Head of the Philippine Tube-nose Fruit Bat is broad, with deep face, broad, bluntly pointed ears, and tubular divergent nostrils. Eyes are large, with amberirises. Pelage is thick and woolly. Females are generally lighter than males, and young are intermediate in color. Dorsal pelage is light (females) to dark (males) brown, with distinctive thin dark blackish brown mid-dorsal stripe (3—4 mm thick) stretching from shoulders to rump. Head is more golden brown, and neck 1s brownish gray. Ventral pelage is light brown (females) to chocolate-brown (males). There is yellow spotting on wings, legs, and ears (ears sometimes not spotted); wings are brown to yellowish brown (substantially darker in males). Second digit of wing has a claw, and wing attaches at second digit of foot. Tail is short, black, and wrinkled, and narrow uropatagium connects at base and stretches to calcar at ankles. Claws are dark brown. Skull and mandible are robust, rostrum is short, sagittal crest is well developed, postorbital processes are strong, zygomatic arch is strongly arched dorsally, and posterior margin of palate is rounded and U-shaped. Single lower incisor is completely deciduous, falling out before adulthood; lower molars are broad and rounded in dorsal view; C, replaces incisors and is long and powerful; P,is elongated and longer than P, and P; and P* has very weak labial posterior cusp.

Habitat. Primary and secondary forests, typically near water bodies, from sea level up to elevations of ¢. 1300 m. The Philippine Tube-nosed Fruit Bat occurs in degraded habitat on Negros and Cebu.

Food and Feeding. The Philippine Tube-nosed Fruit Bat mainly eats figs ( Ficus , Moraceae ).

Breeding. Reproduction of the Philippine Tube-nosed Fruit Bat occurs in May-June. Two young were captured in March on Cebu.

Activity patterns. Philippine Tube-nose Fruit Bats are nocturnal.

Movements, Home range and Social organization. No information.

Status and Conservation. Classified as Endangered on The IUCN Red List. The Philippine Tube-nosed Fruit Bat has a restricted distribution and is considered rare. Total population based on current known distribution and abundance estimates is probably less than 2500 individuals. It was previously thought to only occur in highquality primary forest, but it seems to tolerate degraded habitats on Negros and Cebu. Greatest threat is deforestation that has already destroyed much of its island habitat (especially Cebu). Deforestation rates have slowed in the Philippines, but only because there is such little forest left to cut down. Additional surveys and studies are needed to determine the full extent of its distribution and understand its ecology and threats.

Bibliography. Alburo (2017), Bennett et al. (1997), Bergmans (2001), Carino (2004), Heaney & Peterson (1984), Ong, Rosell-Ambal, Tabaranza, Heaney, Ingle et al. (2008), Paguntalan & Jakosalem (2008), Utzurrum (1995), Vinciguerra & Muller (1993).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Chiroptera

Family

Pteropodidae

Genus

Nyctimene

Loc

Nyctimene rabori

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

Nyctimene rabori

Heaney & Peterson 1984
1984
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