Molossus coibensis Allen, 1904
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5252/zoosystema2018v40a18 |
publication LSID |
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2E6C5EBA-6376-4016-A1A6-70F7FC8E5AF4 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4382963 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1320879D-FFB3-FF9A-FC34-FC6E6952F86C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Molossus coibensis Allen, 1904 |
status |
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Molossus coibensis Allen, 1904 View in CoL
Molossus coibensis Allen, 1904: 227 View in CoL .
Molossus barnesi Thomas, 1905: 584 View in CoL (type locality: French Guiana: Cayenne).
Molossus burnesi – Thomas 1905: 584 (type locality: Cayene, French Guiana; misspelling of Molossus barnesi Thomas, 1905 View in CoL ). — Husson 1962: 251 (misspelling of Molossus barnesi Thomas, 1905 View in CoL ).
Molossus cherriei Allen, 1916: 35 (type locality: Tapirapoan, Mato Grosso, Brazil).
Molossus burnsi – Hershkovitz 1949: 454 (misspelling of Molossus barnesi Thomas, 1905 View in CoL ).
Molossus burnesi Molossus aztecus lambi Gardner, 1966: 1 (type locality: 11 km, Northeast of Esquintla, Chiapas, Mexico).
EMENDED DIAGNOSIS. — Smallest species of Molossus View in CoL , usually with dark dorsal hairs varying from cocoa brown to blackish. Monochromatic dorsal hair or, if bicoloured, with a pale brown or grayish short basal band not exceeding one third of the total length. Dorsal hairs from 2.0 to 4.0 mm long. Forearm length averaging 36.9 mm (36.1- 37.9) in males and 37.0 mm (34.3-37.5) in females; skull length averages 16.4 mm (15.7-16.9) in males and 15.5 mm (14.9-16.7) in females ( Table 1 View TABLE ). Relatively massive skull with inflated braincase ( Fig. 2B View FIG ). Infraorbital foramen opens frontally ( Fig. 2G View FIG ). Very shallow or absent basioccipital pits ( Figs 2C View FIG , 8 View FIG ). Nasal process of the premaxilla not protruding over the nasal cavity ( Fig. 2A View FIG ). Mastoid process oriented ventrally in dorsal view ( Fig. 2E View FIG ). Quadrangular occipital complex ( Fig. 2F View FIG ) and upper incisors with convergent tips ( Fig. 2H View FIG ).
VARIATION. — Only a single specimen (UFMG 3350) had grayish dorsal pelage instead of brown, and Gager et al. (2016) recorded cinnamon dorsal fur in specimens from Panama. The basioccipital pits are shallow or absent. Upper incisors can vary from short and spatulated to slightly elongated, but always have convergent tips (AMNH 217448 and AMNH 217449).
DISTRIBUTION. — M. coibensis is widely distributed in Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Guyana ( Eger 2008). The presence of M. coibensis in Brazil was firstly recorded by Dolan (1989) under the name Molossus cherriei based on a specimen (holotype) from the state of Mato Grosso, and subsequently extended by Costa et al. (2013) to the state of Pará based on six adults and one juvenile female. In this study records of M. coibensis were obtained for Cidade da Barra (Bahia), Belo Horizonte (Minas Gerais), São Luís (Maranhão), São Paulo (São Paulo), and Corumbá (Mato Grosso do Sul) ( Fig. 9 View FIG ).
REMARKS
Our morphological analyses indicate that the differences between M. barnesi and M. coibensis described by Simmons & Voss (1998) represent intraspecific variation, as suggested by Gregorin et al. (2011) and Catzeflis et al. (2016). Some individuals of M. barnesi (e.g. AMNH 26905) have dark dorsal fur with a pale band at the base of the dorsal hairs, not exceeding 1/3 of its length. This pattern of variation also occurs in M. coibensis , as described in the account of that species. Both the mesopterygoid canal and the crest between the basisphenoid and basioccipital pits are variable in M. coibensis , and the range of variation includes values described for M. barnesi ( Gregorin et al. 2011) . Simmons & Voss (1998) based on the species distributions available at the time, also suggested that there was a large gap in the distribution of these two species: M. coibensis would be present in Central America and northwestern South America while M. barnesi would be restricted to French Guiana. However, the extension of the distributional range of M. coibensis to eastern South America ( Lim & Engstrom 2001) and northern Brazil ( Costa et al. 2013), together with the small morphological differences found between these two taxa, support M. barnesi as junior synonym of M. coibensis ( Catzeflis et al. 2016) .
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Molossus coibensis Allen, 1904
Loureiro, Livia Oliveira, Gregorin, Renato & Perini, Fernando Araujo 2018 |
Molossus burnesi
GARDNER A. L. 1966: 1 |
Molossus burnsi
HERSHKOVITZ P. 1949: 454 |
Molossus cherriei
ALLEN J. A. 1916: 35 |
Molossus barnesi
THOMAS O. 1905: 584 |
Molossus burnesi
HUSSON A. M. 1962: 251 |
THOMAS O. 1905: 584 |
Molossus coibensis
ALLEN J. A. 1904: 227 |