Lasiurus varius (Poeppig, 1835)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6397752 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6567097 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4C3D87E8-FF82-6A3D-FF82-9AE519D7B3D3 |
treatment provided by |
Conny |
scientific name |
Lasiurus varius |
status |
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260. View Plate 65: Vespertilionidae
Cinnamon Red Bat
French: Lasiure du Chili / German: Zimtrote Haarschwanzfledermaus / Spanish: Lasiuro de Chile
Other common names: Chilean Red Bat
Taxonomy. Nycticeius varius Poeppig, 1835 ,
“Antuco,” Chile.
See L. egregius . Lasiurus varius was previously considered a subspecies of L. borealis or L. blossevilii . Additional studies based on morphological evidence treated it as a full species. Moreover, recent molecular analyses based on mtDNA and nDNA also recovered L. varius as distinct from other congeners and placed it in a basal position relative to other Red Bats. Monotypic. Distribution. From C Chile and WC Argentina S to Tierra del Fuego. View Figure
Descriptive notes. Head-body 55-61 mm, tail 44-58 mm, ear 9-13- 9 mm, hindfoot 6-10 mm, forearm 3642- 1 mm; weight 7-13 g. Dorsal hairs are tricolored, with black bases, yellowish middles, and bright red cinnamon tips. Ventral hairs are similar to dorsal hairs, but central band is much reduced. There are yellow patches on shoulders, and white wash on hairs is absent. Ears are small, rounded, black, and fringed with hairs on outer basal part. Wing membranes are black. Uropatagium is densely furred, with hairs extending beyond its edge. Skull is robust; rostrum is short and wide. Braincase is high and rounded; caudal spine of palate is well developed; sagittal crest is usually reduced, but it can be evident in anterior part of braincase; and lambdoid crests are slightly developed. I? is triangular and in contact with cingulum of C', which is long and pointed; P* is reduced and not visible in lateral view; M' and M? are well developed, and M® has only two commissures; I is tricuspid, and I,is bicuspid, filling gap between canines; and P, is small. Dental formulais1 1/3, C1/1,P2/2.M 3/3 (2) = 32,
Habitat. Temperate rainforests, xeric shrublands, Patagonian forests, deciduous forests, evergreen forests, pasturelands, pine and eucalypt plantations, and urban areas, usually associated with watercourses, at elevations up to ¢. 1000 m.
Food and Feeding. Cinnamon Red Bats usually forage alone, preying mainly on aquatic insects. They can forage above canopies but also beneath them and on trails. Diets mainly contain Homoptera, Coleoptera , Hymenoptera , and Diptera .
Breeding. Pregnant Cinnamon Red Bats were captured in December. Females usually bear two embryos, but there are records of only one embryo.
Activity patterns. The Cinnamon Red Bat roosts mainly in trees but was found on rocks along the coast of Chile. Echolocation calls are divided in three phases: search, approach, and final buzz. Search-phase calls are long (c.7 milliseconds) and include single-harmonic calls, with narrow downward FM component, followed by QCF component. They sweep from c¢.52 kHz to ¢.33 kHz, with interpulse intervals of ¢.216 milliseconds. Approach-phase calls are similar to search-phase calls but with shorter and broader bandwidth, higher slope, and shorter interpulse intervals. Terminal buzz consists of FM calls with no QCF elements, high pulse repetition rate, and lower call duration and interpulse intervals. Echolocation behavioris affected by degree of structural clutter of foraging areas.
Movements, Home range and Social organization. Population sizes of Cinnamon Red Bats vary seasonally. It might be migratory at least in southern parts ofits distribution. It is mainly solitary, but clusters of four individuals have been observed.
Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The Cinnamon Red Bat is widely distributed, presumably with large populations, and occurs in protected areas.
Bibliography. Baird et al. (2015), Barquez et al. (1999), Diaz et al. (2017), Gardner & Handley (2008), Mann (1978), Mares et al. (1995), Novaes, Garbino et al. (2018), Rodriguez-San Pedro & Simonetti (2014), Rodriguez-San Pedro etal. (2016), Simmons (2005), Solari (2018h).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Lasiurus varius
Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier 2019 |
Nycticeius varius
Poeppig 1835 |