Kerivoula lanosa (A. Smith, 1847)
Fig. 34 E–F
Vespertilio lanosus A. Smith, 1847: pl. 50 and text.
* Kerivoula harrisoni muscilla (Thomas, 1906): 294.
* Kerivoula harrisoni lucia (Hinton, 1920): 240.
Rosevear (1965: 307–308) doubted the validity of the characters separating harrisoni from lanosa, i.e., the number of cusps of the upper incisors (two in harrisoni and one in the other species) and the length of the rostrum (comparing c-m 3 with m 3 -m 3, the first being greater than the second in harrisoni and smaller in the other species). This was further investigated by Hill (1977: 628), who considered harrisoni to be a subspecies of lanosa .
Hayman et al. (1966: 58, map 86) mention three specimens from the eastern part of the DRC: one from Pawa (Haut-Uélé Province) [considered to belong to K. harrisoni bellula Aellen, 1959 by Aellen 1959: 225], one from Lukulu (Tanganyika Province) and one from Funda Biabo (Lualaba Province). One additional specimen was collected along the road between Kamituga and Kampene in Sud-Kivu Province. The SDM map confirms the distribution suggested by Cotterill (2013j: 730), who mentions it is known from widespread, scattered records in the rain forest, the northern rain forest-savanna mosaic, Somalia-Masai bushland, coastal forest mosaic, Zambezian woodland, Afromontane-Afroalpine and south-west Cape biotic zones, but we suggest it might occur further to the west in northern Namibia and south-central to coastal Angola.