Rhinolophus pusillus Temminck, 1834

Zhang, Libiao, Jones, Gareth, Zhang, Jinshuo, Zhu, Guangjian & Parsons, Stuart, 2009, Recent surveys of bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera) from China. I. Rhinolophidae and Hipposideridae, Acta Chiropterologica 11 (1), pp. 71-88 : 79-80

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3161/150811009X465703

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4334168

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AF87D3-C436-B542-FCEA-8738FE35BA22

treatment provided by

Valdenar (2020-07-14 11:51:09, last updated 2024-11-29 12:46:43)

scientific name

Rhinolophus pusillus Temminck, 1834
status

 

Rhinolophus pusillus Temminck, 1834 View in CoL

Least horseshoe bat

This is a common bat species in China. FA — 34.3–41.6 mm, mass — 3.3–7.8 g, FMAXE — 100.3–111.2 kHz. Capture sites included Beijing, Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, Hubei, Jiangxi, Shandong, Sichuan and Yunnan. Among these sites, bats from Beijing were larger than others (FA 40.2–41.6 mm) and had a lower call frequency, ranging 105.2–109.7 kHz. For example, some R. pusillus from Guangxi called at a higher frequency (111.2 kHz) and are smaller (FA 35.2–37.9 mm). Robinson (1996) reported that R. pusillus in Malaysia calls at 92.5 kHz (FA 38.3 mm), and so it appears likely that cryptic species divisions are likely in this taxon across its range. Li et al. (2006) suggested that bat taxa R. pusillus (sampled across China), R. monoceros (Taiwan) , R. cornutus (main islands of Japan) and R. c. pumilus (Okinawa, Japan) are better considered as geographical subspecies rather than distinct species. Simmons (2005) considers that R. cornutus is confined to Japan and, therefore, bats from China that were previously assigned to this taxon are now considered to belong to R. pusillus .

Previous records from China: Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, Hebei, Hunan,

Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Shaanxi, Sichuan, Tibet, Yunnan and Zhejiang ( Zhang, 1997; Wang, 2003).

Ecological Notes

This is the most widespread and frequently encountered rhinolophid in China. It is rarely found in large numbers, and all records were from caves or once from a rock crevice. Five droppings collected in July 2002 from Beijing were analysed and found to contain (average percentage volume) 45% dipterans, 42% lepidopterans and 14% coleopterans. The diet is therefore similar to that of R. hipposideros in Europe ( Vaughan, 1997), which it resembles closely in morphology seemingly as a consequence of convergent evolution ( Li et al., 2006). Pregnant females were captured on 17 May, lactating females on 12 June 2005, in Guangxi.

LI, G., G. JONES, S. J. ROSSITER, S. - F. CHEN, S. PARSONS, and S. ZHANG. 2006. Phylogenetics of small horseshoe bats from East Asia based on mitochondrial DNA sequence variation. Journal of Mammalogy, 87: 1234 - 1240.

ROBINSON, M. F. 1996. A relationship between echolocation calls and noseleaf, widths in bats of the genera Rhinolophus and Hipposideros. Journal of Zoology (London), 239: 389 - 393.

SIMMONS, N. B. 2005. Order Chiroptera. Pp. 312 - 525, in Mammal species of the World: a taxonomic and geographic reference, 3 rd edition (D. E. WILSON and D. M. REEDER, eds.). The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2142 pp.

VAUGHAN, N. 1997. The diets of British bats. Mammal Review, 27: 77 - 94.

WANG, Y. X. (ed.). 2003. A complete checklist of mammal species and subspecies in China: a taxonomic and geographic reference. China Forestry Publishing House, Beijing, 394 pp.

ZHANG, Y. Z. (ed.). 1997. Distribution of mammalian species in China. China Forestry Publishing House, Beijing, 280 pp.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Chiroptera

Family

Rhinolophidae

Genus

Rhinolophus