Neoromicia tenuipinnis (Peters, 1872)

Bates, Paul J. J., Cameron, Kenneth, Pearch, Malcolm J. & Hayes, Benjamin, 2013, A review of the bats (Chiroptera) of the Republic of Congo, including eight species new to the country, Acta Chiropterologica 15 (2), pp. 313-340 : 327-328

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3161/150811013X678955

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4332334

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/837C87DB-FF9B-C06B-FC1E-FA7CFF32FD10

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Neoromicia tenuipinnis (Peters, 1872)
status

 

Neoromicia tenuipinnis (Peters, 1872) View in CoL

White-winged serotine

Vesperus tenuipinnis Peters, 1872: 263 ; ‘Guinea’.

New material

HZM.7.40170 , ♀, HZM.8.40171 , ♀, 29 July, 2012, Airport Road , Lekoumou, 2°45.724’S, 13°34.953’E. GoogleMaps Previous records are included in Appendix I View APPENDIX ; the known distribution corresponds to localities 24 and 29 in Fig. 1 View FIG . There is no detailed information on abundance but it appears to be relatively common ( Happold and Happold, 2013).

Description

A very small species with a forearm length of 29.6, 30.4 mm ( Table 2 View TABLE ). This species is characterised by its white wings and interfemoral membrane (above and below); the forearms and the tail

itself are contrastingly brown. The dorsal pelage has dark bases to the hairs, with paler tips. The hairs on the underside also have dark roots but the tips are distinctly paler, far more pronounced than in the dorsal pelage. The ears are virtually naked and pale, almost white, above and below. Each tragus is white, with a straight anterior border and a smoothly rounded posterior one, which has a notch near the base ( Fig. 8F View FIG ). The skull is short (GTL= 12.83, 12.88 mm; Table 3 View TABLE ) with an almost straight profile ( Fig. 12C View FIG ). The first upper incisor (I 2) is unicuspid but with a slight notch beneath the tip; the second incisor (I 4) is about half the height of I 2 and is also unicuspid ( Fig. 12C View FIG ). There is no small upper premolar (P 2); the second upper premolar (P 4) is between half and two-thirds the crown area of the first upper molar (M 1) ( Fig. 12C View FIG ). The first lower premolar (P 2) is also between half and two-thirds the crown area of the second (P 4) and about half the height. With only two female specimens available, it was not possible to examine the baculum.

Taxonomic notes

Allen (1917) reported that some specimens from the Democratic Republic of Congo had pale ears and pale tips to the hairs on the dorsal surface and others had dark ears, dark dorsal pelage and averaged smaller. He referred the former to Eptesicus tenuipinnis (= Neoromicia tenuipinnis ) and the latter to a new taxon E. ater Allen, 1917 . However, following Sanborn (1950), the taxon ater was included as a synonym of N. tenuipinnis , a view still followed today ( Simmons, 2005; Happold and Happold, 2013). The two recent specimens from Congo described above have pale ears and dark dorsal pelage with pale tips, corresponding to the original description of N. tenuipinnis (Peters, 1872) . This is in contrast to a specimen from Liberia, which is shown in Monadjem et al. (2010: figure 284). This individual has markedly dark ears and Monadjem et al. (2010: 478) describe tenuipinnis as having ears, which are ‘dark brown’. Either ear colour is polymorphic or perhaps Allen (1917) is correct and there are two cryptic species present in Africa. Happold and Happold (2013) suggest the need for a taxonomic revision of the species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Chiroptera

Family

Vespertilionidae

Genus

Neoromicia

Loc

Neoromicia tenuipinnis (Peters, 1872)

Bates, Paul J. J., Cameron, Kenneth, Pearch, Malcolm J. & Hayes, Benjamin 2013
2013
Loc

Vesperus tenuipinnis

Vesperus tenuipinnis Peters, 1872: 263
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