Rhinolophus yunanensis Dobson, 1872

Wu, Yi, Harada, Masashi & Motokawa, Masaharu, 2009, Taxonomy of Rhinolophus yunanensis Dobson, 1872 (Chiroptera: Rhinolophidae) with a description of a new species from Thailand, Acta Chiropterologica 11 (2), pp. 237-246 : 243-245

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3161/150811009X485486

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/352D87DB-727E-FFD9-FF78-11EA2B6DFA70

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Rhinolophus yunanensis Dobson, 1872
status

 

Rhinolophus yunanensis Dobson, 1872 View in CoL

( Figs. 1–2 View FIG View FIG , 5 View FIG )

Rhinolophus yunanensis Dobson, 1872: 336 View in CoL ; Hill, 1986: 15; Corbet and Hill, 1992: 97; Wang, 2003: 34; Csorba et al., 2003: 84; Simmons, 2005: 365; Wilson, 2008: 344.

Rhinolophus pearsoni View in CoL [in partim]; Dobson, 1876: 43; Dobson, 1878 a: 108; Dobson, 1878 b: 95; Anderson, 1881: 109.

Rhinolophus pearsoni pearsoni View in CoL [in partim]; Allen, 1938: 181; Ellerman and Morrison-Scott, 1951: 122.

Type Specimens

Hotha, Yunnan, China. Collected by J. Anderson. Elevation, approximately 4,500 feet (= 1371.6 m; Dobson, 1872, 1878 b; Anderson, 1881). Type specimens consist of two male specimens and one female specimen ( Dobson, 1876, 1878 b). Hill (1986) reported a male syntype deposited in the British Museum (Natural History) as BMNH 9.4.4.3, and he discussed the cotypes of R. yunanensis . Turni and Kock (2008) reported that the other extracted skull of an adult male syntype is deposited in the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin as ZMB 4368.

Amended Diagnosis

A medium-sized species of the pearsoni group of the genus Rhinolophus . Horseshoe is wide, without small leaves below. The baculum is relatively short, with a basal cone about one-half of its length. The second lower premolar ( PM 3) is present with a distinct cusp, but is small and almost inside the tooth row.

Description of the Species

A medium-sized species ( FA 55.49–59.25 mm) of the pearsoni group, with comparatively large ears measuring 19.92–23.07 mm ( Table 1 View TABLE ). Noseleaves are large ( Fig. 5 View FIG ), thick and fleshy-looking, with a low, arc-shaped connecting process from the top of a high pandurate sella. Horseshoe is wide, about 10.56 mm, with no small leaves below. Fur is woolly, glossy, and dense; the dorsal color in adult specimens is light grayish-brown or dark gray; the fur is lighter and paler below.

The skull ( Fig. 1 View FIG ) is large ( CCL 21.21–22.74 mm); the upper teeth are larger in the ventral view; the second lower premolar ( PM 3) is present with a distinct cusp between PM 2 and PM 4 ( Fig. 1 View FIG ), but is small and almost inside the tooth row. The baculum ( Fig. 2 View FIG ) is relatively small and extremely specialized. The basal cone is very strong with a width about one-half of its length. Shafts are roughly cylindrical, with a basal cone width nine times the shaft width in ventral view. The total length of the baculum is 3.49 mm. The width of the shaft is 0.15 × 0.45 mm. The width of the basal cone is 1.23 × 1.39 mm. The dorsoproximal margin is weakly emarginated. Ventral incision is located at the base of the trapeziform, lacking a distal portion. The tip is thinner and nearly rounded off in the dorsal and ventral view but flat in outline in the lateral view.

Karyotype

Conventional, G-banded, and C-banded karyotypes of R. yunanensis based on specimens collect- ed from Emei-shan, Sichuan Province are shown in Fig. 6 View FIG . The conventional karyotype is not different from that reported by Wu et al. (2006). The chromosome number was 2 n = 46 and FN = 60. There were seven large metacentric or submetacentric pairs, one pair of medium-sized subtelocentrics, and 14 pairs of medium to small acrocentrics in the autosomes, with a subtelocentric X and a small, submetacentric Y chromosome. One autosomal pair of acrocentric chromosomes (no. 12) had secondary constrictions adjacent to the centromere.

The karyotype of R. yunanensis (2 n = 46, FN = 60: Wu et al., 2006 — Fig. 6 View FIG ) from Sichuan differed from the karyotype of R. thailandensis (2 n = 60, FN = 64: Harada et al., 1985 — Fig. 3 View FIG ), as discussed

above, and ‘ R. yunanensis ’ (2 n = 44, FN = 60) from Anlong, Guizhou Province, China ( Gu, 2006). The karyotype differences between samples from Sichu- an and Guizhou are significant, as seen in the numbers of large metacentric pairs and acrocentrics pairs: 7 and 14 pairs in the former and 8 and 12 pairs in the latter, respectively. The karyotype of 2 n = 44 and FN = 60 is similar to the reported karyotype for R. pearsoni from the same locality of Anlong, Guizhou Province (2 n = 44, FN = 62: Mao et al., 2007) and from Anhui Province (2 n = 42, FN = 64: Zhang, 1985). Although we have not re-examined the voucher specimens from Guizhou Province, those samples with 2 n = 44 and FN = 60 karyotype may represent R. pearsoni , and not R. yunanensis .

Habitat

All specimens from Emei-shan, Sichuan Province, China were caught during the day from Jiulaodong Cave. They were sleeping deeply at approximately 3 m height in the cave when caught and made no attempt to fly. On 20 September 2004, R. yunanensis was found sympatrically with R. sinicus , R. macrotis , and Myotis altarium .

Comparisons

The baculum of R. yunanensis from Sichuan differs from those of R. thailandensis , as mentioned above, and R. pearsoni . The basal cone in front is big and shorter in width-to-height in R. yunanensis , whereas it forms an equilateral triangle in R. pearsoni — compared with the report by Topál (1975).

Distribution

Rhinolophus yunanensis is distributed in the provinces of Sichuan and Yunnan, China. As discussed above, a report from Guizhou ( Gu, 2006) may be a misidentification of R. pearsoni and should be confirmed by future surveys.

ZMB

Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (Zoological Collections)

PM

Pratt Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Chiroptera

Family

Rhinolophidae

Genus

Rhinolophus

Loc

Rhinolophus yunanensis Dobson, 1872

Wu, Yi, Harada, Masashi & Motokawa, Masaharu 2009
2009
Loc

Rhinolophus pearsoni pearsoni

ALLEN, G. M. 1938: 181
1938
Loc

Rhinolophus pearsoni

ANDERSON, J. 1881: 109
DOBSON, G. E. 1878: 108
DOBSON, G. E. 1878: 95
DOBSON, G. E. 1876: 43
1876
Loc

Rhinolophus yunanensis

WILSON, D. E. 2008: 344
SIMMONS, N. B. 2005: 365
WANG, Y. X. 2003: 34
CSORBA, G. & P. UJHELYI & N. THOMAS 2003: 84
CORBET, G. B. & J. E. HILL 1992: 97
HILL, J. E. 1986: 15
DOBSON, G. E. 1872: 336
1872
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