Neoromicia tenuipinnis (Peters, 1872)
(Table 3)
Vesperus tenuipinnis Peters, 1872: 263 .
COMMON NAMES. — English White-winged Bat. French: Pipistrelle à ailes blanches.
MATERIAL EXAMINED. — 13 specimens (including original data).
Mount Cameroon area • 3 ♀♀, 2 ♂♂; Mubenge - Isongo; 4°05’00”N, 9°00’00”E; 0 m; Martin Eisentraut leg.; SMNS 3458, 3459, 5602, ZMB 9304, 93807 • 2♂♂; Debunscha; 4°06’00”N, 8°59’00”E; 36 m; Martin Eisentraut leg.; SMNS 5603, 5604 .
Other localities of Cameroon • 1 specimen; Douala; 4°04’00”N, 9°43’00”E; 0 m; SMNS 2362b • 1 ♀; Bitye; 3°01’00”N, 12°22’00”E; 616 m; 13.XII.2014; Rosenberg W.F.H leg.; ZFMK 1979.0647.
ORIGINAL DATA. — 4 individuals (3 females and 1 male) (Table 1) of the white-winged serotine were captured over a slow flowing stream near a cultivated farm at an altitude of 470 m a.s.l. The species was originally documented in the Mount Cameroon area as Eptesicus tenuipinnis (Peters, 1872) (Eisentraut 1963) .
HABITATS AND DISTRIBUTION. —- The species is widely distributed in sub-Saharan Africa from West Africa through Central Africa and parts of East Africa (Monadjem & Fahr 2017). Although principally associated with lowland rainforest (Monadjem et al. 2010), it has also been recorded in forest, moist savannah, tropical dry forest and mangrove forest where small groups roost in roofs, eaves of houses, small crevices in houses and hollow trees (Happold 1987; Monadjem et al. 2010). Happold (1987) noted that this species may fly into houses to hunt insects around light.