Sturnira tildae de la Torre, 1959
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zoologia.37.e36514 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E03C0430-68C6-449B-A0AF-9FB0968FB38C |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FEB34E-891A-FFE6-82F6-AEE48065FE2C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Sturnira tildae de la Torre, 1959 |
status |
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Sturnira tildae de la Torre, 1959 View in CoL
Fig. 26
Taxonomy. The distinction between S. tildae and most congeners is discussed above. Sturnira tildae can be distinguished from S. giannae by the color pattern of the dorsal fur (tetracolored in S. tildae and bicolored in S. giannae ); the length of the dorsal fur (> 8 mm in S. tildae and 4–6 mm in S. giannae ); and the length of metacarpals III and IV (Met III <IV in S. tildae and Met III = IV in S. giannae – Velazco and Patterson 2019). Specimens from PECB (ZSP 029, 038; see Table 7 for measurements) have tetracolored dorsal fur ( Fig. 30), with narrow whitish basis, followed by a blackish dark brown band, a paler cream band and a mid-brown distal band, sometimes orangish brown; the contrast between the three first bands is well marked. As observed in S. lilium , this banding is also divergent from the pattern recorded by some authors – according to Lim and Engstrom (2001) and López-Baucells et al. (2016), the dorsal fur is strongly tricolored in S. tildae . Velazco and Patterson (2019), however, describe the dorsal pelage of S. tildae as tetracolored, this difference may be related to the fact that some authors may not consider the whitish basis (1/10 of total hairs length) of hairs as a valid band; the same seems to occur in S. lilium . The venter is grayish light brown. The upper inner incisors have bases and tips of the same size, in contact and bilobed; lingual cusps of lower molars weakly serrated.
Distribution. In Brazil, the species is recorded in Amazonia, Atlantic Forest, Cerrado and Caatinga, on the states of Amazonas, Acre, Rondônia, Pará, Amapá, Roraima, Tocantins, Sergipe, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Bahia, Minas Gerais, Espírito Santo, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Paraná, and Santa Catarina ( Tavares et al. 2008, Reis et al. 2013, Reis et al. 2017). In São Paulo the species is distributed along the coastal Atlantic Forest ( Garbino 2016). Field observations. The five (2 males and 3 females) individuals were captured in mist-nets set at ground-level in sampling sites M5, M16, M22, M28 and M35 (Appendix 1). Captures occurred in February, April, May, June and September.
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