Murina balaensis, Soisook, 2013

Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier, 2019, Vespertilionidae, Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions, pp. 716-981 : 919-920

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6397752

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6580690

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4C3D87E8-FF65-6ADB-FA7D-9E591DC0B97D

treatment provided by

Conny

scientific name

Murina balaensis
status

 

363. View Plate 69: Vespertilionidae

Bala Tube-nosed Bat

Murina balaensis View in CoL

French: Murine de Bala / German: Bala-Rohrennase / Spanish: Ratonero narizudo de Bala

Taxonomy. Murina balaensis Soisook et al., 2013 View in CoL ,

“ Thailand, Narathiwat Province, Wang, Halabala WS, Bala Forest, Second bridge wail, 5°48.9°N, 101°48.1°E, 370 m asl.” GoogleMaps

See M. eleryi . Monotypic.

Distribution. Known only from type locality in S Peninsular Thailand. View Figure

Descriptive notes. Head-body 34-334- 5 mm, tail 30-6-30- 7 mm, ear 12-312- 8 mm, hindfoot 6- 6-7 mm, forearm 28-30- 4 mm; weight 3-5- 4 g. Fur long and silky. Dorsal pelage is golden orangish brown (hairs with dark gray bases and orange reddish brown tips, some hairs having charcoal black tips), with longer shiny golden guard hairs mixed throughout; venter is whitish gray (hairs with dark gray bases and whitish graytips). Dorsal pelage extends sparsely onto wings, uropatagium, thumbs, and feet. Face is sparsely haired except for long protuberant naked nostrils. Ears are short, broad, and rounded, with smoothly convex anterior margins, no notch on posterior margins, and broadly rounded tips; tragus is long and narrow and tapers toward pointed tip. Wing attaches near base of claw on first toe. Baculum is relatively rectangular, with rounded corners and slight concavities on tip and base; it is small (1 mm long) and has upwardly arched dorsal surface and deeply concave ventralside for its full length. Skull has relatively low braincase; sagittal crest is absent, and lambdoidal crest is weak; I? is anterior to I; C! is twothirds to slightly less than the crown area but subequal in height to P*; P? is ¢.50% the crown area and height of P*; M' and M* have well-developed mesostyles; and talonids of M, and M, are subequal to or larger than their respective trigonids.

Habitat. Lowland moist evergreen rainforest at elevations of 340-370 m (type locality).

Food and Feeding. Bala Tube-nosed Bats were observed foraging for small insects in cluttered understory, flying 2-3 m aboveground.

Breeding. No information.

Activity patterns. Calls of two Bala Tube-nosed Bats (male holotype and female paratype) are steep FM sweeps, with start frequencies of 145-9-158-7 kHz (male) and 159- 164 kHz (female), end frequencies of 65-5-67 kHz (male) and 62-66-9 kHz (female), peak frequencies of 90-7-107-3 kHz (male) and 84-6-95-3 kHz (female), and durations of 1-7-2-6 milliseconds (male) and 1-9-3 milliseconds (female).

Movements, Home range and Social organization. No information.

Status and Conservation. Classified as Critically Endangered on The IUCN Red Last. The Bala Tube-nosed Bat is currently known from two specimens from one locality, and virtually nothing is known aboutits ecology and threats. It is likely threatened by habitat loss from agricultural expansion and logging.

Bibliography. Soisook (2017b), Soisook, Thaw Win-Naingng et al. (2017).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Chiroptera

Family

Vespertilionidae

Genus

Murina

Loc

Murina balaensis

Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier 2019
2019
Loc

Murina balaensis

Soisook 2013
2013
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF