Murina fionae, Francis & Eger, 2012
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https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6397752 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6580678 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4C3D87E8-FF67-6AD8-FF7A-943C1DA4B38C |
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Conny |
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Murina fionae |
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354. View Plate 69: Vespertilionidae
Fiona’s Tube-nosed Bat
French: Murine de Fiona / German: Fiona-Rohrennase / Spanish: Ratonero narizudo de Fiona
Taxonomy. Murina fionae Francis & Eger, 2012 View in CoL ,
“Pha Deng, ~ 8 km E of Ban Navang, Khammouan Province, Laos (17°57'N, 105°23'E); altitude 1140 m.” GoogleMaps
Murina fionae is included in a clade with M. guilleni , M. cf. cyclotis (from India), M. cyclotis , M. ct. peninsularis (from Borneo), and M. peninsularis based on limited genetic data. Monotypic.
Distribution. N & C Vietnam, C Laos, and EC Cambodia. View Figure
Descriptive notes. Head-body 42-1-51- 3 mm, tail 37-44- 5 mm, ear 12- 1-16 mm, hindfoot 6:8-9- 3 mm, forearm 34-2-40- 1 mm; weight 7- 5-12 g. Fur long and silky. Dorsal pelage is orange (hairs with pale buff bases and orange-browntips), with longer guard hairs scattered throughout; venter is pale buff orange and whiter near chin (hairs unicolored buff orange). 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; tragusis long and narrow and tapers toward pointed tip. Wing attaches near base of claw on first toe. Baculum has upwardly arched dorsal surface and deeply concave ventral surface, being somewhat heartshaped (small notch at tip and pointed at base) in dorsal view and very short (1- 1 mm long). Skull is large and robust, with well-domed braincase; sagittal crest is very well developed, and lambdoidalcrest is weakly developed; I? is lateral to I; C! is much taller than P*, but basal area is only slightly larger or subequal to that of P*; P? is subequalto P*in height, but its basal area is two-thirds to nearly equal to that of P*; M' and M? lack mesostyles; and talonids of M, and M, are reduced relative to their trigonids.
Habitat. Wet, hill evergreen forests at elevations of 830-1140 m in the Annamite Mountains and semideciduous forests at 290 m in Cambodia.
Food and Feeding. No information.
Breeding. No information.
Activity patterns. No information.
Movements, Home range and Social organization. No information.
Status and Conservation. Not assessed on The [UCNRed List. Virtually nothing is known about ecology of Fiona’s Tube-nosed Bat, and additional studies are needed to clarify its conservation status.
Bibliography. Francis & Eger (2012), Nguyen Truong Son et al. (2015), Soisook (2013), Soisook, Karapan, Satasook, Thong Vu Dinh et al. (2013), Soisook, Thaw Win-Naing et al. (2017).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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