1. Confirmation of the existence of Himalayan long-eared bats, Plecotus homochrous (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae), in China.
- Author
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Pengfei Luo, Xiangyang He, Yuzhi Zhang, Jianping Ye, Min Guo, Jin Deng, Chunhui Zhou, Jiang Zhou, and Libiao Zhang
- Subjects
VESPERTILIONIDAE ,BATS ,NATIONAL parks & reserves ,NATURE reserves ,SKULL ,THUMB ,FOREARM ,EAR - Abstract
The existence of Himalayan long-eared bats, Plecotus homochrous (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae), in China has not been previously confirmed. In this study, four bats captured with harp traps from two sites in the Maoershan National Nature Reserve in Guangxi, China were investigated. These bats have long, wide auricles, each with a prominent tragus. The length of each auricle is about the same as that of a forearm. Hairs on the ventral fur have a dark base with mixed grey and yellowish tips; those on the dorsal fur also have a dark base and are bicolored with brown tips. The thumbs are very short. A concavity is present in the front of the dorsal side of the cranium. Based on morphological characteristics and phylogeny using Cyt b gene sequences, these bats were identified as P. homochrous, thus confirming the existence of Himalayan long-eared bats in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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