Wall-roosting mouse-eared bat
Template:Short description Template:Speciesbox The wall-roosting mouse-eared bat, or Nepalese whiskered myotis (Myotis muricola) is a species of vesper bat whose type locality is Nepal.
Taxonomic notes
Myotis muricola was previously classified as a subspecies of Myotis mystacinus but genetic studies indicate that M. muricola represents a complex of species.
Morphology
The fur on the upper side of M.muricola is coloured brown or grey with dark bases, and the fur on the underside has dark bases and light brown tips. The ears are moderately long, slender, bent forwards and bluntly pointed (Francis, 2008). M.muricola has small feet with wing membranes attached at the base of the toes. The tail is long and completely enclosed in the interfemoral membrane. It has three pairs of premolars, with the upper canine much longer than the third premolar. The second premolar is small and slightly intruded from the tooth row (Yasuma, Andau, Apin, Tuh Yit Yu, & Kimsui, 2003).
Distributions
Myotis muricola is found in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam (Simmons, 2005).
Ecology
Myotis muricola is a nocturnal and insectivorous bat. It tends to feed during the first two hours after sunset and before dawn, using ultrasonic echolocation (Richardson, 1993). It catches insects in flight or perched on foliage, the ground, or on a water surface. Small insects are usually caught directly in the mouth, while larger ones are scooped out of the air using the tail membrane and flipped into the mouth, or brought to the mouth with the wing tips (Bonaccooso, 1998). It drinks by swooping low over the surface of a body of water, or by collecting droplets of water from the rooves of the tunnels or caves in which it roosts (Richardson, 1993).
Habitat
Myotis muricola roosts in a variety of different sites, including curled-up banana leaves (Francis, 2008), limestone forests (Abdullah, Azlan, & Neuchlos, 2005), hollow trees, rock shelters, artificial caves, mines and tunnels, and old buildings (Richardson, 1993).
Conservation status
According to the 2019 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, M. muricola is classified as Least Concern.[1]
References
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- Francis, C.M., Guillén, A., Robinson, M.F. (1999). Order Chiroptera: Bats. Wildlife of Lao PDR: 1999 Status Report .
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- Mouse-eared bats
- Bats of Asia
- Bats of Oceania
- Bats of Southeast Asia
- Bats of Indonesia
- Bats of Malaysia
- Mammals of Afghanistan
- Mammals of Pakistan
- Mammals of Nepal
- Mammals of Bangladesh
- Mammals of Bhutan
- Mammals of Brunei
- Mammals of Cambodia
- Bats of China
- Bats of India
- Mammals of Laos
- Mammals of Myanmar
- Mammals of Papua New Guinea
- Bats of the Philippines
- Mammals of Singapore
- Mammals of Taiwan
- Mammals of Thailand
- Mammals of Vietnam
- Mammals of Western New Guinea
- Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
- Mammals described in 1846
- Bats of New Guinea
- Bats of Borneo