Jones's roundleaf bat

Jones's roundleaf bat (Hipposideros jonesi) is a species of bat in the family Hipposideridae. It is endemic to southern West Africa. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical dry forest, dry savanna, moist savanna, subtropical or tropical dry lowland grassland, rocky areas, caves, and subterranean habitats (other than caves).[1]

Jones's roundleaf bat

Near Threatened  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Chiroptera
Family: Hipposideridae
Genus: Hipposideros
Species:
H. jonesi
Binomial name
Hipposideros jonesi
Hayman, 1947
Jones's roundleaf bat range

Taxonomy

The holotype was collected by T. S. Jones of the Sierra Leone Department of Agriculture in Makeni in 1947. Upon further examination of the holotype at the British Museum by Hayman, it was recognized as a distinct species. The bat was subsequently named after T. S. Jones.[2][3]

It belong to the bicolor species group.

Description

It is a small microbat with a noseleaf and large ears. Both sexes are similar in appearance. It is grayish-brown with an orange phase. The hairs are fine, dense, and silky, and the mid-dorsal hairs are 10-11 mm in length. The dorsal pelage is grayish-brown to a dirty brown. The dorsal hairs are dark gray and gray at the tip. The ventral pelage is lighter, and the ventral hairs are pale gray or brown with a whitish tip. The dorsal pelage on the orange phase is tawny-orange to cinnamon. The wings and the interfemoral membrane are a dark gray in color.

It has a noseleaf with enlarged internarial septum, which partly conceals the nostrils. The noseleaf also has one lateral leaflet on each side, with the frontal sac being absent. The noseleaf is longer than it is broad. The posterior component is elongated, and divided into 4 cells by two prominent lateral septa and one weak middle septum.The upper margin of the noseleaf is strongly curved and is sub-triangular in outline. The anterior component is hairy and broad, covering the muzzle. The internarial septum is pad-like and greatly enlarged, forming a transversely oval disc which partly conceals the nostrils. The bat also lacks an anal sac.

The bat has very large and separated ears. The ears are around 45-60 % of the forearm length, which is relatively long. The ears are broad, sub-triangular, and pointed in shape with only a faint concavity in outer margin below tip. Each ear has 11 internal folds, with the antitragus possessing a distinct fold.[4]

Biology

The bat is insectivorous.[5]

Habitat and distribution

The species has been recorded in Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone.

The species roosts in small groups of several dozen individuals. It is known to roost in caves, boulder caves, true caves, and mine shafts.

The bat's range extends through a wide variety of habitats, such as tropical moist forest, arid Sahel vegetation, and from lowland areas into montane regions. It has been recorded up to an elevation of 1350 m.[1]

Conservation

The species has been assessed by the IUCN as near-threatened.

It faces threats from degradation of roosting habitat in caves, and may also be threatened by subsistence hunting. The bat's population also depends on the availability of caves as day-roosts.[6]

It is not protected by any laws or international agreements, and the presence of the species in protected areas is not known.[1]

gollark: They *are* often kind of insecure though.
gollark: It's not just some arbitrary thing where you have to set up a GPS host or it won't tell you some location it magically got, it actually *requires* the hosts to work.
gollark: It uses true range multilateration on those to figure out the location of your client device.
gollark: `gps.locate` knows the distances to each GPS host, and their locations.
gollark: No, not necessarily.

References

  1. Cooper-Bohannon, R.; Mickleburgh, S.; Hutson, A.M.; Bergmans, W.; Fahr, J. (2020). "Hipposideros jonesi". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T10140A22092411. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-2.RLTS.T10140A22092411.en. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  2. Hayman, R. W. (1964). "Notes on a West African Bat Hipposideros Jonesi". Mammalia. 28. doi:10.1515/mamm.1964.28.1.76.
  3. Hayman, R.W. (1947). "IV.—A new Hipposideros from Sierra Leone". Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 14 (109): 71–73. doi:10.1080/00222934708654611.
  4. Fahr, J. (2013). Kingdon, J.; Happold, D.; Butynski, T.; Hoffmann, M.; Happold, M.; Kalina, J. (eds.). Mammals of Africa. 4. A&C Black. pp. 387–389. ISBN 9781408189962.
  5. Lawer, Eric Adjei; Darkoh, Esther Love (2016-04-07). "Effects of agroecosystems on insect and insectivorous bat activity: a preliminary finding based on light trap and mist net captures". Turkish Journal of Zoology. 40 (3): 423–432. doi:10.3906/zoo-1507-17. ISSN 1300-0179.
  6. Weber, Natalie; Fahr, Jakob (2007). Survey of endemic and globally threatened bat species in the Fouta Djallon Plateau for conservation priorities in Guinea (Report).
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