Desert Long-eared Bat

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Desert Long-Eared Bat
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Chiroptera
Family: Vespertilionidae
Genus: Otonycteris
Species: O. hemprichii
Binomial name
Otonycteris hemprichii
Peters, 1859

The Desert Long-Eared Bat (Otonycteris hemprichii) is a species of vesper bat in the Vespertilionidae family.

Contents

[edit] Distribution & Range

The single species, O. hemprichi, occurs in the desert zone from Morocco and northern Niger through Egypt and the Arabian peninsula to Kazakhstan, Kyrgystan, and Pakistan[1].

[edit] Taxonomy

The systematic position of Otonycteris is unclear, but chromosomal analysis suggests close affinity to Barbastella and Plecotus[2]

[edit] Physiology

Head and body length is about 73-81 mm, tail length is about 47-70 mm, and forearm length is 57-67 mm. Several authorities[3] gave the weight of two adult males as 18 to 20 grams. The large ears, about 40 mm in length, are directed nearly horizontally and are connected across the forehead by a low band of skin. Five female specimens revealed two pairs of pectoral mammae, a unique condition in mammals. It is not known if both pairs are functional.

[edit] Coloration

The coloration above is pale sandy to dark brown; the underparts are usually whitish.

[edit] Comparative Anatomy

The skull and teeth of Otonycteris resemble those of Eptesicus

[edit] Ecology & Behavior

[edit] Habitat

It has been stated that this bat is capable of inhabiting extremely barren and arid regions[4]. In the Negev Desert a pair was found roosting in a rocky crevice on a hill. This bat has also been found in buildings.

[edit] Locomotion

Otonycteris hemprichii reportedly has a slow, floppy flight.

[edit] Behavior

[edit] Diet

Based on an analysis of its body mass, low aspect ratio, and low relative wing loading, it has been predicted[5] that the species will be found to carnivorous in diet. Oservations in Kyrgyzstan indicate that the bat forages close to the ground, uses echolocation to detect large flying or surface-dwelling invertebrates, and feeds mostly on arachnids and orthopterans that are seized directly from the ground[6].

[edit] Courtship & Breeding

Breeding colonies of 3-15 females have been found, and seven pregnant females, most with two embryos, have been collected in central Asia; one was collected on 12 June[7]. Three pregnant females, each with two embryos, were found in a deserted hut in Jordan on 2 May [8]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Aulagnier & Mein 1985; Corbet 1978; Fairon 1980; Horacek 1991; Roberts 1977; Shaimardanov 1982
  2. ^ Qumsiyeh & Bickham 1993
  3. ^ Gaisler, Madkour, & Pelikan 1972
  4. ^ Harrison 1964
  5. ^ Norberg & Fenton 1988
  6. ^ Arlettaz et. al. 1995; Horacek 1991
  7. ^ Horacek 1991; Roberts1977
  8. ^ Atallah 1977

[edit] Sources