Long-snouted bat

Species of bat

Long-snouted bat
Conservation status

Near Threatened  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Chiroptera
Family: Phyllostomidae
Genus: Platalina
Thomas, 1928
Species:
P. genovensium
Binomial name
Platalina genovensium
Thomas, 1928

The long-snouted bat (Platalina genovensium) is a species of bat in the family Phyllostomidae.[2] It is the only species within the genus Platalina.[2][3] It is endemic to northern Peru and northern Chile.[1][4] It feeds almost exclusively on the nectar and fruit of the columnar cactus.[5] The species is rare, but has a wide distribution with at least 25 populations, and is listed as near-threatened due to habitat loss causing the removal of their primary food source.[1]

Description

Captured long-snouted bats range in length from 7.2 to 8.9 cm with a tail length of 0.5 to 1.1 cm and forearm length of 12.8 to 26.5 cm. Weights range from 12.8 to 26.5 g with the upper weight range including a pregnant female.[6] More typical measurements are total length around 81 mm, wing extension of 341 mm, and weights of 19.5 to 19.9 grams. Wing area is the largest of any known glossophagine with wing loading the lowest. This may be due to the high altitude.[7] It is the largest bat within the family Lonchophyllinae. This size could be an adaptation for night temperatures approaching 0c. The bat is known for its extremely elongated muzzle which could indicate increased specialization.[5] In addition, the tongue is long, extendable and covered in papillae. The upper incisors are broad and spoon shaped with a diamond-shaped nose-leaf. The interfemoral membrane is long and sparsely haired with the tail extending 1/3 of the way into the membrane. The body is pale brown with the base of each hair being lighter than the tip. The underside is also lighter than the back.

Range

On the western slopes of the Andes, this species ranges from Piura in the North to Tacna in the south.[7] Most research has centered on Arequipa. On the eastern slopes, there is only one known population near Huánuco. Elevations range from sea level to 2500 m although no individual has been collected below 2200 m. Populations are strongly associated with desert habitats dominated by columnar cactus. This range is hypothesized to change with precipitation events as populations move to more moist areas during El Niño events.[7][4]

Habitat and roosting

The primary habitat requirement for this species is high densities of a plant species in the genus Weberbauerocereus, W. weberbaueri. These densities range from 20 to 30 cacti per 100 m2 (1,100 sq ft).[8][4] Fruit, pollen and nectar production are the limiting resource for the population resulting in large population swings during drought. They typically live in colonies of up to 50 individuals, though may separate into small groups of 5-7 individuals within the roost.[5] Colonies include all male and mixed sex groups with no known occurrences of female only groups. All known colonies inhabit abandoned mines.

Diet

The long-snouted bat has an obligate mutualistic relationship with the W. weberbaueri and as a result, this species is the primary pollinator and seed disperser for this species.[4] This species of cactus produces fruit year around, even after 17 months without rain which allows minimal bat populations to persist. Platalina genovensium increases the successful fruit production from 40% to 77%, significantly increasing available food available in the ecosystem for rodents and birds.[4] During and following drought, two species of hummingbird (Platagona gigas and Rhodopis vesper) also play a role in pollination. The bats supplement their diet with small coleopterans found within the flower but the primary component of their diet is cactus pollen.[4] Carbon isotope analysis has determined that the long-snouted bat feeds almost exclusively on CAM plants or insects that feed on CAM plants. Other species which may play a role in their diet to an unknown degree include Browningia candelaris, Neoraimondia arequipensis, Coryocactus brevistylus, Echinopsis chiloensis, Armatocereus procerus, and Weberbauerocereus rauhii.[4] Carrying capacity can range from 5 bats per ha during rainy years to .5 bats in drought years.[7] Activity peaked around 8 pm.[7]

Reproduction

During periods of drought, reproduction is completely halted perhaps via delayed fertilization.[4] In 1993, 3 out of 8 captured adult females were pregnant or lactating in October therefore the hypothesized breeding peak is around October coinciding with spring flowering.[4] Pregnant females have also been captured in September, March and June.[7] Pregnancy and lactation length are unknown. There may be possible sexual dimorphism with females having slightly longer forearms.[7]

Conservation status

The main conservation threats include habitat loss and collection for medicinal sale.[1][5][4] Their low population densities and dependence in columnar cactus make them vulnerable to habitat loss. In addition, their roosting locations in known mines make them vulnerable to over harvest by medicinal collectors. Any harvest during times of drought when populations are suppressed and there is no reproduction could threaten the persistence of local populations. Medicinal uses of bats in the local culture range from curing epilepsy to heart attacks.[4] Additional threats include more frequent el Nino induced droughts with climate change. Populations are decreasing at a rate between 10 and 30% over 10 years.[1] It is one of two species of bats currently listed as critically endangered by Peruvian legislation (Supreme Decree 034-2004-AG).[7] It is also listed as near threatened by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN, 2011).

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Pacheco, V.; Aguirre, L. (2016). "Platalina genovensium". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T17487A21988884. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-2.RLTS.T17487A21988884.en. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b Simmons, N.B. (2005). "Order Chiroptera". In Wilson, D.E.; Reeder, D.M (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 403. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  3. ^ Sahley, C.T.; Baraybar, L. (1996). "Natural History of the Long-Snouted Bat, Platalina genovensium (Phyllostomidae: Glossophaginae) in Southwestern Peru" (PDF). Vida Silvestre Neotropical. 5 (2). Retrieved October 29, 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Catherine T. Sahley (October 1996). "Bat and Hummingbird Pollination of an Autotetraploid Columnar Cactus, Weberbauerocereus weberbaueri (Cactaceae)" (PDF). American Journal of Botany. 83 (10): 1329–1336. doi:10.1002/j.1537-2197.1996.tb13918.x. JSTOR 2446118.
  5. ^ a b c d "Long-snouted bat videos, photos and facts - Platalina genovensium | ARKive". 29 November 2014. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  6. ^ "Peruvian long-snouted bat - BMAP". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-11-25.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h "The Peruvian Long-Snouted Bat, Platalina genovensium Thomas, 1928 (Phyllostomidae, Lonchophyllinae), in the Area of Influence of the PERU LNG Gas Pipeline: Population Status and Recommendations for Conservation". ResearchGate.net. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  8. ^ Petit, S. (1995). "The mutualism between bats and columnar cacti on Curacao and conservation implications". Scholarlyrepository.miami.edu.

External links

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Extant species of family Phyllostomidae
Brachyphyllinae
Brachyphylla
  • Antillean fruit-eating bat (B. cavernarum)
  • Cuban fruit-eating bat (B. nana)
Carolliinae
Carollia
(Short-tailed
leaf-nosed bats)
  • Benkeith's short-tailed bat (C. benkeithi)
  • Silky short-tailed bat (C. brevicauda)
  • Chestnut short-tailed bat (C. castanea)
  • Manu short-tailed bat (C. manu)
  • Mono's short-tailed bat (C. monohernandezi)
  • Seba's short-tailed bat (C. perspicillata)
  • Sowell's short-tailed bat (C. sowelli)
  • Gray short-tailed bat (C. subrufa)
Rhinophylla
  • Hairy little fruit bat (R. alethina)
  • Fischer's little fruit bat (R. fischerae)
  • Dwarf little fruit bat (R. pumilio)
Desmodontinae
(vampire bats)
Desmodus
  • Common vampire bat (D. rotundus)
Diaemus
  • White-winged vampire bat (D. youngi)
Diphylla
  • Hairy-legged vampire bat (D. ecaudata)
Phyllonycterinae
Erophylla
  • Brown flower bat (E. bombifrons)
  • Buffy flower bat (E. sezekorni)
Phyllonycteris
  • Jamaican flower bat (P. aphylla)
  • Cuban flower bat (P. poeyi)
Subfamily Glossophaginae
Glossophagini
Anoura
(Geoffroy's
long-nosed bats)
  • A. aequatoris
  • Cadena's tailless bat (A. cadenai)
  • A. carishina
  • Tailed tailless bat (A. caudifer)
  • Handley's tailless bat (A. cultrata)
  • Tube-lipped nectar bat (A. fistulata)
  • Geoffroy's tailless bat (A. geoffroyi)
  • Broad-toothed tailless bat (A. latidens)
  • Luis Manuel's tailless bat (A. luismanueli)
  • A. peruana
Choeroniscus
  • Godman's long-tailed bat (C. godmani)
  • Lesser long-tongued bat (C. minor)
  • Greater long-tailed bat (C. periosus)
Choeronycteris
  • Mexican long-tongued bat (C. mexicana)
Dryadonycteris
Glossophaga
  • Commissaris's long-tongued bat (G. commissarisi)
  • Gray long-tongued bat (G. leachii)
  • Miller's long-tongued bat (G. longirostris)
  • Western long-tongued bat (G. morenoi)
  • Pallas's long-tongued bat (G. soricina)
Hylonycteris
  • Underwood's long-tongued bat (H. underwoodi)
Leptonycteris
(Saussure's
long-nosed bats)
  • Southern long-nosed bat (L. curasoae)
  • Greater long-nosed bat (L. nivalis)
  • Lesser long-nosed bat (L. yerbabuenae)
Lichonycteris
  • Pale brown long-nosed bat (L. degener)
  • Dark long-tongued bat (L. obscura)
Monophyllus
  • Insular single leaf bat (M. plethodon)
  • Leach's single leaf bat (M. redmani)
Musonycteris
  • Banana bat (M. harrisoni)
Scleronycteris
  • Ega long-tongued bat (S. ega)
Hsunycterini
Hsunycteris
Lonchophyllini
Lionycteris
  • Chestnut long-tongued bat (L. spurrelli)
Lonchophylla
  • Bokermann's nectar bat (L. bokermanni)
  • Chocoan long-tongued bat (L. chocoana)
  • L. concava
  • Dekeyser's nectar bat (L. dekeyseri)
  • Arched nectar bat (L. fornicata)
  • Handley's nectar bat (L. handleyi)
  • Western nectar bat (L. hesperia)
  • L. inexpectata
  • Godman's nectar bat (L. mordax)
  • Orcés's long-tongued bat (L. orcesi)
  • L. orienticollina
  • L. peracchii
  • Orange nectar bat (L. robusta)
  • Thomas's nectar bat (L. thomasi)
Platalina
  • Long-snouted bat (P. genovensium)
Xeronycteris
  • Vieira's long-tongued bat (X. vieirai)
Subfamily Phyllostominae
Micronycterini
Glyphonycteris
  • Behn's bat (G. behnii)
  • Davies's big-eared bat (G. daviesi)
  • Tricolored big-eared bat (G. sylvestris)
Lampronycteris
  • Yellow-throated big-eared bat (L. brachyotis)
Macrotus
(big-eared bats)
  • California leaf-nosed bat (M. californicus)
  • Waterhouse's leaf-nosed bat (M. waterhousii)
Micronycteris
(Little Big-eared
Bats)
  • Brosset's big-eared bat (M. brosseti)
  • Giovanni's big-eared bat (M. giovanniae)
  • Hairy big-eared bat (M. hirsuta)
  • Matses's big-eared bat (M. matses)
  • Little big-eared bat (M. megalotis)
  • Common big-eared bat (M. microtis)
  • White-bellied big-eared bat (M. minuta)
  • Sanborn's big-eared bat (M. sanborni)
  • Schmidts's big-eared bat (M. schmidtorum)
  • Yates's big-eared bat (M. yatesi)
Neonycteris
  • Least big-eared bat (N. pusilla)
Trinycteris
  • Niceforo's big-eared bat (T. nicefori)
Vampyrini
Chrotopterus
  • Big-eared woolly bat (C. auritus)
Lophostoma
  • Pygmy round-eared bat (L. brasiliense)
  • Carriker's round-eared bat (L. carrikeri)
  • Davis's round-eared bat (L. evotis)
  • Kalko's round-eared bat (L. kalkoae)
  • Western round-eared bat (L. occidentalis)
  • Schultz's round-eared bat (L. schulzi)
  • White-throated round-eared bat (L. silvicolum)
  • Yasuni round-eared bat (L. yasuni)
Tonatia
(round-eared bats)
  • Greater round-eared bat (T. bidens)
  • Stripe-headed round-eared bat (T. saurophila)
Trachops
  • Fringe-lipped bat (T. cirrhosus)
Vampyrum
  • Spectral bat (V. spectrum)
Lonchorhinini
Lonchorhina
(sword-nosed bats)
  • Tomes's sword-nosed bat (L. aurita)
  • Fernandez's sword-nosed bat (L. fernandezi)
  • Northern sword-nosed bat (L. inusitata)
  • Marinkelle's sword-nosed bat (L. marinkellei)
  • Orinoco sword-nosed bat (L. orinocensis)
Macrophyllum
  • Long-legged bat (M. macrophyllum)
Mimon
(Gray's Spear-nosed
Bats)
  • Golden bat (M. bennettii)
  • Cozumelan golden bat (M. cozumelae)
  • Striped hairy-nosed bat (M. crenulatum)
  • Koepcke's spear-nosed bat (M. koepckeae)
Phyllostomatini
Phylloderma
  • Pale-faced bat (P. stenops)
Phyllostomus
(spear-nosed bats)
  • Pale spear-nosed bat (P. discolor)
  • Lesser spear-nosed bat (P. elongatus)
  • Greater spear-nosed bat (P. hastatus)
  • Guianan spear-nosed bat (P. latifolius)
Subfamily Stenodermatinae
Ametrida
  • Little white-shouldered bat (A. centurio)
Ardops
  • Tree bat (A. nichollsi)
Ariteus
  • Jamaican fig-eating bat (A. flavescens)
Artibeus
(Neotropical fruit bats)
  • Subgenus Artibeus: Anderson's fruit-eating bat (A. aequatorialis)
  • Large fruit-eating bat (A. amplus)
  • Fringed fruit-eating bat (A. fimbriatus)
  • Fraternal fruit-eating bat (A. fraterculus)
  • Hairy fruit-eating bat (A. hirsutus)
  • Honduran fruit-eating bat (A. inopinatus)
  • Jamaican fruit-eating bat (A. jamaicensis)
  • Great fruit-eating bat (A. lituratus)
  • Dark fruit-eating bat (A. obscurus)
  • Flat-faced fruit-eating bat (A. planirostris)
  • Schwartz's fruit-eating bat (A. schwartzi)
  • Subgenus Koopmania: Brown fruit-eating bat (A. concolor)
Centurio
  • Wrinkle-faced bat (C. senex)
Chiroderma
(big-eyed bats)
  • Brazilian big-eyed bat (C. doriae)
  • Guadeloupe big-eyed bat (C. improvisum)
  • Salvin's big-eyed bat (C. salvini)
  • Little big-eyed bat (C. trinitatum)
  • Hairy big-eyed bat (C. villosum)
  • C. vizottoi
Dermanura
  • Andersen's fruit-eating bat (D. anderseni)
  • Aztec fruit-eating bat (D. aztecus)
  • Bogotá fruit-eating bat (D. bogotensis)
  • Gervais's fruit-eating bat (D. cinerea)
  • Silver fruit-eating bat (D. glauca)
  • Gnome fruit-eating bat (D. gnoma)
  • Pygmy fruit-eating bat (D. phaeotis)
  • D. rava
  • Rosenberg's fruit-eating bat (D. rosenbergi)
  • Toltec fruit-eating bat (D. tolteca)
  • Thomas's fruit-eating bat (D. watsoni)
Ectophylla
  • Honduran white bat (E. alba)
Enchisthenes
  • Velvety fruit-eating bat (E. hartii)
Mesophylla
  • MacConnell's bat (M. macconnelli)
Phyllops
(Falcate-winged bats)
  • Cuban fig-eating bat (P. falcatus)
Platyrrhinus
  • P. albericoi
  • Slender broad-nosed bat (P. angustirostris)
  • P. aquilus
  • Eldorado broad-nosed bat (P. aurarius)
  • Short-headed broad-nosed bat (P. brachycephalus)
  • Choco broad-nosed bat (P. chocoensis)
  • Thomas's broad-nosed bat (P. dorsalis)
  • P. fusciventris
  • P. guianensis
  • Heller's broad-nosed bat (P. helleri)
  • P. incarum
  • Buffy broad-nosed bat (P. infuscus)
  • P. ismaeli
  • White-lined broad-nosed bat (P. lineatus)
  • P. masu
  • Matapalo broad-nosed bat (P. matapalensis)
  • P. nigellus
  • P. nitelinea
  • Recife broad-nosed bat (P. recifinus)
  • Shadowy broad-nosed bat (P. umbratus)
  • Greater broad-nosed bat (P. vittatus)
Pygoderma
  • Ipanema bat (P. bilabiatum)
Sphaeronycteris
  • Visored bat (S. toxophyllum)
Stenoderma
  • Red fruit bat (S. rufum)
Sturnira
(yellow-shouldered bats)
  • S. angeli
  • Aratathomas's yellow-shouldered bat (S. aratathomasi)
  • S. bakeri
  • Bidentate yellow-shouldered bat (S. bidens)
  • Bogotá yellow-shouldered bat (S. bogotensis)
  • S. burtonlimi
  • Hairy yellow-shouldered bat (S. erythromos)
  • S. hondurensis
  • Choco yellow-shouldered bat (S. koopmanhilli)
  • Little yellow-shouldered bat (S. lilium)
  • Highland yellow-shouldered bat (S. ludovici)
  • Louis's yellow-shouldered bat (S. luisi)
  • Greater yellow-shouldered bat (S. magna)
  • Mistratoan yellow-shouldered bat (S. mistratensis)
  • Talamancan yellow-shouldered bat (S. mordax)
  • Lesser yellow-shouldered bat (S. nana)
  • Tschudi's yellow-shouldered bat (S. oporaphilum)
  • S. parvidens
  • S. paulsoni
  • S. perla
  • Soriano's yellow-shouldered bat (S. sorianoi)
  • Thomas's yellow-shouldered bat (S. thomasi)
  • Tilda's yellow-shouldered bat (S. tildae)
Uroderma
(Tent-building bats)
  • U. bakeri
  • Tent-making bat (U. bilobatum)
  • U. convexum
  • U. davisi
  • Brown tent-making bat (U. magnirostrum)
Vampyressa
(yellow-eared bats)
  • Kalko's yellow-eared bat (V. elisabethae)
  • Melissa's yellow-eared bat (V. melissa)
  • Southern little yellow-eared bat (V. pusilla)
  • Northern little yellow-eared bat (V. thyone)
  • Villa's yellow-eared bat (V. villai)
Vampyriscus
  • Bidentate yellow-eared bat (V. bidens)
  • Brock's yellow-eared bat (V. brocki)
  • Striped yellow-eared bat (V. nymphaea)
Vampyrodes
  • Great stripe-faced bat (V. caraccioli)
Taxon identifiers
Platalina genovensium