Pipistrellus anthonyi Tate 1942

Pipistrellus anthonyi Anthony’s Pipistrelle Pipistrellus anthonyi Tate, 1942: 252; Changyinku, N. Burma, 7,000’ Previous records from Myanmar Kachin State: Changyinku (type locality of anthonyi ). There are no new records. Descriptive characters No specimen of P. anthonyi was seen by the authors of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bates, Paul J. J., Nwe, Tin, Bu, Si Si Hla, Mie, Khin Mie, Swe, Khin Maung, Nyo, Nyo, Khaing, Aye Aye, Aye, Nu Nu, Toke, Yin Yin, Aung, Naing Naing, Thi, Mar Mar, Mackie, Iain
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Published: Zenodo 2005
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4335743
https://zenodo.org/record/4335743
Description
Summary:Pipistrellus anthonyi Anthony’s Pipistrelle Pipistrellus anthonyi Tate, 1942: 252; Changyinku, N. Burma, 7,000’ Previous records from Myanmar Kachin State: Changyinku (type locality of anthonyi ). There are no new records. Descriptive characters No specimen of P. anthonyi was seen by the authors of this paper. The description re- lies primarily on Tate (1942). With a fore- arm length of 38 mm, P. anthonyi is struc- turally similar to P. joffrei but very dark brown instead of pale brown. The pelage is glossy and velvety. The thumb is short, the basal phalanx is 3.4 mm in length and pro- vided with a small basal pad. Tate (1942) did not specify whether the fifth digit of anthonyi is reduced in length, as it is in P. joffrei . The only known skull of anthonyi has an incomplete braincase. According to Tate (1942), the skull has ‘an exceptionally wide lachrymal region and even wider spaces across well developed supraorbital tuber- cles, but narrower muzzle and canine width’. Each zygoma has a small descending process, 0.5 mm in depth, external to the third upper molar (M3). The canine has a strongly defined posterior cusp; the first up- per premolar (P2) is minute, about one quar- ter of the crown area of the first upper inci- sor (I2). Both the first (P2) and second (P4) premolars are rather small and compressed in the toothrow; P4 is slightly taller than P2. Nothing is known of the baculum of this species. According to Hill (1966), in P. jof- frei , the baculum is thought to be either small or absent. Similar species As noted above, P. anthonyi is apparently structurally similar to P. joffrei but with a darker pelage. However, a specimen (BMNH.16.3.26.2) in the Natural History Museum, London referred to P. joffrei is in- termediate in colour, being a dark reddish- brown. This possibly suggests that anthonyi may prove to be conspecific with joffrei , with P. joffrei being the prior name. Ecology This data deficient species, which is endemic to Myanmar, was collected in March, 1939 from Changyinku, which is a small village situated in a broad, open valley at an altitude of 2,150 m a.s.l. The valley is drained by the headwaters of the Chipwi River. Even by 1939 it had been extensively cleared of its natural deciduous forest for cultivation and grazing. Open, dry and boggy meadows, bracken, tree rhododendron ( Rhododendron delavayi ), and some pine forest occurred in the region (Anthony, 1941). : Published as part of Bates, Paul J. J., Nwe, Tin, Bu, Si Si Hla, Mie, Khin Mie, Swe, Khin Maung, Nyo, Nyo, Khaing, Aye Aye, Aye, Nu Nu, Toke, Yin Yin, Aung, Naing Naing, Thi, Mar Mar & Mackie, Iain, 2005, A review of the genera Myotis, Ia, Pipistrellus, Hypsugo, and Arielulus (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) from Myanmar (Burma), including three species new to the country, pp. 205-236 in Acta Chiropterologica 7 (2) on pages 229-230, DOI: 10.3161/1733-5329(2005)7[205:AROTGM]2.0.CO;2, http://zenodo.org/record/3942897 : {"references": ["TATE, G. H. H. 1942. Review of the vespertilionine bats, with special attention to genera and spe- cies of the Archbold collections. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 80: 221 - 297.", "HILL, J. E. 1966. A review of the genus Philetor (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae). Bulletin of the British Museum Natural History (Zoology), 14: 373 - 387.", "ANTHONY, H. E. 1941. Mammals collected by the Ver- nay-Cutting Burma expedition. Field Museum of Natural History, Zoological Series, 27: 37 - 123."]}