Pipistrellus permixtus Aellen 1957

30. Dar-es-Salaam Pipistrelle Pipistrellus permixtus French: Pipistrelle de Tanzanie / German: Dar-es-Salaam-Zwergfledermaus / Spanish: Pipistrela de Tanzania Other common names: Dar-es-Salaam Pipistrelle Bat, Tanzania Pipistrelle Taxonomy. Pipistrellus (Pipistrellus) permixtus Aellen, 1957, “ Dar e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Don E. Wilson, Russell A. Mittermeier
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Lynx Edicions 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6567077
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/4C3D87E8FFE86A57FF8494391FE9B23A
Description
Summary:30. Dar-es-Salaam Pipistrelle Pipistrellus permixtus French: Pipistrelle de Tanzanie / German: Dar-es-Salaam-Zwergfledermaus / Spanish: Pipistrela de Tanzania Other common names: Dar-es-Salaam Pipistrelle Bat, Tanzania Pipistrelle Taxonomy. Pipistrellus (Pipistrellus) permixtus Aellen, 1957, “ Dar es Salam [sic], Tanganyika [= Tanzania].” Taxonomy of P. permixtus is currently uncertain. It seems to be related to Palearctic Pipistrellus, and because the only known specimen was found at port Dar-es-Salaam, there are speculations that it might have been a stowaway on a ship from some Palearctic region. Monotypic. Distribution. Known only from type specimen at Dar-es-Salaam, EC Tanzania. Descriptive notes. Head-body ¢. 42 mm, tail ¢. 33 mm, ear c.12-5 mm, hindfoot 6 mm, forearm 33-5 mm (type specimen). Pelage color of the Dar-es-Salaam Pipistrelle is uncertain because color of type specimen was lost before the species was described because it was preserved in “spirits.” Individual hairs are known to be bicolored; ventral pelage is also unknown butis reported as not pure white (probably lighter than dorsum). Ears are relatively short, with rounded tips; tragus is about one-third the ear length, broadestjust above middle of anterior margin, and sickle-shaped, with anterior margin concave, posterior margin smoothly convex, and tip rounded. Thumbis relatively long. Uropatagium reaches to very tip oftail; postcalcarial lobe is large and well developed. Skull is of medium size for an African Pipistrellus; supraorbital region is not so expanded that dorsal surface of rostrum has pentagonal outline; forehead region is moderately concave; I? is bicuspid; I’ is about two-thirds the height of I*; P* is well developed, visible above gum, and displaced lingually according to V. Aellen in 1957 but was deemed to be within tooth row by K. F. Koopman in 1994 after observing the holotype; C,is relatively robust; and lower molars are nyctalodont. Habitat. Potentially dry coastal forests, which surrounds the area where type specimen ...