We describe a new species of bat in the genus Emballonura (Chiroptera: Emballonuridae), E. tiavato, from the dry forest regions of Madagascar. This species is distinguished from the only other member of this genus found on the island, E. atrata, and extralimital species based on a variety of external and cranial characteristics. Details of the distribution, phylogeny, and natural history of the two species of Malagasy Emballonura are presented.
Introduction
The genus Emballonura (Family Emballonuridae) is broadly distributed from islands in the western Pacific Ocean, through mainland southeastern Asia and associated islands, to Madagascar. The latter island forms the western distributional limit of the genus. As currently configured, Emballonura, often referred to as a sheath-tailed bat, is composed of nine species (Simmons, 2005), of which eight are only found on islands and six are largely restricted to the Melanesian region. The majority of Emballonura spp. have relatively restricted geographical distributions.
Two species of Emballonuridae are mentioned in the literature as occurring on Madagascar—Emballonura atrata and Taphozous mauritianus—both known from specimen records across various portions of the island (Peterson et al., 1995; Goodman et al., 2005). A third species, Coleura afra, has been recently documented for the island (Goodman et al., in press). E. atrata, which is endemic to Madagascar, is previously recorded from very few sites and less than 30 specimens—nearly one-half of these are fluid preserved or dried mummies with unextracted skulls. Thus, to date, insufficient material has been available to examine patterns of geographic variation in this species.
Over the past decade we have conducted bat surveys on Madagascar, particularly in the dry western portion of the island. During the course of these inventories we have captured individuals of Emballonura at several sites, and, based on this new material, we are able to assess and quantify variation on a geographic level in members of this genus across much of the island. Contrary to early interpretations, Emballonura on Madagascar is widespread, rather than being restricted to the humid portions of the island (Honacki et al., 1982), and is not rare (Tate and Archbold, 1939), particularly in zones with exposed rock outcrops and caves.
Materials and Methods
Morphological Analyses
We have consulted specimens of adult Emballonura spp. housed in several natural history museums. The acronyms of these institutions are: AMNH American Museum of Natural History, New York; FMNH Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago; MNHN Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, France; RMNH Naturalis, Leiden, The Netherlands [formerly Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Histoire]; ROM Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada; UADBA Université d'Antananarivo, Département de Biologie Animale, Antananarivo, Madagascar; USNM National Museum of Natural History, Washington, D.C. [formerly United States National Museum]; ZMAK Zoologisches Museum Alexander Koenig, Bonn, Germany; and ZMB Museum für Naturkunde, Humboldt Universität, Berlin, Germany [formerly Zoologisches Museum, Berlin].
We recorded five external measurements in millimeters from captured individuals before preparation. These included: total length, tail length, hind foot length (not including claw), ear length, and forearm length. Further, we measured body mass in grams using a spring balance. For certain specimens, obtained by other collectors, measurement data were noted directly from labels or field catalogs held in various museums. There are considerable differences among field collectors in the techniques that they use to measure bats; most notable in this regard for emballonurids is rather inconsistent methods for total length, tail, and hind foot measurements. When tabulating descriptive statistics of external measurements, we have in some cases only used those of a single collector—although this reduces sample size, it also decreases the range and variance of external measurements. SMG also took four wing and two hind limb measurements in millimeters from liquid preserved specimens: total length of third digit (metacarpal), third digit (first phalanx), fourth digit (metacarpal), fourth digit (first phalanx), tibia, and calcar.
SMG measured seven cranial and five dental characters using digital calipers, accurate to the nearest 0.1 mm. The measurements and their definitions are: greatest skull length to canines: from posteriormost part of occipital to anterior-buccal alveolar border of canines; greatest zygomatic breadth: width across zygomatic arches at widest point; interorbital width: dorsal width at most constricted part of skull; mastoid width: greatest width across skull at mastoid processes; braincase height: from basiosphenoid and basiooccipital bones to top of braincase (in Malagasy Emballonura the sagittal crest is present, but not well developed); rostral width: maximum width across rostrum dorsally at lacryimal protuberances; C1–C1: width across anterior-buccal alveolar border of canines; M1–M1: maximum width across palate at buccal alveolar borders of third molars; and C1–M3: crown length from the anterior-buccal alveolar border of the canine to the posterior buccal margin of the third molar.
As some species of Emballonura show sexual dimorphism in size, with males being smaller than females (Peterson et al., 1995; Bonaccorso, 1998), separate descriptive statistics were calculated for adults of each sex. To assist with the analysis of patterns of geographic variation in Malagasy Emballonura, particularly sites with small sample sizes, we have grouped specimens as operational taxonomic units (OTUs) based on general region of locality. These include the northern site of Ankarana (OTU 1), all eastern sites south of Maroantsetra (OTU 2), all western sites south of Nosy Be and Ambanja (OTU 3), and the northern sites of Daraina, Analamerana, and Andavakoera (OTU 4; fig. 1).
Genetic Analyses
Our intention with the genetic analyses was to assess whether they corroborated taxonomic conclusions drawn from the quantitative and qualitative analyses. Total genomic DNA was isolated using a DNeasy DNA isolation kit (Qiagen), and stored in the provided elution buffer. Approximately 250 bp of the mitochondrial D-loop was amplified in E. atrata using the primers F(mt) and Mt15996L (Wilkinson and Chapman, 1991; Campbell et al., 1995). The complete mitochondrial cytochrome b gene (cyt b) was amplified using the primer pairs L14724/H15506 and L15171/UMMZ04 in E. atrata (Irwin et al., 1991; Yoder et al., 1996; Jansa et al., 1999). PCRs were performed in 50-µl reaction volumes, containing 2.25 mM MgCl2, 0.25 mM dNTPs, 2.5 U Taq DNA polymerase, 5 µl Promega 10× buffer, 5 µl genomic DNA, and 20 pmol of each primer. The amplification involved an initial denaturation at 94°C for 3 min, followed by 40 cycles of 94°C for 45 sec, 52°C for 45 sec, and 72°C for 1 min, with a final elongation step at 72°C for 4 min. The PCR product was then purified using either gel band excision (Gel Excision kit, Qiagen) or PCR purification (PCR Purification kit, Qiagen).
The purified fragment was sequenced from both directions using the BigDye terminator cycle sequencing kit v.3.1 (Applied Biosystems) in a 20-µl reaction containing 2 µl of the BigDye solution, 1.2 µl ABI 5× sequencing buffer, 5 pmol of primer, and 100–200 ng of purified PCR product. The temperature profile was conducted according to the manufacturer's instructions. The sequencing reactions were cleaned of unincorporated nucleotides using genCLEAN dye terminator removal plates (Genetix) and analyzed on an ABI3100 automated sequencer. Each individual was sequenced 4 to 15 times per locus from multiple PCR reactions to resolve any ambiguities present in single sequencing passes. We used Sequencher v.4.2 (Gene Codes Corp.) to assemble and edit consensus sequences for each individual, and aligned the data by eye using MacClade v.4.0 (Maddison and Maddison, 2000). All sequences were deposited with GenBank: cytochrome b (DQ178249–DQ178285) and D-loop (DQ178286–DQ178323).
We performed Bayesian and maximum parsimony phylogenetic analyses on the cyt b data using MrBayes v.3.0b4 (Huelsenbeck and Ronquist, 2001) and PAUP* v.4.0b10 (Swofford, 2002), respectively. Sequences of Saccopteryx bilineata (Juste et al., 1999) and E. alecto (Hulva and Horáček, 2002) were used as the outgroups. Maximum parsimony analyses were performed using heuristic searches with tree bisection–reconnection (TBR) branch swapping, and setting the maximum number of saved trees to 1000. Parsimony bootstrap analyses were performed using heuristic searches, TBR branch swapping, and 100 replicates of the random addition search option. Bayesian analyses were performed with flat priors, running four chains of 10 million generations each, with sampling every 500 generations. The chains were heated using the temperature scaling factor t = 0.2. We specified an HKY + Γ model with four rate categories for the gamma distribution, the model having been specified using ModelTest v.3.06 (Posada and Crandall, 1998). After examining the likelihood profile using Tracer v.1.1 ( http://evolve.zoo.ox.ac.uk/software.html?id=tracer), we discarded the first 4000 trees as a burn-in and constructed a 50% majority consensus tree from the remaining 16,000 trees in PAUP* (Swofford, 2002).
For each species and for each locus, we used ModelTest v.3.06 to determine the best-fitting model of evolution. Using the prescribed model and parameter values, we used Arlequin v.2.001 (Schneider et al., 2001) to test for genetic structure among geographic regions and sampling sites. We also used DnaSP v.4.0 (Rozas et al., 2003) to calculate descriptive measures such as haplotype diversity (h) and nucleotide diversity (π). Parsimony networks were constructed for each species and for each locus using TCS v.1.18 (Clement et al., 2000).
Emballonura atrata Peters, 1874
This taxon was described based on a single specimen collected “aus dem Innern von Madagascar” (Peters, 1874: 694), or in the interior of Madagascar. The holotype, which has been examined in the Museum für Naturkunde, Humboldt Universität, Berlin, is cataloged as number 4692. The cadaver is in alcohol and the pelage faded in coloration. The extracted skull is in relatively good shape, although the premaxillaries and associated incisors are not attached, the zygomatic processes are not intact, the occipital and palatine bones are partially broken, and considerable soft tissue still remains in the alisphenoid and basisphenoid region and partially obscures these structures. A label glued to the bottle containing the specimen has written upon it “4692 ♀, Emballonura atrata Ptrs. Madagaskar Crossly” and no date is associated with the specimen. The collector is undoubtedly Alfred Crossley, a British natural historian who visited Madagascar on several occasions, and obtained specimens particularly in the eastern portion of the island that are deposited in numerous European collections (Tattersall, 1986; Dorr, 1997). There is no evidence that he traveled to drier western portions of the island, particularly areas of deciduous forest. It has been previously suggested that J. M. Hildebrandt collected the E. atrata holotype (Peterson et al., 1995, footnote, p. 56), which is not correct.
Further evidence that the holotype specimen of E. atrata comes from the eastern humid forests is that, within the same accession at the Berlin Museum as specimen 4692, there are a variety of other mammal specimens, such as the lipotyphlan Hemicentetes and the primates Propithecus diadema and Lichanotus mitratus [ = Indri indri] that represent taxa of this biome. Crossley collected the holotype of L. mitratus in the northern portion of Madagascar in the region of “Nossi Vola und Saralalan” (Peters, 1871). This site has been interpreted by Schwarz (1931) as probably from the Lalo River, east of the Bay of Antongil. If this is indeed the case, the site is close to the modern city of Maroantsetra. Another possibility is that the site of “Nossi Vola” is Nosivola (17°43′S, 48°39′E), which is located to the east of Lac Alaotra and on the road between Ambatondrazaka and Manakambahiny-Est. What is almost certain is this material would have been collected on his late 1869 expedition to Madagascar, when Crossley disembarked at Vohemar and collected in various portions of the eastern humid forest and the region of Lac Alaotra (Grandidier, 1872; Tattersall, 1986). Using the above-presented information, we restrict the type locality to the “lowland regions of the northern portion of eastern Madagascar.”
On the basis of details presented below, we have examined specimens of a large and dark form of Emballonura that are assigned to E. atrata from the region of Maroantsetra south to Tolagnaro and covering much of the eastern portion of the island (fig. 1; appendix 1). All of these specimens come from lowland sites or the lower end of the montane zones (less than 900 m) and we are unaware of any evidence of this species in the Central Highlands. After comparison of our recently collected specimens of Malagasy Emballonura from several different sites, as well as older museum material, to the holotype of E. atrata, it is evident that an undescribed species exists in the drier northern and western portions of the island. This conclusion is corroborated by genetic analyses of the mitochondrial cyt b gene and D-loop region.
Table 1
Selected Measurements of Combined Adult Male and Female Emballonura tiavato and E. atrataa
Holotype
Field Museum of Natural History number 169705, adult male prepared as skin, skull, and partial postcranial skeleton (original number 11923a), collected January 22, 2001, by S. M. Goodman.
The study skin is in a good state of preservation, with both wings folded under the body and the tail membrane spread. The skull is intact with the delicate premaxillaries still attached and the rami of the mandible separated. Portions of the postcranial skeleton were also saved. The habitat noted on the specimen label is “In dry deciduous forest at base of tsingy”; this latter word from the Malagasy refers to a particular type of eroded limestone formation. The individual was captured in a harp trap placed along a trail in the forest and within 40 m of the north entrance of Andrafiabe Cave. The collection site is a limestone karst area with an extensive underground cave system (Cardiff and Befourouack, 2003).
External measurements noted on the specimen label are: total length—64 mm, tail length—15 mm, hind foot length (not including claw)—5 mm, tragus length—5 mm, ear length—14 mm, and forearm length—36 mm. The fresh body mass of the specimen was 3.7 g. The testes were abdominal, measured 2 × 1 mm, and the epididymes not convoluted.
Type Locality
Madagascar: Province d'Antsiranana, Réserve Spéciale d'Ankarana, 2.6 km E of Andrafiabe, in forest near Andrafiabe Cave, 12°55.9′S, 49°03.4′E, ± 50 m.
Etymology
The name tiavato is derived from the Malagasy and means “likes rocks”. This refers to the propensity of this species to occur in areas with exposed rock outcrops and caves.
Diagnosis
A diminutive species of Emballonura (forearm length = 36–41 mm in males and 35–42 mm in females) with notably long rounded ears (11–15 mm in males and 12–15 mm in females). The dorsum pelage coloration is uniform pale to medium grayish-brown and the ventrum is paler buff-brown (fig. 2, left). Inner portion of tragus convex with distinct hatchet-shaped anterior projection. Calcar slightly shorter in length than tibia. Nasal bone hourglass shaped and with distinct central sulcus. Relatively narrow diastema between PM1 and PM2. Basisphenoid pits distinctly rounded and of medium depth and separated by median septum.
Distribution
Known from the drier portions of Madagascar, from the Daraina region inland from Vohemar north to Ankarana and then south along the western side of the island to at least Bemaraha (fig. 1). We have not examined a specimen of Emballonura reported from “Tuléar” [ = Toliara] (Peterson et al., 1995), but we presume it to be referable to this species. Fieldwork in the Mikea Forest between Toliara and Morombe and to the south near Saint Augustin and Tsimanampetsotsa has not provided any evidence of the presence of this genus (Goodman and Razakarivony, 2004; Goodman et al., 2005).
Description
Dorsum cover fur notably long and slightly shaggy, with slightly silky texture, and uniform pale to medium grayish-brown color: basal one-quarter notably lighter and approaching medium-gray in color. The ventrum is paler buff-brown, with a slightly grayish-brown cast: basal one-third distinctly lighter and medium-gray in color. Little anterior–posterior variation in dorsum or ventrum coloration. Pelage in E. atrata notably darker, approaching brownish-black on dorsum and ventrum (fig. 2, right).
Ears long (11–15 mm in males and 12–15 mm in females), terminating with slightly pointed tip, but notably more acutely pointed in E. atrata (fig. 3). In E. tiavato, the inner portion of tragus convex with distinct hatchet-shaped sharp anterior projection, and in E. atrata, this structure is distinctly less developed and more rounded (fig. 3). In E. tiavato, there is a distinct swelling at base of outer portion of tragus that is not present in E. atrata. On average calcar shorter than tibia in E. tiavato, while in E. atrata these two structures are approximately the same length.
Cranium notably small, distinct rostral expansion across the nasal and maxilla, and postorbital processes greatly reduced in size (fig. 4). Rostral width narrower with respect to E. atrata. In E. tiavato and E. atrata, postorbital crest not confluent with sagittal crest. Occipital portion of skull less inflated than in E. atrata. In E. tiavato, nasal bones are distinctly hourglass shaped and with well-defined, deep, and relatively broad nasal sulcus that terminates well before the anterior margin of the nasal (fig. 5). This is in contrast to E. atrata, in which the lateral edges of the nasal bones are largely in parallel, the nasal sulcus is less broad, and the anterior margin of the sulcus nearly reaches the superior edge of the nasal. E. tiavato has a relatively narrow diastema between PM1 and PM2, which is distinctly wider in E. atrata (fig. 4). Basisphenoid pits in E. tiavato of medium depth and separated by median septum as in E. atrata. The distal limit of the pit is rounded and in E. atrata more oblong in shape and extends distally toward the auditory bullae.
Comparisons
Other than Mosia, Emballonura is the only genus of Emballonuridae with the dental formula of 2/3-1/1–2/2-3/3. All adult specimens of Emballonura that we have examined from Madagascar possess this dental formula. Mosia, which is often placed as a subgenus of Emballonura, is notably different from Emballonura based on structural differences in the hyoid apparatus, tragus, and penis (Griffiths and Smith, 1991; Griffiths et al., 1991).
Excluding E. atrata, of the eight species recognized in this genus (sensu Simmons, 2005), the following six have forearm lengths notably greater than that of the Malagasy species and are not included in the morphological comparisons below: E. furax Thomas, 1911; E. dianae Hill, 1956; E. alecto (Eydoux and Gervais, 1836); E. monticola Temminck, 1838; E. semicaudata (Peale, 1848), and E. serii Flannery, 1994 (Taylor, 1934; Flannery, 1994, 1995a, 1995b; Bonaccorso, 1998; Ingle and Heaney, 1992). The other two non-Malagasy Emballonura species can be distinguished from the species described herein, E. tiavato, by their multicolored dorsal pelage with distinctly white under fur (E. raffrayana Dobson, 1879), notable differences in tail and hind foot length (E. beccarii Peters and Doria, 1881, E. raffrayana; appendix 2), distinct rostral swelling (E. beccarii, E. raffrayana), and anterolateral extension of basisphenoid pits and absence of median septum between the pits (E. beccarii, E. raffrayana).
The differentiation of E. tiavato and E. atrata is based on a suite of different characters. The primary distinguishing characters are pelage, ear tip shape, tragus shape, shape of nasals, PM1 and PM2 diastema width, and shape of basisphenoid pits (see Description section above). For immediate recognition of an individual in the hand, pelage and a few external characters can be used to separate these species. The dorsum pelage coloration of E. atrata is a distinctly monocolored blackish-brown to black, with a slightly lighter ventrum (fig. 2). In contrast, the dorsum of E. tiavato is a notably lighter uniform pale to medium grayish-brown and the ventrum is paler buffy-brown (fig. 2). In E. tiavato, the anterior lateral portion of the tragus has a distinct hatchet shape, as compared to the blunter tragus tip in E. atrata (fig. 3). Further, there is no overlap in adult body weight between E. tiavato (mean = 3.6 g, range 2.7–4.5 g, N = 37) and E. atrata (mean = 5.3 g, range 5.0–7.1 g, N = 6; t = 2.02, df = 41, P = 1.54−7)—these comparisons exclude pregnant females with moderate to large embryos.
To better evaluate differences in external measurements of these two taxa, we restricted our comparisons to specimens measured by the same field collector (SMG)—for E. tiavato these include specimens obtained at Ankarana (OTU 1) and for E. atrata those from Midongy du Sud (subset of OTU 2). With the exception of hind foot length, all of the mean external measurements made in the field of animals from these two populations were significantly different (table 1; appendix 2). For a suite of other variables, including other external (wing metacarpals and phalanges, tibia, and calcar), cranial, and dental measurements, we compared all of the adult individuals of OTUs 1, 3, and 4 ( = E. tiavato) against those of OTU 2 (E. atrata). In these cases, significant differences were found between E. tiavato and E. atrata in body weight, all wing bone measurements, tibia, calcar, and all of the cranial-dental measurements, with the exception of C1–C1 (table 1; appendix 3).
Given the ambiguity associated with the exact locality where the holotype of E. atrata was obtained, it was critical to associate this species name with one of the two distinct species of this genus occurring on Madagascar. On the basis of numerous external, cranial, and dental characters, the name atrata is applicable to the larger and darker eastern species. The holotype of E. atrata (ZMB 4692) is distinctly faded in coloration, which is not unexpected after well over 130 years in alcohol. However, in his description of E. atrata, Peters (1874) noted dark pelage coloration, matching that of eastern members of this genus. Further, Dorst (1947), in a key to the bats of Madagascar, noted that the pelage of E. atrata was uniformly blackish.
A principal component analysis was conducted on a series of cranial measurements available for the holotype of E. atrata, and these were compared to individuals from the four different OTUs. The first two factors of the analysis explained 83.5% of the variance, and greatest zygomatic breadth, mastoid width, and rostral width had heavy loadings (table 2). When the scores of these two factors are plotted against one another (fig. 6), there is a clear separation between populations occurring in the humid forest formations (OTU 2) and dry forest formations (OTUs 1, 3, and 4). Further, the holotype of E. atrata (ZMB 4692) falls within the scatter of points associated with the humid forest formations, providing further evidence that this population is referable to this species.
Table 2
Factor Loadings of Principal Component Analysis for Selected Cranial Measurements Available from the Slightly Damaged Holotype of Emballonura atrata and Compared to Specimens from All Four OTUsa
Taxonomic Note
To our knowledge, the only name previously used for a species of Emballonura on Madagascar is E. atrata Peters, 1874. The exception is the mention of E. madagascariensis by Sclater (1864), which we consider a nomen dubium.
Corroborating Genetic Results
Phylogenetic and network analyses show that regional sampling sites are well differentiated. The three samples of Emballonura from Midongy du Sud, in southeastern Madagascar, have identical haplotypes at both the cyt b and D-loop loci. Alternatively, network analyses of both loci reveal that the southeastern haplotype is the most divergent among all sampled Malagasy Emballonura, being at least six mutations removed at the D-loop (fig. 7) and at least 20 mutations removed at the cyt b locus (fig. 8).
Analyses of molecular variance confirm the patterns of regional genetic structure observed in the network analyses. Malagasy Emballonura samples are significantly structured between northern and western ( = E. tiavato) and southeastern (E. atrata) regions, with 68.83% of the variance at the cyt b locus found between the two regions (φ;ST = 0.688; P < 0.001) and 69.08% of the variance at the D-loop found between the two regions (φ;ST = 0.690; P < 0.001).
An intriguing variant is seen in FMNH 173002, a specimen of E. tiavato from the Réserve Spéciale d'Ankarana. This individual is morphologically indistinguishable from its conspecifics, yet is genetically more similar to E. atrata at both mitochondrial loci examined here. We consider this to be a result of incomplete lineage sorting acting on the nonrecombining mitochondrial genome, and may indicate a relatively recent time since the divergence of these two species.
Overall, we find evidence of two distinctive groups of Emballonura on Madagascar. The observed genetic patterns are consistent with the presence of multiple demes, but due to the low sampling size and the lack of geographically intermediate sampling sites, we cannot exclude simple isolation by distance as a viable hypothesis based solely on genetic data. However, the totality of the evidence, considering these genetic patterns in light of the morphological and distributional data, strongly support the existence of a previously undescribed species in the dry areas of northern and western Madagascar.
Discussion
Notes on Natural History
Emballonura tiavato is a delicately flying bat that is among the first species to become airborne at dusk. They have been captured at Ankarana and other sites in the dry north on several occasions actively foraging in the forest understory when the last fading rays of daylight still remain. The stomach contents of one individual of E. tiavato collected in the Daraina area in November 2001 contained the wing scale remains of a Lepidoptera (Razakarivony et al., 2005).
All of the individuals of Emballonura we have captured on Madagascar were obtained at the entrance of caves and rock overhangs or in areas with rock outcrops, and on the basis of this field experience, this genus is not synanthropic. However, Peterson et al. (1995) reported that near the eastern humid forest site of Périnet [ = Andasibe], a local inhabitant brought to them a specimen that had been obtained in a house. We assume that this individual was actively feeding and simply sought shelter between foraging bouts rather than using the house as a day-roost. A large number of dwellings and buildings in villages within the eastern humid forest zone have been surveyed for synanthropic-living species of bats and no sign of Emballonura has been found (F. H. Ratrimomanarivo, personal commun.). In May 2005 at Marovaza, up to five individuals of E. tiavato were found after dusk roosting on the ceiling of a house without windows and within 5 m of an exposed limestone tsingy rock face. These animals did not use the house as a day-roost, but rather as a resting site during night foraging bouts.
On the basis of specimens we have examined, we can offer the following insights about the seasonality of reproduction in E. tiavato. On February 4, 2004, at Andavakoera, a female was collected with a single embryo (crown-rump length of 16 mm), three other females were obtained in full lactation, each with a single placental scar, and two were subadults. Over the course of four days in mid-December 2004 in the region of Marovaza and Anjajavy, a number of females were captured that were pregnant and all with single embryos and large mammae. These included two individuals in a sea cave with embryo crown-rump lengths of 18 and 21 mm. Of six individuals captured at a slightly inland cave, all were female, and five were carrying embryos (12–18 mm crown-rump length). The sixth individual, an adult female, did not show any signs of reproductive activity. Given that not a single male was captured at this latter cave, it may have been the site of a nursery colony. The only other pregnant female E. tiavato that we captured is an individual on November 5, 2001, in the Daraina area that had a single embryo measuring 9 mm in crown-rump length. Females with enlarged mammae have been obtained in mid-April to early May in Ankarana. We have not handled a male that was clearly in reproductive condition, although one at Anjajavy on December 7, 2004, had testes measuring 3 × 2 mm and slightly convoluted epididymis, another at Andavakoera on February 4, 2002, had 3 × 1 mm testes and slightly convoluted epididymis, and a third individual at Ankarana on May 19 had 4 × 2 mm testes and slightly convoluted epididymes. Thus, on the basis of this information, we conclude that the litter size is one and it would appear that there is notable variation between populations in northern and northwestern Madagascar as to the time of parturition. Evaluating whether this difference is associated with latitudinal variation in seasonality or fluctuating from year to year based on local rainfall patterns requires further field studies.
Much less information is available on the reproductive season of E. atrata. On November 15, 2004, three females were obtained near Midongy du Sud: One was adult and showed no sign of sexual activity and the other two had enlarged mammae and single embryos (crown-rump length 15 mm and 18 mm). Russ and Bennett (1999) reported seeing a pair mating on a cave ceiling during the month of March 1999 (J. Russ, personal commun.). Of three females collected in late May 2005 near Kianjavato, two had large mammae, no embryos, and one placental scar each. The third individual was an adult with no recent sign of breeding activity.
Taxonomy, Biogeography, and Conservation
Tate and Archbold (1939) identified a number of cranial characters that they used to separate species groups and species in the genus Emballonura. They concluded that E. atrata had “simple” features assumed to be ancestral character states for this genus (p. 5). Griffiths et al. (1991) reexamined and scored the character states identified by Tate and Archbold (1939) as apomorphic or plesiomorphic and used them in a cladistic analysis. Their results reflect those of Tate and Archbold (1939), indicating that E. atrata is the least derived of any living Emballonura and that it lacks a number of characters found in other members of this genus. The character states scored by Griffiths et al. (1991) for E. atrata are identical to those found in E. tiavato. These include the presence of a nasal sulcus and absence of lateral rostral swelling, confluent basal pits, anterolateral extension of the basal (basisphenoid) pits, and posterior recession of basisphenoid pits. On the basis of these characters, E. atrata and E. tiavato form a species group and are each other's closest relatives, which implies a single colonization of the island by this genus and subsequent speciation.
Multiple species of Emballonura have been found to co-occur on several tropical islands. The highest species richness for any island occurs on New Guinea. Five species, including Mosia (often recognized as a subgenus of Emballonura; Griffiths et al., 1991), occur in the same general portion of the island and in many cases in sympatry, and a sixth species occurs on nearby islands (Flannery, 1995b; Bonaccorso, 1998). Thus, the presence of two species of Emballonura on Madagascar is not exceptional, and current information indicates that they are allopatric in their distributions.
What is intriguing in a biogeographic sense is the complete absence of any species of Emballonura on any other island in the Indian Ocean. The westernmost non-Malagasy species is E. monticola, found in southern Myanmar, the Malay Peninsula, and the islands of Sumatra, Java, and Borneo (Simmons, 2005). There is a water expanse of about 5600 km between this species and Madagascar that crosses the islands or archipelagos of Andamar, Sri Lanka, Maldives, Seychelles, Mascarenes, and the Comoros. Island size probably does not explain the absence of Emballonura from these different sites, as members of this genus are known from some very small western Pacific islands (Flannery, 1995b). Further, many of these islands have caves and rock outcrops, the day-roost sites typically occupied by members of this genus. Finally, given the presumed ability of Emballonura to reach Madagascar across a considerable expanse of water, its absence from the African continent is inexplicable.
Cornet (1974) devised a very useful system to explain biotic variation on Madagascar in the form of bioclimatic zones, very similar to the life zone ecology of Holdridge (1964). Cornet's system was based on data from a series of weather stations across the island and calculated from the parameters of water deficit (annual rainfall minus potential evapotranspiration), mean minimum temperature in the coldest month of the year, and length of the dry season. Five different stages were delimited in this system, and the wettest portion of the island fell under the “étage humide” or moist stage. The line separating this stage from the four drier stages closely matches the distributional limit of E. atrata (fig. 1). Further, the southern limit of E. tiavato, based on our survey data, along the western lowland portion of the island coincides with the division of “étage sec” or dry stage and “étage subaride” or subarid stage. There is a specimen record of Emballonura from Toliara (Peterson et al., 1995: 57), but we have not captured a member of this genus during several bat inventories in the region.
Emballonura tiavato occurs across the drier portions of Madagascar, including the northern and western lowland portions of the island. This species seems to be broadly distributed in karstic limestone areas of the lowland central west, particularly in the region north of Mahajanga. It is known to occur in several protected areas including the Réserve Spéciale d'Ankarana, Réserve Spéciale d'Analamerana, and Parc National de Bemaraha (Goodman et al., 2005), as well as from numerous sites outside of the existing reserve system.
Fewer precise details are available on the distribution of E. atrata in the east, as compared to E. tiavato in the west. In the MNHN there is a series of close to 25 specimens of E. atrata collected in the Maroantsetra area over the course of 2 weeks in the mid-1930s. A label in one jar with 19 specimens (1947-289a to 1947-289t) reads, “Brought in by natives who said that they had removed them from small caves or crevices in rocks in forest.” On the Masoala Peninsula, not far from Maroantsetra, a cave colony was found with at least 100 bats, a portion of which were E. atrata, and in this same region up to three individuals have been found together in hollow standing and downed tree trunks (Russ and Bennett, 1999). During a mid-November 2003 survey of the Parc National de Midongy du Sud and surrounding region a group of about 10 individuals was located in an underground rock shelter with a small hole opening to the surface (S. M. Goodman, unpubl.). This species appears to be broadly distributed across lowland areas of the complete length of the eastern humid forest, a region nearly 1500 km in length, but has not been reported from many protected areas. However, few eastern lowland reserves have been surveyed for bats.
Emballonura spp. on Madagascar are not collected as wild meat, presumably because of their small size and because they are not known to form large colonies. Members of this genus tend to live in day-roosts associated with forest habitat and they may be among the few bat species on the island that are forest dependent (Goodman et al., 2005). In our experience, it is highly unusual to capture Emballonura out of forest settings. Thus, the maintenance of natural habitat may be important for their long-term survival. Further, a variety of different types of human use of caves might disturb day-roosting individuals and pose another potential threat to the Emballonura.
Acknowledgments
It is with pleasure that we acknowledge the assistance of the Association Nationale pour le Gestion des Aires Protégées (ANGAP) and the Direction des Eaux et Forêts for issuing permits to conduct this research. The aid of two different colleagues, Daniel Rakotondravony and Olga Ramilijaona, in their roles as departmental chairs of the Département de Biologie Animale, Université d'Antananarivo, in certain administrative details is greatly appreciated. A portion of our bat survey fieldwork was undertaken with the financial aid of Bat Conservation International, the Ellen T. Smith and Marshall Field funds of the Field Museum of Natural History, the National Geographic Society (6637-99 and 7402-03), The National Speleological Society, and the Volkswagen Foundation, under the protocol of collaboration between the Université d'Antananarivo, WWF-Madagascar, and Field Museum of Natural History. This research was partially based upon work supported under a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (to SGC). We are indebted to the following curators for access to specimens in their care (museum acronyms defined above in Materials and Methods section): Rob Voss (AMNH), Michel Trainer and Jean-Marc Pons (MNHN), Chris Smeenks (RMNH), Judith Eger (ROM), Daniel Rakotondravony (UADBA), Michael Carleton and Linda Gordon (USNM), Rainer Hutterer (ZMAK), and Robert Asher (ZMB). For hospitality and logistic aid we are grateful to Marc Le Groumellec and Rao Manavendra of UNIMA and Philippe Girard, Thierry Ranarivelo, and Abel Nirina at Marovaza. Several colleagues helped in the fieldwork and these include Achille Raselimanana, Fanja Ratrimomanarivo, Mamy Ravokatra, and Vola Razakarivony. We also kindly acknowledge Richard Jenkins and his associates of Bat Conservation Madagascar for allowing us access to specimens collected by this research group. We are indebted to Harald Schütz and John Weinstein for providing photographs, Lucienne Wilmé for the map, and Rebecca Kramer for line drawings. Paula Jenkins helped with an important bibliographic detail. Robert Voss and two anonymous reviewers provided helpful comments on an earlier version of this paper.
References
Appendices
Appendix 1
Specimens of Emballonura spp. from Madagascar Used in This Study
Abbreviations used: PN = Parc National, RS = Réserve Spéciale
Emballonura tiavato—Province d'Antsiranana: Ambanja, lower Sambirano River (MCZ 45087–88); Andavaka Matsaborimadio, at edge of Matsaborimadio, 10.5 km NE Ambondromifehy, 12°48.625′S, 49°15.252′E, 290 m (FMNH 179239); Andavadrano, 5.5 km SE Ambery, 12°50.632′S, 49°20.897′E, 330 m (FMNH 179238); Forêt d'Andavakoera, Grotte d'Andakaty, 2.9 km N Betsiaka, 13°07.778′S, 49°14.039′E, 210 m (FMNH 179357–364); Forêt de Binara, 7.5 km SW Daraina, 13°15′18″S, 49°36′59″E (FMNH 172680); Nosy Be, Pointe à la Fièvre (MNHN 1985.410); RS d'Analamerana, Grotte de Bazaribe, 3.6 km SE de Menagisy, 12°42.728′S, 49°28.411′E, 90 m (FMNH 178800–802); RS d'Ankarana, 2.6 km E Andrafiabe, near Andrafiabe Cave, 12°55.9′S, 49°03.4′E, 50 m (FMNH 169705, 176275–276, 176360–361); RS d'Ankarana, Antsironandoha Cave (west), 10 km NW Mahamasina, 12°53′20″S, 49°5′51″E, 100 m (FMNH 173002); RS d'Ankarana, Ambahibe Cave, 2 km W Mahamasina, 12°58′03″S, 49°7′13″, 100 m (FMNH 173003); RS d'Ankarana, Grotte d'Ambahibe, 3.0 km NW Mahamasina, 12°58′5″S, 49°07′09″E, 80 m (FMNH 176270–274). Province de Mahajanga. Marovaza, 14°56′48.0″S, 47°16′28.6″E, 5 m (FMNH 184025-026); 4.0 km NE Anjajavy, 14°59.713′S, 47°13.916′E, 10 m (FMNH 184080); 3.0 km NE Anjajavy, 15°0.471′S, 47°14.331′E, 10 m (FMNH 184018–024); 18.5 km S. Anjajavy, 15°11.426′S, 47°12.175′E, 50 m (FMNH 184016–017); 26.5 km SW Anjajavy, 15°11.871′S, 47°02.534′E, sea level (FMNH 184013-015); PN de Bemaraha, Anjohitantely, 19°08.460′S, 44°48.783′E, 64 m (UADBA uncataloged RBJ 157, 158, 162).
Emballonura atrata—Province de Fianarantsoa. Fort Carnot [ = Ikongo] (MCZ 45649); grotte au N de Vondrozo (MCZ 45089); Kianjavato, 21°22.442′S, 47°51.604′E, 150 m (FMNH 185224–226); W slope of Mt. Ambatobe, 1.2 km ENE Ampatramary, 9.5 km NE Midongy su Sud, 23°30.6′S, 47°03.1′E, 650 m (FMNH 178677, 178595–596). Province de Toamasina: Hiaraka, Baie d'Antongil, Masoala (MNHN 1985.948); Maroantsetra (MNHN 1985.411); 20 km SW Maroantsetra (FMNH 74198–74203; MNHN 1947.288 [7 specimens], 1947.289 A à T [19 specimens], 1996.358–360); 40 km NW Maroantsetra (MNHN 1947.288 [7 specimens]); Périnet [ = Andasibe] (MNHN 1985.418, ROM 42056); région d'Antanambe, Mananara (MNHN 1997–2133); Rogez (MNHN 1984.757–758); Tamatave [ = Toamasina] (MCZ 16401–402). Province de Toliara. Evondro [ = Isaka-Ivondro?], valley of high Fanjahira (MCZ 45081–086); Marovony Forest, 24°08′S, 47°22′E, 30 m (USNM 577062–063). Uncertain localities. Aus dem Innern von Madagaskar (holotype, ZMB 4692); Grande forêt de l'Est (MCZ 45091); probably côte est (MCZ 57538); Tanala (MCZ 45647).
Appendix 2
Descriptive statistics presented as mean ± standard deviation (minimum – maximum, N). Samples measured by a single field collector are in bold. Separate t-test statistical comparisons of measurements of E. tiavato and E. atrata were conducted to examine differences between the sexes: *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001. Descriptive statistics of external measurements presented in bold were made by the same field collector (SMG). To examine differences in external measurements made in the field, including forearm, between these two species of Emballonura, we used the Ankarana (OTU 1) and Midongy du Sud (subset of OTU 2) samples, which were measured by the same field collector and t-test statistical comparisons of measurements (sexes combined for each species), while those of weight, different wing bones, tibia, and calcar we used combined OTUs 1, 3, and 4 compared to OTU 2—in both cases sexes combined: +P < 0.05, ++P < 0.01, +++P < 0.001, ++++P < 0.0001.
Appendix 3
Descriptive statistics presented as mean ± standard deviation (minimum − maximum, N). Separate t-test statistical comparisons of measurements of E. tiavato and E. atrata were conducted to examine differences between the sexes: *P < 0.05. To examine differences in cranial and dental measurements between these two species of Emballonura, we used OTUs 1, 3, and 4 compared to OTU 2 and t-test statistical comparisons of measurements (sexes combined for each species): +P < 0.05, ++P < 0.01, +++P < 0.001, ++++P < 0.0001.