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Дата изменения: Fri Oct 27 18:36:04 2006
Дата индексирования: Tue Oct 2 03:17:53 2012
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Greater tube-nosed bat
   

 
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SCIENTIFIC NAME: Murina hilgendorfi Peters, 1880
COMMON NAMES: Greater tube-nosed bat, Siberian tube-nosed bat
SYNONYMS: sibirica Kastschenko, 1905; ognevi Bianchi, 1916; intermedia Mori, 1933.
DIMENSIONS: Body mass ca. 7-13 g, head and body length 50-60 mm, tail length 35-40 mm, forearm length 36-44 mm, wingspan ca. 25-31 cm.
DESCRIPTION: Fur dense and soft, grayish to reddish-brown on upperparts, with conspicuously splendent individual long hairs. Underpart coloration more light, grayish. Wing membranes grayish-brown, muzzle dark. Ears broadly rounded, with conspicuous emargination on posterior border. Dentition robust and massive.
DISTRIBUTION: Distributed sparsely in Altai, southern and south-eastern Siberia, Baikal lake, Transbaikalia and Russian Far East, also in nothern China, Japan and probably Corea.
NATURAL HISTORY: Inhabits hilly and mountainous areas, up to 4000 m ASL, with mixed coniferous-broadleafed and broadleaved forests and usually with underground cavities. Day roosts were foung in tree canopies and other tree- or timber-associated shelters (under loose bark, in firewood piles, etc.), and also in caves. Life habits are poorly known. Apparently insectivorous, probably a ground-gleaner (at least in part), picking its prey from soil or vegetation surface. The foraging flight is powerful and maneuverable. While foraging, this species may also extensively use quadrupedal ground locomotion. Echolocation signal is an FM sweep from 112 to 40 kHz, with maximum energy around 50-80 kHz. Births probably occur in the beginning of summer. Females do not form large nursing colonies and possibly live solitarily. One or two young are produced in each litter. A resident species, hibernating in caves, were it can form aggregations up to several hundreds of individuals. Maximum recorded longevity is up to 16 years (usually ca. 5-9).
STATUS: A widespread species, inhabiting low populated areas. Rarely recording but probably more common than it was thought previously. IUCN: Not listed.

 
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