About: Mindoro Stripe-faced Fruit Bat   Sponge Permalink

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The Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat (Styloctenium mindorensis), nicknamed the "flying fox" for its foxlike face (although it is not a flying fox bat), is a new species of stripe-faced fruit bat endemic to the island of Mindoro. Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat is a typical fruit bat, possessing modified forearms for flight, short clawed hind legs and large ears for use in echolocation. The bat shares many anatomical features with the rest of its genus, which was originally described from just one species. These include an overall orange pelage, a white stripe down the middle of the bat's rostrum and white spots above its eyes. Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bats can be distinguished from the other member of its genus by its possession of multicusped lower and upper canine teeth.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Mindoro Stripe-faced Fruit Bat
rdfs:comment
  • The Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat (Styloctenium mindorensis), nicknamed the "flying fox" for its foxlike face (although it is not a flying fox bat), is a new species of stripe-faced fruit bat endemic to the island of Mindoro. Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat is a typical fruit bat, possessing modified forearms for flight, short clawed hind legs and large ears for use in echolocation. The bat shares many anatomical features with the rest of its genus, which was originally described from just one species. These include an overall orange pelage, a white stripe down the middle of the bat's rostrum and white spots above its eyes. Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bats can be distinguished from the other member of its genus by its possession of multicusped lower and upper canine teeth.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:animals/pro...iPageUsesTemplate
Name
  • Mindoro Stripe-faced Fruit Bat
Species
  • Styloctenium mindorensis
Genus
Class
OtherName
  • "flying fox" for its foxlike face
Family
Order
Phylum
Location
  • island of Mindoro.
abstract
  • The Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat (Styloctenium mindorensis), nicknamed the "flying fox" for its foxlike face (although it is not a flying fox bat), is a new species of stripe-faced fruit bat endemic to the island of Mindoro. Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat is a typical fruit bat, possessing modified forearms for flight, short clawed hind legs and large ears for use in echolocation. The bat shares many anatomical features with the rest of its genus, which was originally described from just one species. These include an overall orange pelage, a white stripe down the middle of the bat's rostrum and white spots above its eyes. Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bats can be distinguished from the other member of its genus by its possession of multicusped lower and upper canine teeth. Because of its distinct morphological features, it was placed in the genus Styloctenium. Prior to this, the genus was only described from one species, the Sulawesi stripe-faced fruit bat. The second species in the genus to be discovered, it was formally described by Jacob Esselstyn in the August 2007 issue of the Journal of Mammalogy. Esselstyn first heard rumours of the bat's existence from locals in barangay Batong Buhay in the municipality of Sablayan in the province of Occidental Mindoro. The researchers remained skeptical of the species' existence until a live specimen was unexpectedly found in February 2006. The bat was unintentionally caught in one of their nets used for surveying the local fauna. Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat is the 74th chiropteran species to be found in the Philippines and the country's 26th endemic one. While no population studies has been done so far on the species, it has been suggested that it may be threatened by hunting and habitat loss due to the general deforestation of forests on Mindoro. Along with other large pteropodids on the island, the bat is hunted by the locals for food. The describer went so far as to state that because of these threats, the species may be at risk of extinction. Aboriginal rock art dating back some 20,000 years, from near Kalumburu in the Kimberley region of Western Australia, depicts several bats similar to mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat hanging from a branch or vine. The paintings belong to a category of sophisticated rock art known as Bradshaws. The facial markings on the paintings are particularly clear and have led researchers to conclude that the subjects were either the fruit bat or a closely related species.
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