4.1 Article

A new species of Cynomops (Chiroptera: Molossidae) from the northwestern slope of the Andes

Journal

MAMMALIA
Volume 85, Issue 3, Pages 273-286

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/mammalia-2020-0068

Keywords

dog-faced bat; integrative taxonomy; South America; western Andes

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The systematics and taxonomy of the broadly distributed bats of the genus Cynomops has changed significantly with the splitting of species and identification of a new species. The study used morphological and molecular data to recognize a new species in western Colombia, western Ecuador, and northwestern Peru. This highlights the importance of considering multiple lines of evidence in the recognition of new species.
The systematics and taxonomy of the broadly distributed bats of the genus Cynomops has changed considerably in the last few years. Among the major changes, Cynomops abrasus was split into two species of large-bodied forms (Cynomops mastivus and C. abrasus) distributed east of the Andes. However, large Colombian specimens identified as C. abrasus from the western side of the Andes had yet to be included in any revisionary work. Phylogenetic analysis performed in this study, using mtDNA sequences (Cytochrome-b), revealed that these Colombian individuals are more closely related to Cynomops greenhalli. Morphological and molecular data allowed us to recognize populations from western Colombia, western Ecuador and northwestern Peru, as members of a new species of Cynomops. Characters that allow for its differentiation from C. greenhalli include a larger forearm, paler but more uniform ventral pelage, more globular braincase, and well-developed zygomatic processes of the maxilla (almost reaching the postorbital constriction). This study serves as another example of the importance of including multiple lines of evidence in the recognition of a new species. Given its rarity and the advanced transformation of its habitat, this new species is particularly important from a conservation perspective.

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