Ryukyu tube-nosed bat
The Ryukyu tube-nosed bat is a small, plant-roosting species of bat in the family Vespertilionidae. It is endemic to three islands of the central Ryukyus and is listed as Endangered by both the IUCN and Japan's Ministry of the Environment.
Taxonomy and etymology
Murina ryukyuana was described in 1998 based on specimens from northern Okinawa. Its specific epithet refers to the Ryukyu Archipelago.Description
Murina ryukyana has rounded ears that are with tragi that are. It has straight hair in shades of brown, with dorsal hairs longer than its ventral hairs.Distribution and habitat
The bat is found only in the subtropical evergreen broad-leaf forests of Okinawa Island, Tokunoshima, and Amami-Ōshima.Ecology and behavior
Roosting
Radio-tracking reveals strong reliance on plant roosts throughout the year. Non-reproductive individuals usually roost singly, mainly in understory foliage. Maternity roosts occur both in foliage roosts and small tree cavities, but are more likely to occur in older forest stands and tend to be higher off the ground. Roost switching is frequent, and the maximum roost-switch distance recorded is 179 m.Foraging and diet
Although its diet has not been analyzed, morphology and very faint, steep frequency-modulated echolocation calls suggest prey capture by gleaning or short-range hawking inside clutter.Social calls have been recorded far more often than feeding buzzes, indicating a possibly important communicative repertoire and either greater reliance on listening for prey or very soft feeding buzzes.