A New Subspecies of the Fruit-eating Bat,
Sturnira ludovici, from Western Mexico
BY
J. KNOX JONES, JR., AND GARY L. PHILLIPS
The fruit-eating bats of the genusSturniraare represented on the North American mainland by two species,S. liliumandS. ludovici. The former, in most areas the smaller of the two, is widely distributed in México and Central America and is common in many places. On the other hand,S. ludovici, described by Anthony (1924:8) from near Gualea, Ecuador, generally has been regarded as rare; insofar as we can determine only 20 specimens of the species have been recorded previously from North America (Costa Rica, Honduras, and México).
In 1961 (M. Raymond Lee) and 1962 (Percy L. Clifton), field representatives of the Museum of Natural History collected mammals in western México. Among the bats obtained by them were 23 specimens ofS. ludovici, which represent an heretofore undetected subspecies that is named and described below.
Sturnira ludovici occidentalis, new subspecies
Holotype.—Adult female, skin and skull, no. 92798 Museum of Natural History, The University of Kansas, from Plumosas, 2500 feet elevation, Sinaloa; obtained on August 31, 1962, by Percy L. Clifton (original no. 2939).
Distribution.—Western México; known certainly from south-western Durango south to southern Jalisco (see Fig. 1).
Diagnosis.—Size small both externally and cranially (forearm in adults 40.4-44.1 mm., greatest length of skull 21.7-22.9); rostrum short and abruptly elevated; skull relatively broad; dorsal pelage drab brownish over-all, usually lacking epaulets (pale yellowish brown when present); ventral pelage brownish gray.
Comparisons.—FromSturnira ludovici ludovici, the only other subspecies of the species,S. l. occidentalisdiffers in averaging smaller in most external and cranial dimensions (in some measurements the upper size limits ofoccidentalisbarely overlap the lower limits in specimens ofludoviciexamined), in having a relatively broader skull with a shorter, more abruptly elevated rostrum, and in being paler both dorsally and ventrally.
FromSturnira lilium parvidens, with which it is sympatric,S. l. occidentalisusually (but not always) differs in being brownish (rather than yellowish to yellowish orange) dorsally and in lacking epaulets, and differs in the following cranial features: first upper incisors simple (rather than weakly bifid in unworn condition), larger, and more nearly straight when viewed from the front; second upper incisors reduced; lower incisors bilobate rather than tri