A group of scientists have discovered a new species of bat in the Cat Ba and Chu Mom Ray national parks of Vietnam.
A
distinctive echolocation frequency led to the finding of a new species
of bat within the genus Hipposideros. This bat is similar to the species
Hipposideros armiger, differences in acoustics, size, and DNA between
these bats led to the identification of the new species. This new member
has been given the scientific name Hipposideros griffini.
The H.
griffini bat has a smaller overall body size than its close cousin, H.
armiger, and variations in the skull and teeth. Differences also
appeared in the mitochondrial DNA collected from these bats. The
echolocation frequencies of the new species range from 76.6 to 79.2 kHz,
which is higher than frequencies of several H. armiger subspecies,
which range from 64.7 to 71.4 kHz. Additional evidence shows that these
two species are occupying the same geographical region yet have retained
their separate identities.
Dr. Vu Dinh Thong, a member of the
research group, who comes from the Institute of Ecology and Bioresources
of Vietnam, said that the new species of bat is named after the late
professor Donald Redfield Griffin, of Rockefeller University in New
York. Griffin was a leader in and essential contributor to bat
echolocation research, which was key to identifying H. griffini as a new
species. The proposed common name for this bat is “Griffin’s leaf-nosed
bat.”
The new species was found at Cat Ba Island in Ha Long Bay in northern Vietnam and in Chu Mom Ray
National Park, situated on the mainland more than 600 miles (1,000 km)
to the south. H. griffini joins about 70 other species within the genus
Hipposideros.
This discovery was the result of cooperation among
experts of Vietnam’s Institute of Ecology and Bio-resources, Germany’s
Tuebingen University, Britain’s Harrison Institute, the Dublin
University of Ireland and the Hungarian Natural History Museum
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