Observations of the 'Critically Endangered' bare-rumped sheathtail bat Saccolaimus saccolaimus Temminck (Chiroptera: Emballonuridae) on Cape York Peninsula, Queensland.
S Murphy
Australian Mammalogy 23(2) 185 - 187
Abstract
THE bare-rumped sheathtailed bat Saccolaimus
saccolaimus is a poorly understood species that has a
wide distribution covering parts of India, Sri Lanka,
Thailand, Myanmar, Malaya, Indonesia, New
Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Northern Australia
(Bonaccorso 1998). First collected in Australia by De
Vis near Cardwell, the current known distribution in
Queensland (Qld) extends from Bowen to Cooktown
with one isolated specimen collected near Coen on
Cape York Peninsula (Hall 1995; Duncan et al. 1999).
It has also been recorded in the Alligator River area in
the Northern Territory (McKean et al. 1981). The
conservation status of S. saccolaimus in Qld has
recently been defined as ‘Critically Endangered’, and
the species has not been recorded anywhere in
Australia for at least 18 years (Duncan et al. 1999;
Menkhorst and Knight 2001). The likely reasons for
the apparent decline are unclear, but may involve
land-clearing and changed fire regimes in the coastal
zone where it is thought to occur (Duncan et al.
1999). In contrast, Bonaccorso (1998) considers S.
saccolaimus to be secure, albeit also poorly known in
Papua New Guinea.
Full text doi:10.1071/AM01185
© CSIRO 2001





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