. Bonner zoologische Monographien. Zoology. BONNER ZOOLOGISCHE MONOGRAPHIEN Nr. 55/2009 of arboviruses in Ugandan R. eloquens. Echolocation of "R. fiimigatus" at Kampala described by Roberts (1972). Rbinolophiis fumiqatus exsuU Fig. 13H Rhinolophus fiimigatus ^n^ptW 1842, Mus. Senck. 3: 132; Shoa (Ethiopia, region around Addis-Ababa). Rhinolophus fumigatus exsiil Andersen 1905, hm\. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 7 (15): 74; Kitui (Kenya r22'S 38°E). Range. More a dry country bat than R. eloqtiens. But like it occurs in neighbouring S Sudan and W Kenya. Listed by Kityo (1994). Fig. 18 displa


. Bonner zoologische Monographien. Zoology. BONNER ZOOLOGISCHE MONOGRAPHIEN Nr. 55/2009 of arboviruses in Ugandan R. eloquens. Echolocation of "R. fiimigatus" at Kampala described by Roberts (1972). Rbinolophiis fumiqatus exsuU Fig. 13H Rhinolophus fiimigatus ^n^ptW 1842, Mus. Senck. 3: 132; Shoa (Ethiopia, region around Addis-Ababa). Rhinolophus fumigatus exsiil Andersen 1905, hm\. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 7 (15): 74; Kitui (Kenya r22'S 38°E). Range. More a dry country bat than R. eloqtiens. But like it occurs in neighbouring S Sudan and W Kenya. Listed by Kityo (1994). Fig. 18 displays the Ugan- dan distribution. Eastern. Sipi (ROM).. FIG. 19. Distribution of select Rhinolophidae: Rhi- nolophus clivosus acrotis (A), Rhinolophus clivosus zu- luensis (â ). Shaded areas indicate lakes. Nile. Arua (ROM). Measurements. (Arua, Sipi, Aba, D. R. Congo) HB 50-65; T 22-28; HF 10-12; E 21-24; FA 50-54; SK ; XZ ; XMST ll;XIO 3; CM^ ; MW {Rhinolophus clivosus) Rhinolophus clivosus Cretzschmar 1830, "Reise ins nördl. ; (Frankhart), p. 47; Mohila (Saudi Ara- bia 27°40'N 35°30'E). Rhinolophus clivosus zuluensis. Fig. 13J,I Rhinolophus augur zuluensis Andt^SQU. 1904, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 7 (14): 383; Insuzi (S. Africa 28°53'S 3r3'E). ^Rhinolophus keniensis Hollister 1916, Smiths. Misc. Coll. 66 (1): 2; Mt Kenya 2134 m. ^Rhinolophus ferrumequinus keniensis (Hollister) Har- rison 1959, Occ. Pap. Nd. Mus. S. Rhod. 23B: 230- 231. Range. Hayman & Hill (1971) rejected the concept of Ugandan or east v^frican forms as subspecies of Eurasian R. ferrumequinum; however, there is little difference between keniensis reported on Mt Elgon (Granvik 1924, Koopman 1966, 1975), and R. c. zuluensis specimens from W Uganda, eastern D. R. Congo, and Rwanda (Koopman 1975). In Uganda the subspecies seems to prefer high altitudes, but it is not very common. A smaller subspecies occurs in light forests of E Uganda. Fig. 19


Size: 1583px × 1578px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookcollectionbiodiversity, booksubjectzoology