The little goblin bat is a species of bat in the family Molossidae, the free-tailed bats. It is endemic to Cuba. This bat is vulnerable due to habitat loss and degradation. During the day it can be found roosting in the palm treeCopernicia gigas and in human-made structures. The diet of this bat is entirely composed of insects. It hunts insects using echolocation, emitting a variable pattern of calls.
Description
Its total body length is. The fur is short and dense, with individual hairs about long. The face lacks fur except for a sparse layer of fine hairs. The wing membranes on both sides of the body are furred close to the abdomen. The uropatagium has hair on both sides. Its forearm is approximately long. Its ears are small and pointed at the tips. The tragus is short, at. Its dental formula is, for a total of 28 teeth.
Distribution
M. minutus is the only species of bat endemic to Cuba. Specimens have been collected from Trinidad, Cuba, as well as the Cuban municipalities of Omaja and Guaro. In 1911, Glover Morrill Allen hypothesized that the ancestor of the little goblin bat originated in Central America, and dispersed to Cuba by way of the Yucatan land bridge, which no longer exists. This hypothesis of Cuban Mormopterus originating in Central America was echoed by Karl Koopman in 1989, as per Mancina 2007.
Taxonomic history
The species was described by Gerrit Smith Miller, Jr. in 1899 and initially placed in the genus Nyctinomus. This species's holotype is a male specimen collected by Frank M. Chapman of the American Museum of Natural History. Miller notes Chapman had identified this specimen as Nyctinomus brasiliensis in an earlier paper. The specific epithetminutus is Latin for "small, paltry"; Miller wrote in his species description that it was the "smallest known species of Nyctinomus". In 1907, Miller classified this species in the genus Mormopterus. The Mormopterus genus is further divided into species group, which classify members of the genus based on how closely related they are. The little goblin bat is placed in the kalinowskii group, which also contains the following species:
, it is listed as vulnerable by the IUCN. It meets the criteria for this assessment because its area of occupancy is less than, and there is a projected decline in the extent and quality of its habitat. Its population is decreasing. A main threat to this species is habitat destruction. Some disagree with the IUCN's assessment of the species, asserting that it should instead be listed as near threatened.