Part 5 (1/2)
1860. _Pteropus geddiei_ MacGillivary, Zoologist, 18:7134, September, type from Aneitum Island, New Hebrides; 1912, Andersen, Catalogue of the Chiroptera ... British Museum, 1:189; 1931, Sanborn, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Zool.
Ser., 18:13, February 12, from Rennell Island in the Solomons.
1914. _Pteropus tonga.n.u.s geddiei_, Revilliod, _in_ Sarasin and Roux, Nova Caledonia (A), 1:341; 1954, Laurie and Hill, List of land mammals of New Guinea, Celebes and adjacent islands, p. 34, June 30.
_Specimens examined._--None.
_Remarks._--_Pteropus tonga.n.u.s geddiei_, as far as is known, is the widest ranging subspecies of this genus. It is the only megachiropteran in the Solomon Islands having affinities with bats to the southeast (the New Hebrides, Santa Cruz Islands, Samoan Islands and Fiji Islands) rather than with those to the west (New Guinea). The subspecies _P.
tonga.n.u.s geddiei_, which ranges from the Solomons to the New Hebrides (about 500 miles straight-line distance), is said to be remarkably uniform throughout its range. Sanborn (1931:14) compared color and size in specimens from the Solomon Islands and the New Hebrides and found little variation. Another subspecies, _P. t. bascilicus_ Thomas 1915, apparently closely related to _geddiei_, is known from Dampier [= Kar-kar] Island off the northeastern coast of New Guinea and therefore farther westward from the New Hebrides than are the Solomon Islands.
Additional remarks on the distribution of this species are in the section on Zoogeography and Speciation.
=Pteropus rayneri=
_Pteropus rayneri_ is endemic to the Solomon Islands. It is divisible into seven subspecies (see Fig. 6), which, excepting _P. r. rennelli_ and _P. r. cognatus_, are strikingly colored--the mantle, back, and rump being of different colors. Differences in color and size provide characters differentiating the subspecies (see key, p. 793). Recorded lengths of forearms do not overlap between any two subspecies. _P. r.
grandis_, northernmost in distribution, has the longest (about 170) forearm and _P. r. cognatus_, known from two of the southernmost islands, has the shortest (about 121).
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 6. Distribution of _Pteropus rayneri_: _P. r.
rayneri_ ([RTW]); _P. r. grandis_ ([RW]); _P. r. lavella.n.u.s_ ([BC]); _P. r. monoensis_ ([BW]); _P. r. rubia.n.u.s_ ([TW]); _P. r. cognatus_ ([LW]); _P. r. rennelli_ ([LTW]). For names of islands see Fig. 2.]
Adult males of _Pteropus rayneri_ have well-developed tufts of hair on each side of the neck where a gland is located (see Andersen, 1912:259). Apparently these glands are not present in females as none were found in specimens studied by me or those reported by Sanborn (1931:16). Evidently, these glands are a.s.sociated with s.e.xual maturity in males because neither Sanborn nor I found them in subadult males.
=Pteropus rayneri rayneri= Gray
1870. _Pteropus rayneri_ (part), Gray, Catalogue of monkeys, lemurs and fruit-eating bats ... British Museum, p. 108, cotypes from Guadalca.n.a.l; 1878, Dobson, Catalogue of the Chiroptera ...
British Museum, p. 33; 1879, Trouessart, Rev. Mag. Zool., 6:204; 1879, Trouessart, Ann. Sci. Nat. Zool, 8:16; 1887, Thomas, Proc.
Zool. Soc. London, p. 322, March 15; 1888, Thomas, Proc. Zool.
Soc. London, p. 472, December 4; 1898, Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium ..., 1:78; 1912, Andersen, Catalogue of the Chiroptera ... British Museum, p. 254; 1931, Sanborn, Publ. Field Mus. Nat.
Hist., Zool. Ser., 18:15, February 12, from Guadalca.n.a.l and Malaita.
1954. _Pteropus rayneri rayneri_, Laurie and Hill, List of land mammals of New Guinea, Celebes and adjacent islands, p. 35, June 30.
1899. _Pteropus (Spectrum) rayneri_ (part), Matschie, Die Megachiroptera ... naturkunde, p. 22; 1904, Trouessart, Catalogus Mammalium ..., Suppl., p. 51.
_Specimens examined_ (four males and one female; one embryo in alcohol).--Guadalca.n.a.l in July and November, USNM 278700-02, USNM 278142, USNM 278714.
_Measurements._--Measurements of three males and one female are, respectively, as follows: Length of head and body, --, 210, 214, 215; hind foot, --, 33, 39, 42; ear, --, 23, 23, 23; length of forearm, --, 138, 136, 134; greatest length of skull, 61.5, 59.2, 61.6, 61.2; condylobasal length, 61.4, 58.2, 60.3, 60.0; zygomatic breadth, 36.6, 35.3, 35.4, 36.5; breadth of braincase, 23.7, 22.5, 22.6, 24.1; breadth across first upper molars, --, 16.9, 16.7, 16.8; width of M1, 3.4, 3.5, 3.5, 3.5; length of maxillary tooth-row, 22.4, 22.1, 23.6, 23.2; length of mandibular tooth-row, 26.4, 25.5, 25.9, 25.6.
_Remarks._--_Pteropus rayneri_ was named on the basis of two specimens (cotypes) obtained on Guadalca.n.a.l and listed as ”male” and ”female”; according to Andersen (1912:254), however, both are females.
_P. r. rayneri_ is known from Guadalca.n.a.l and Malaita (see Fig. 6), and is of almost the same size as _P. r. cognatus_, which is known from San Cristobal and Ugi, only about 40 miles to the southeast. In the latter subspecies the back and rump are the same color (Prouts Brown), whereas in _P. r. rayneri_ the rump is brightly colored and therefore contrasts strongly with the dark brown back. A specimen of _rayneri_ from Malaita was reported by Sanborn (1931:15) as unusually small and having a dark-colored rump patch. In the specimens examined from Guadalca.n.a.l, there is noticeable variation in color of the mantle that does not seem related to age or s.e.x. In two specimens (adult male and female) the mantle is Cinnamon-Rufous tinged with Russet, strongly contrasting with the crown, which is Ochraceous-Tawny and has scattered silvery hairs.
Another specimen has a darker mantle (near Chestnut-Brown) and a crown of about the same color, but with a few scattered Ochraceous-Tawny hairs.
The skull of one adult male bears an extra peglike tooth posterior to M3 on the right side.
An embryo, in an advanced stage of development, in the collection of the U. S. National Museum, measures: Length of head and body, 98; hind foot, 30; ear, 8.5; length of forearm, 48 (this may be the same specimen listed by Sanborn and Nicholson, 1950:329).
=Pteropus rayneri grandis= Thomas