Abstract:
The Cameroon Volcanic Line, which divides the Congo Basin fauna from the West African fauna, is a known area of
high endemism for various taxa, but the region’s bat fauna has received little attention. We review variation in
morphological and molecular (mitochondrial Cytochrome b) characters in the Tropical African vespertilionid bat genus
Pseudoromicia. Assessment of this variation indicates the existence of a new species of Pseudoromicia, from the Mbam
Minkom Massif in the Centre Region of Cameroon. The new species is diagnosable by sequence data and is
morphologically similar to its putative sister taxon, P. kityoi, from Uganda. Although we suggest that it be assigned to the
IUCN category of Data Deficient, there should be some concern as to the conservation status of this species: the Mbam
Minkom Massif ecosystem is threatened due to lack of legal conservation frameworks and exposure to increasing human
pressure. The new species is in a clade with P. roseveari and P. kityoi. These three species may be relicts of a single
widespread species originating in the West African “white-winged” group of Pseudoromicia that then spread east across
the tropical moist broadleaf forest into East Africa, and are now restricted to a few upland rainforest patches in West
Africa (P. roseveari), in outliers of the Cameroon Volcanic Line region (Pseudoromicia sp.), and the Lake Victoria area
(P. kityoi). The smaller, white-winged species are hypothesized to be ancestral, with one extant putative species (P.
rendalli) also extending into East and southern Africa (Van Cakenberghe & Happold, 2013). The larger, dark-winged taxa
likely dispersed to East Africa and subsequently back to West Africa (e.g., Pseudoromicia sp., P. roseveari). Our data
illustrate the potential importance of the Dahomey Gap and climatic changes in the evolution of this group of species.
http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:30929BAA-4043-422D-B209-16CAB826043E
Key words: Africa, bat, biodiversity, Cameroon, mitochondrial DNA, systematics, taxonomy