Perception Channels: tactile ; chemical
US Federal List: no special status
CITES: no special status
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: least concern
Dusky fruit bats feed at the fruit source nearest to their roost, which is often a fruit plantation. In areas where the population density of these bats is high, their utilization of this abundant food source can cause considerable damage to and loss of the crop (Feldhamer 1999, Nowak 1999).
As a frugivore, Penthetor lucasi may provide a valuable ecological service to humans in the dispersal of seeds of the plants they consume away from the parent tree, either through spitting the seeds out or passing them through the gut (Feldhamer 1999).
The dusky fruit bat is a frugivore. It emerges from its roost at dusk to feed at the nearest food source, often a fruit plantation (Nowak 1999). Food sources are located primarily through olfaction (Feldhamer 1999).
The dusky fruit bat, Penthetor lucasi, inhabits the Malay Peninsula, the Riau Archipelago near Singapore, Sumatra, and Borneo (Nowak 1999).
The dusky fruit bat is irregularly distributed throughout lowland and hill forests (Nowak 1999).
Terrestrial Biomes: forest
Head and body length in Penthetor lucasi is on average 114mm, with a tail 8-10mm long. The fur is coarse and smoky brown in color (Nowak 1999).
As with all Pteropodids, P. lucasi lacks facial features related to echolocation, such as a nose leaf or enlarged tragus. The eyes are large to account for a greater dependence on vision than seen in microchiropterans. It has a well-developed postorbital process, and a claw on the second digit with the second finger being independent. The palate extends beyond the last upper molar and has ridges (Feldhamer et al. 1999).
P. lucasi can be distinguished from other members of the family Pteropodidae based on the fact that it has only one pair of lower incisors, and that a tail is present and extremely thin as compared to other Pteropodids (Nowak 1999).
Range mass: 30 to 55 g.
Other Physical Features: endothermic ; bilateral symmetry
Research indicates that breeding in P. lucasi is seasonal. One study of pregnancy in P. lucasi revealed that the highest number of pregnant females were recorded in September, very few females were pregnant in June, and there were no recorded pregnancies in January, February, March, and July (Nowak 1999). There is typically only one offspring in a birth (Nowak 1999).
Key Reproductive Features: gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual
The dusky fruit bat (Penthetor lucasi) is a species of bat found in Indonesia and Malaysia.[1]
Dusky fruit bats are species found in Southeast Asia that serve as pollinators and seed dispersers in their ecosystem. Dusky fruit bats are considerably excellent seed dispersers due to their ability to travel long distances (2).
2. Manivannan, Y., Rahman, M., Tingga, R., & Khan, F. A. A. (2019). Genetic diversity of the cave roosting dusky fruit bat, Penthetor lucasi from Sarawak. Malaysian Applied Biology, 48(3), 167–179.
The dusky fruit bat (Penthetor lucasi) is a species of bat found in Indonesia and Malaysia.
Dusky fruit bats are species found in Southeast Asia that serve as pollinators and seed dispersers in their ecosystem. Dusky fruit bats are considerably excellent seed dispersers due to their ability to travel long distances (2).