In a 1995 contribution to
Faune de Madagascar on Malagasy bats,
Randolph Peterson and colleagues listed four species of
Miniopterus on Madagascar and the nearby
Comoros, including the small
Miniopterus manavi with a broad distribution on both Madagascar and the Comoros. However, during the first decade of the 21st century,
molecular studies have revealed that
Miniopterus, a widespread genus in the Old World, is much more species-rich than previously thought. A 2008 study comparing sequences of the
mitochondrial cytochrome b and
D-loop markers found two distinct, unrelated groups within the supposed
M. manavi from the Comoros; both groups were also found on Madagascar. The next year,
Steven Goodman and colleagues revisited the group with more extensive sampling on Madagascar. They separated three species within the former "
M. manavi":
M. manavi itself in the
Central Highlands,
M. griveaudi (previously a
subspecies of
M. manavi) on
Anjouan,
Grande Comore, and northern and western Madagascar, and the newly described
Miniopterus aelleni on Anjouan and northern and western Madagascar. The
specific name aelleni honors Prof.
Villy Aellen of the
Natural History Museum of Geneva, who has done much research on African bats. Within
M. aelleni, Goodman and colleagues found some differentiation (3.4% sequence divergence in cytochrome
b sequences) between individuals from
Montagne d'Ambre in northern Madagascar and those from Anjouan and
Ankarana, near Montagne d'Ambre; the cytochrome
b divergence between
M. aelleni and other Malagasy
Miniopterus is 7 to 10%. Later in 2009, Goodman and colleagues described two more species of
M. manavi-like Malagasy
Miniopterus:
M. brachytragos from northern Madagascar and
M. mahafaliensis from the southwest. On the basis of cytochrome
b sequences, they found that
M. aelleni was most closely related to a
clade of
M. brachytragos,
M. manavi, and another recently described Malagasy species,
M. petersoni. The five recognized species of
M. manavi-like bats are not each other's closest relatives, but apparently acquired their similarities through
convergent evolution. At some places (for example,
Namoroka) four
cryptic species of
M. manavi-like bats, including
M. aelleni, occur together. ==Description==