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Titre: The diet of bats from Southeastern Brazil: the relation to echolocation and foraging behaviour
Auteur(s): Fenton, M. Brock
Whitaker Jr, John O
Vonhof, Maarten J
Waterman, Jane M
Pedro, Wagner A
Aguiar, Ludmilla M.S
Baumgarten, Júlio E
Bouchard, Sylvie
Faria, Deborah M
Portfors, Christine V
Rautenbach, Naas I.L
Scully, William
Zortea, Marlon
Assunto:: Chiroptera
Dieta
Ecolocalização
Comportamento de forrageamento
Região Sudeste
Date de publication: 1999
Editeur: Sociedade Brasileira de Zoologia
Référence bibliographique: Rev. Bras. Zool.,v.16,n.4,p.1081-1085,1999
Résumé: In this study the incidence of moths and beetles was examined from feces samples of bats that use different foraging behaviors. Twenty sites around the Fazenda Intervales, a Field Research Station located in São Paulo State, in southeastern Brazil were sampled. Feces were collected from bats caught in mist nets, Turtle Traps or hand nets and, in one case, from beneath a roost. Feces samples were taken from six species of bats: Micronycteris megalotis (Gray, 1842), Mimon bennettii (Gray, 1838), Furipterus horrens (F. Cuvier, 1828), Myotis riparius Handley, 1960, Myotis ruber (E. Geoffroy, 1806) and Histiotus velalus (I. Geoffroy, 1824). To record and describe the frequencies dominating bat echolocation calls, an Anabat II bat detector coupled with an Anabat ZCA interfaces and DOS laptop computers were used. The data show that Furipterus horrens feeds extensively on moths, as predicted from the features of its echolocation calls. Gleaning bats, whose echolocation calls are much less conspicuous to moths take a wide range of insect (and other) prey.
metadata.dc.description.unidade: Em processamento
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0101-81751999000400017
Collection(s) :Artigos publicados em periódicos e afins

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