Tents and harems: apparent defence of foliage roosts by tent-making bats
Creators
Description
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) Palmate umbrella tents used by tent-making bats in Trinidad, West Indies, were observed in three species of Neotropical palms, Sabal mauritiiformis, Coccothrinax barbadensis and Mauritia flexuosa. Tents were most common in palm leaves that have supporting petioles angled at 50-70? above the horizontal. The shape and volume of tents is influenced mostly by leaf morphology (leaf width and leaflet length) and age of the tent. Tent-crowns varied from being heart-shaped in S. mauritiiformis, oval or round in C. barbadensis and spade-shaped in M. flexuosa. Leaves in which tents were constructed were most often beneath overhanging vegetation, and were generally free of vegetation below, allowing bats to enter and depart from tents without being impeded by the clutter of adjacent vegetation.
Files
Kunz and McCracken - 1996 - Tents and harems apparent defence of foliage roos.pdf
Files
(2.4 MB)
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Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- hash://md5/088f83b2f2e58ee7e1f9a459b0766952
- URN
- urn:lsid:zotero.org:groups:5435545:items:46AT6FBV
- DOI
- 10.1017/S0266467400009342
Biodiversity
- Class
- Mammalia
- Kingdom
- Animalia
- Order
- Chiroptera
- Phylum
- Chordata