Authors
Nancy Vaughan Jennings, Stuart Parsons, Kate E Barlow, Michael R Gannon
Publication date
2004/6/1
Journal
Acta Chiropterologica
Volume
6
Issue
1
Pages
75-90
Publisher
Museum and Institute of Zoology, Polish Academy of Sciences
Description
Echolocation calls of 119 bats belonging to 12 species in three families from Antillean islands of Puerto Rico, Dominica, and St. Vincent were recorded by using time-expansion methods. Spectrograms of calls and descriptive statistics of five temporal and frequency variables measured from calls are presented. The echolocation calls of many of these species, particularly those in the family Phyllostomidae, have not been described previously. The wing morphology of each taxon is described and related to the structure of its echolocation calls and its foraging ecology. Of slow aerial-hawking insectivores, the Mormoopidae and Natalidae Mormoops blainvillii, Pteronotus davyi davyi, P. quadridens fuliginosus, and Natalus stramineus stramineus can forage with great manoeuvrability in background-cluttered space (close to vegetation), and are able to hover. Pteronotus parnellii portoricensis is able to fly and echolocate …
Total citations
20052006200720082009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220233510915613796556825454
Scholar articles
NV Jennings, S Parsons, KE Barlow, MR Gannon - Acta Chiropterologica, 2004