

Author: MacSwiney G. Cristina M. Cimé Beatríz Bolívar Clarke Frank M. Racey Paul A.
Publisher: Museum and Institute of Zoology, Polish Academy of Sciences
ISSN: 1508-1109
Source: Acta Chiropterologica, Vol.11, Iss.1, 2009-06, pp. : 139-147
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Abstract
The behaviour and habitat associations of aerial insectivorous bats are poorly understood despite constituting up to 65% of bat species in the Neotropics. In 2003, 2004 and 2005 we quantified the activity of insectivorous bats and their insect prey at pastureland and forest sites with and without cenotes (water-filled sinkholes) in the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. We used a time-expansion bat detector to survey each habitat for 24 nights and analysed 2,880 one-minute recorded sequences to determine bat activity. We identified 14 species and five phonic types belonging to four families. Bat activity and the average number of bat species acoustically sampled each night were significantly greater in habitats with cenotes than in those without.
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