The mammals of Paracou, French Guiana, a Neotropical lowland rainforest fauna. Part 1, Bats
Author
Simmons, Nancy B.
Department of Mammalogy, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY, USA
Author
Voss, Robert S.
Department of Mammalogy, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY, USA
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
1998
1998-12-31
237
1
219
journal article
8160
10.5281/zenodo.4545052
0540f87c-c902-4df5-acd4-51801c9531bd
2246/1634/B237-0004
4545052
Cormura brevirostris
(Wagner)
VOUCHER MATERIAL: 17 females (AMNH *266009, *267070, 267076, *267078, *267389, *267391, *267823, *267824, *267825, *267826, *267828; MNHN *1995.823, *1995.824, *1995.825, *1995.826, *1995.833, *1995.834) and 18 males (AMNH *265994, *266002, *266003, *267069, *267071, *267074, *267075, 267079, *267390, *267394, *267822, *267827; MNHN *1995.827, *1995.828, 1995.829, *1995.830, *1995.831, *1995.832); see table 1 for measurements.
IDENTIFICATION:
Cormura brevirostris
can be distinguished easily from other emballonurids by the unique location of the antebrachial wing sac (Sanborn, 1937: fig. 37;
Jones and Hood, 1993
: fig. 1). Craniodental characters and measurements of
C
.
brevirostris
from the Guianas and other parts of South America were discussed by Sanborn (1937),
Husson (1962
, 1978), Brosset and Charles Dominique (1990), and
Jones and Hood (1993)
.
Husson (1962)
provided a revised description of
Cormura
and a detailed discussion of
Myopteryx pullus
, which he and all subsequent authors have considered to be a junior synonym of
C
.
brevirostris
. No subspecies are currently recognized (
Jones and Hood, 1993
; Koopman, 1994).
Our specimens from Paracou conform to previous descriptions of
Cormura brevirostris
and fall within the range of size variation previously documented in Surinam and French Guiana.
FIELD OBSERVATIONS: We recorded 42 captures (possibly including some recaptures) of
Cormura brevirostris
at Paracou: 7 in groundlevel mistnets, 12 in elevated mistnets, and 23 at roosts. Of the seven groundlevel mistnet captures, one was in welldrained primary forest, three were in creekside primary forest, two were in a treefall opening in creekside primary forest, and one was in a manmade clearing. Eight elevatednet captures were between 10 and 21 m above a narrow dirt road, and four were made between 10 and 38 m over a treefall gap in welldrained primary forest.
We encountered 10 different roosting groups of
Cormura brevirostris
at eight unique roost sites (one site was revisited twice). Five roost sites were on the dark undersides of fallen trees (e.g., fig. 14), but one roosting group was found clinging to an unmodified leaf of
Phenakospermum guyannensis
(fig. 15), another occupied a shallow cavity in the base of a living tree suspended by its roots over a stream, and another was found under a concrete bridge. In addition to the bridge roost, two natural roosts (both in primary forest) were over small streams, but five others (four in primary forest and one in secondary forest) were far from water.
Fig. 13. Dorsal (
A
), ventral (
B
), and lateral (
C
) views of the skull of
Centronycteris maximiliani
(AMNH 267397; male) from Paracou. Note the small anterior upper premolar and the large basisphenoid pits extending between the hamular processes of the pterygoids.
C
.
centralis
(not known from the Guianas) has a larger anterior upper premolar and smaller basisphenoid pits that do not extend between the hamular processes. Scale bar = 5 mm.
Fig. 14. Roost of
Cormura brevirostris
beneath a fallen tree in primary forest at Paracou. Five bats were found roosting on the dark underside of the trunk (arrow), about 1 m above the water when this dryseason photograph was taken. Nets set across this stream captured our only examples of
Noctilio leporinus
.
Fig. 15. Roost of
Cormura brevirostris
in young secondary growth at Paracou. Three bats were found hanging in a cluster from a torn lateral vein (arrow) on the underside of this leaf of
Phenakospermum guyannense
(Strelitziaceae)
. This is the only known instance of
Cormura brevirostris
roosting in foliage, probably not a characteristic behavior of the species.
The 10 roosting groups of
Cormura brevirostris
we found at Paracou (table 2) consisted of two to five individuals, with a modal group size of three. Whereas three roosts each contained two adult males, we never found more than one adult female per roost. In all eight roosting groups that we were able to observe closely before the bats were disturbed, the animals were clustered together in a compact mass; in four groups we were able to see that the individuals were actually touching one another backtobelly. Although three species of
Peropteryx
(
P
.
kappleri
,
P
.
leucoptera
, and
P
.
macrotis
) previously or subsequently occupied some of the same roosts where we captured
C
.
brevirostris
, we never found more than one of these (or any other emballonurid species) sharing the same roost simultaneously.