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
Ectophylla macconnelli
(Thomas)
VOUCHER MATERIAL:
9 females (AMNH *267281, *267537, *267538, *267556, *267558, *267559; MNHN *1995.1181, *1995.1182, *1995.1183) and 4 males (AMNH *267557, *267562, *268539; MNHN *1995.1184); see table 43 for measurements.
IDENTIFICATION: We consulted descriptions and measurements of
Ectophylla macconnelli
provided by Goodwin and Greenhall (1962), Swanepoel and
Genoways (1979)
,
Williams and Genoways (1980a)
, Brosset and Charles Dominique (1990), and
Kunz and Pena (1992)
. Two subspecies are currently recognized, of which the nominate
form occurs
throughout most of the humid Neotropical lowlands, including the Guianas (Koopman, 1994).
Our Paracou series conforms in all respects to previous descriptions of
Ectophylla macconnelli
except that of
Brosset and CharlesDominique (1990)
, who reported unusually high values for length of the maxillary toothrow (6.7–7.4 mm) in their French Guianan material. By contrast, the observed range for this measurement in our series (5.61–6.09 mm) falls within the range previously reported by other authors (5.5–6.6 mm). Because the other external and craniodental measurements reported by Brosset and CharlesDominique are not aberrant, we presume that their maxillary toothrow measurements were erroneously reported.
FIELD OBSERVATIONS: We caught 13
Ectophylla macconnelli
at Paracou, of which only 1 was taken in a mistnet; the remaining 12 were caught at roosts. Our single mistnet capture was at ground level in swampy primary forest.
We found three roosting groups of
Ectophylla macconnelli
, all of which inhabited leaftents (fig. 47) made from the bifid terminal leaflets of fronds of young understory palms provisionally identified as
Astrocaryum sciophilum
. In all construction details that we noted, these tents exactly resembled those described above in the accounts for
Rhinophylla pumilio
and
Artibeus cinereus
. All three roosts were in welldrained primary forest. One roosting group of seven bats, col lected in its entirety, consisted of two adult males and five adult females. Another entire group of three consisted of one adult male and two adult females.
Our roost observations, together with those reported by
Foster (1992)
and Charles Dominique (1993), suggest that
Ectophylla macconnelli
regularly inhabits tents manufactured from the leaves of
Astrocaryum
palms.
12
Because the undersurfaces of
Astrocaryum
leaves are characteristically whitish (
Henderson et al., 1995
), we agree with
Hingston (1932)
that the unsually pale fur of
12
Emmons (1990)
was apparently the first to report that
Ectophylla macconnelli
inhabits palmleaf tents, but she did not identify the host plant. Roosts have been reported in the foliage of other palms (and aroids), but multiple independent observations of occupied bifid tents in
Astrocaryum
spp. from opposite ends of Amazonia suggest that this genus is favored by
Ectophylla macconnelli
. Emmons’ (1990, 1997) suggestion that
E
.
macconnelli
sometimes inhabits hollow trees was based on Handley’s (1976: 30) report of one individual ‘‘found roosting in a tree.’’ However, the original field record for the specimen in question (USNM 405185) notes ‘‘shot in tree after frightened up‘‘—the bat having presumably been dislodged from an unobserved roost in the undergrowth. All other published accounts (including
Beebe [1925]
,
Hingston [1932]
, CharlesDominique [1993], and
Kunz et al. [1994]
in addition to references cited by
Foster [1992]
) explicitly identify foliage as the roosting substrate of
E
.
macconnelli
.
Fig. 47. Roost of
Ectophylla macconnelli
in welldrained primary forest at Paracou. Made from the bifid terminal leaflet of a young palm (
Astrocaryum
cf.
sciophilum
), this shelter contained three
E
.
macconnelli
(one adult male and two adult females) hanging in a tight cluster from the midrib about 1.5 m above the ground (arrow). Note the much sparser undergrowth at this primaryforest site than that surrounding an otherwise similar roost in secondary vegetation (figure 43).
E
.
macconnelli
is correlated with the background color of its typical roosts, perhaps making the bats less conspicuous to diurnal predators.