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
Phyllostomus elongatus
(E. Geoffroy)
VOUCHER MATERIAL:
14 females (AMNH *266051, *266055, *266058, *266062, *266063, *266064, *266067, *266068, *267152, *267897; MNHN *1995.1082, *1995.1083, *1995.1084, *1995.1085) and 12 males (AMNH *266050, *266052, *266053, *266054, *266065, *266066, *266069, *267127; MNHN *1995.1086, *1995.1087, *1995.1088, *1995.1089); see table 28 for measurements.
IDENTIFICATION: Descriptions and measurements of
Phyllostomus elongatus
from the Guianas and elsewhere were provided by
Husson (1962
, 1978),
Hill (1964)
, Swanepoel and
Genoways (1979)
,
Brosset and CharlesDominique (1990)
, and Anderson (1997). No subspecies are currently recognized (Koopman, 1994).
Our material from Paracou agrees in all respects with previous descriptions of
Phyllostomus elongatus
. Like other conspecific material from the Guiana region, our specimens fall near the upper end of the known range of size variation for
P
.
elongatus
.
FIELD OBSERVATIONS: We recorded 162 captures (probably including some recaptures) of
Phyllostomus elongatus
at Paracou. One hundred fiftynine captures were in groundlevel mistnets,
9
one was in a mistnet suspended 13–16 m above a narrow dirt road, and two were at roosts. Seventyfour of the groundlevel mistnet captures were in welldrained primary forest, 45 were in swampy primary forest, 27 were in creekside primary forest, 1 was in a natural treefall opening in primary forest, 7 were in manmade clearings, and 5 were in closedcanopy secondary growth. The two bats taken at roosts were both solitary males; one was collected from a tree cavity with a single large opening about 5 m above the ground (fig. 26), the other from the central shaft of a hol
low tree with a large lower entrance at ground level and second smaller aperture ca. 15–20 m farther up the trunk (this roost was shared with
Saccopteryx bilineata
and
Carollia perspicillata
). Both roosts were in welldrained primary forest.
By contrast with the multiple elevatedmistnet captures we recorded for
Phyllostomus discolor
and
P
.
hastatus
(see above and below), the almost complete absence of
P
.
elongatus
in nets suspended more than a few meters above the ground is noteworthy.