Abstract
The state of Rio Grande do Norte is considered a data gap for bat species records in Brazil. The state is also currently target of large economic projects with potential impacts on bats, especially wind farms and mining enterprises. In addition, Rio Grande do Norte has few conservation units in which there is no systematic study on bat fauna. The Nísia Floresta National Forest (NFNF), a federally protected area of 174 hectares, is located in the eastern coast of Rio Grande do Norte and corresponds to one of the last remnants of Atlantic Forest in the state, in its northernmost limits. A bat inventory was conducted in NFNF using mist nets set at ground level, from sunset to sunrise, from December 2011 to December 2012, totaling 25 sampling nights. We captured 1,379 bats belonging to four families and 16 species. Artibeus planirostris (Phyllostomidae) was the most frequently captured species (n = 685; 50%), followed by Myotis lavali (Vespertilionidae) (n = 248; 18%) and Phyllostomus discolor (Phyllostomidae) (n = 147; 11%). Peropteryx leucoptera, Phyllostomus discolor, Phyllostomus hastatus, Lophostoma brasiliense, Lasiurus blossevillii, Myotis lavali, and Promops nasutus are new records for Rio Grande do Norte, increasing the current number of bat species from 25 to 32 in this state. Further inventories, especially using acoustic surveys with bat detectors, might add more species to the NFNF bat list.
Atlantic Rainforest; chiropteran inventory; conservation units; Neotropical biodiversity; protected areas
Resumo
O estado do Rio Grande do Norte é considerado uma lacuna de informações sobre ocorrência de morcegos no Brasil. O estado também é atualmente alvo de grandes empreendimentos com potencial impacto sobre a quiropterofauna, especialmente no setor de energia eólica e mineração. Além disso, apresenta poucas unidades de conservação, e estas não possuem sua quiropterofauna estudada de maneira sistematizada. A Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta (FNNF), uma unidade de conservação federal de 174 hectares, localiza-se na costa leste do Rio Grande do Norte e corresponde a um dos últimos remanescentes de Mata Atlântica no estado e no limite norte do bioma. Foi realizado um inventário de morcegos na FNNF com a utilização de redes de neblina armadas no nível do solo, do por do sol ao amanhecer, de dezembro de 2011 a dezembro de 2012, totalizando 25 noites de amostragem. Nós capturamos 1379 morcegos pertencentes a quatro famílias e 16 espécies. Artibeus planirostris (Phyllostomidae) foi a espécie mais frequentemente capturada (n = 685; 50%), seguida por Myotis lavali (Vespertilionidae) (n = 248; 18%) e Phyllostomus discolor (Phyllostomidae) (n = 147; 11%). Peropteryx leucoptera, Phyllostomus discolor, Phyllostomus hastatus, Lophostoma brasiliense, Lasiurus blossevillii, Myotis lavali e Promops nasutus são novos registros para o Rio Grande do Norte, aumentando o número atual de espécies de morcegos no estado de 25 para 32. Inventários adicionais, especialmente utilizando amostragens acústicas com detectores de morcegos, tendem a acrescentar novas espécies à lista de morcegos da FNNF.
Mata Atlântica; inventário de quirópteros; unidade de conservação; biodiversidade Neotropical; áreas protegidas
Introduction
Brazil is a mega-biodiversity country (Mittermeier et al. 1997MITTERMEIER, R.A., GIL, P.R. & MITTERMEIER, C.G. 1997. Megadiversity: Earth’s Biologically Wealthiest Nations. Cemex, México.) with one of the highest species richness of bats in the world. Currently, nine families, comprising 178 species, are known in the Brazilian territory (Nogueira et al. 2014NOGUEIRA, M.R., LIMA, I.P., MORATELLI, R., TAVARES, V.C., GREGORIN, R. & PERACCHI, A.L. 2014. Checklist of Brazilian bats, with comments on original records. Check List 10(4):808-821.). Nevertheless, information on distribution and occurrence of bat species in Brazil is highly fragmented. There are no records of bat species for nearly 60% of the Brazilian area, and 8% of the country can be considered minimally surveyed in terms of bats (Bernard et al. 2011BERNARD, E., AGUIAR, L.M.S. & MACHADO, R.B. 2011. Discovering the Brazilian bat fauna: a task for two centuries? Mammal Rev. 41(1):23-39.). One of the most significant data gaps about bat occurrence in Brazil corresponds to the state of Rio Grande do Norte (Bernard et al. 2011BERNARD, E., AGUIAR, L.M.S. & MACHADO, R.B. 2011. Discovering the Brazilian bat fauna: a task for two centuries? Mammal Rev. 41(1):23-39.), located in the northeast part of the country. Currently, Rio Grande do Norte is the state with the lowest number of localities surveyed for bats (= 12) and the lowest bat richness (= 24 species) in northeastern Brazil (Garcia et al. 2014GARCIA, A.C.L., E.S.B. LEAL, C. ROHDE, F.G. CARVALHO-NETO & M.A. MONTES. 2014. The bats of northeastern Brazil: a panorama. Anim. Biol. 64(1):141-150.). Concomitantly, this state has been attracting investments in large economic projects with potential impact on bats, such as wind farms and mining development.
The east coast of Rio Grande do Norte corresponds to the northern limit of the Atlantic Forest biome (IBGE 2004[IBGE] INSTITUTO BRASILEIRO DE GEOGRAFIA E ESTATÍSTICA. 2004. Mapa de Biomas do Brasil. Ministério do Meio ambiente (MMA)/Ministério do Planejamento, Orçamento e Gestão/Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE) – Diretoria de Geociências.), a hotspot for biodiversity conservation due to high rates of endemism and habitat loss (Myers et al. 2000MYERS, N., MITTERMEIER, R.A., MITTERMEIER, C.G., FONSECA, G.A.B. & KENT, J. 2000. Biodiversity hotspots for conservation priorities. Nature 403(6772):854-858.). Five of the 10 bat species currently considered endemic to Brazil occur exclusively in the Atlantic Forest (Nogueira et al. 2014NOGUEIRA, M.R., LIMA, I.P., MORATELLI, R., TAVARES, V.C., GREGORIN, R. & PERACCHI, A.L. 2014. Checklist of Brazilian bats, with comments on original records. Check List 10(4):808-821.). The region originally covered an area of 150 million hectares, but currently, only 12% of the original vegetation remains, mostly distributed in small forest fragments below a size of 50 hectares (Ribeiro et al. 2009RIBEIRO, M.C., METZGER, J.P., MARTENSEN, A.C., PONZONI, F.J. & HIROTA, M.M. 2009. The Brazilian Atlantic Forest: How much is left, and how is the remaining forest distributed? Implications for conservation. Biol. Conserv. 142(6):1141-1153.). Similarly, the current area of the Atlantic Forest corresponds to 12% of its original domain in the state of Rio Grande do Norte, with about 27,000 hectares of natural non-forest vegetation (including mangroves and salt marshes) and 16,000 hectares of forest remnants (Fundação SOS Mata Atlântica & INPE 2014FUNDAÇÃO SOS MATA ATLÂNTICA & INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE PESQUISAS ESPACIAIS (INPE). 2014. Atlas dos remanescentes florestais da Mata Atlântica Período 2012-2013 – Relatório Técnico. Fundação SOS Mata Atlântica/Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais, São Paulo.). One of these remnants is the Nísia Floresta National Forest (Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta), a federally protected area of 174 hectares created in 2001 (MMA 2012[MMA] MINISTÉRIO DO MEIO AMBIENTE, REPÚBLICA FEDERATIVA DO BRASIL. 2012. Plano de Manejo Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta, Rio Grande do Norte – Volume I: Diagnóstico. MMA, Nísia Floresta.).
Although the coastline of Rio Grande do Norte is considered an area of high biological importance and a priority area for biodiversity conservation of the Atlantic Forest (Conservation International do Brasil et al. 2000CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL DO BRASIL, FUNDAÇÃO SOS MATA ATLÂNTICA, FUNDAÇÃO BIODIVERSITAS, INSTITUTO DE PESQUISAS ECOLÓGICAS, SECRETARIA DO MEIO AMBIENTE DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULO & SEMAD/INSTITUTO ESTADUAL DE FLORESTAS-MG. 2000. Avaliação e ações prioritárias para a conservação da biodiversidade da Mata Atlântica e Campos Sulinos. MMA/SBF, Brasília.), this region is poorly surveyed in terms of bats. The scarce information about bat occurrence along the coastal region of Rio Grande do Norte is dispersed in a few research papers and non-published dissertations and theses (reviewed by Garcia et al. 2014GARCIA, A.C.L., E.S.B. LEAL, C. ROHDE, F.G. CARVALHO-NETO & M.A. MONTES. 2014. The bats of northeastern Brazil: a panorama. Anim. Biol. 64(1):141-150.). Bats are diverse and abundant (Altringham 1996ALTRINGHAM, J.D. 1996. Bats Biology and Behaviour. Oxford University Press, New York.), indicators of habitat disturbance (Jones et al. 2009JONES, G., JACOBS, D.S., KUNZ, T.H., WILLIG, M.R. & RACEY, P.A. 2009. Carpe noctem: the importance of bats as bioindicators. Endanger. Species Res. 8(1-2):93-115.), and play important ecological roles as insect controllers (Boyles et al. 2011BOYLES, J.G., CRYAN, P.M., MCCRACKEN, G.F. & KUNZ, T.H. 2011. Economic importance of bats in agriculture. Science 332(6025):41-42.), pollinators (Fleming et al. 2009FLEMING, T.H., GEISELMAN, C. & KRESS, W.J. 2009. The evolution of bat pollination: a phylogenetic perspective. Ann Bot-London 104(6):1017-1043.), and seed dispersers (Lobova et al. 2009LOBOVA, T.A., GEISELMAN, C.K. & MORI, S.A. 2009. Seed dispersal by bats in the Neotropics. New York Botanical Garden, New York.) in the Neotropics. Considering the lack of information about the bat fauna in Rio Grande do Norte and the biological relevance of the remaining Atlantic Forest fragments in this state, the objective of this study was to carry out the first bat inventory at the Nísia Floresta National Forest, northeastern Brazil.
Material and Methods
1. Study Area
Our study was carried out at the Nísia Floresta National Forest (hereafter termed NFNF), a federal protected area located in the municipality of Nísia Floresta, state of Rio Grande do Norte, northeastern Brazil (latitude: 06º05’12,4” S; longitude: 035º11’04,0” W). The NFNF covers an area of 174.95 ha, with a maximum altitude of 100 m asl (MMA 2012[MMA] MINISTÉRIO DO MEIO AMBIENTE, REPÚBLICA FEDERATIVA DO BRASIL. 2012. Plano de Manejo Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta, Rio Grande do Norte – Volume I: Diagnóstico. MMA, Nísia Floresta.). The climate in this region is classified as tropical savannah (Aw) (Peel et al. 2007PEEL, M.C., FINLAYSON, B.L. & MCMAHON, T.A. 2007. Updated world map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification. Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sc. 4(2):1633-1644.) with an average temperature of 27°C (maximum: 30°C; minimum: 21°C) (IDEMA 2013[IDEMA] INSTITUTO DE DESENVOLVIMENTO SUSTENTÁVEL E MEIO AMBIENTE DO RIO GRANDE DO NORTE. 2013. Perfil do Seu Município – Nísia Floresta 2013. IDEMA, Natal.). Normal annual rainfall is 1,522 mm, with a distinctive rainy season from March to August and a dry season from September to February (IDEMA 2013[IDEMA] INSTITUTO DE DESENVOLVIMENTO SUSTENTÁVEL E MEIO AMBIENTE DO RIO GRANDE DO NORTE. 2013. Perfil do Seu Município – Nísia Floresta 2013. IDEMA, Natal.).
The study area is located in the Atlantic Forest biome (IBGE 2004[IBGE] INSTITUTO BRASILEIRO DE GEOGRAFIA E ESTATÍSTICA. 2004. Mapa de Biomas do Brasil. Ministério do Meio ambiente (MMA)/Ministério do Planejamento, Orçamento e Gestão/Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE) – Diretoria de Geociências.), in a region originally covered by rainforest that has been historically exploited for sugarcane production. The NFNF area has been used as a forestry experiment station from the 1960s to the early 1980s and consists of both secondary native forest (≈ 60% of the total area) and experimental forestry sites (≈ 40% of the total area) (MMA 2012[MMA] MINISTÉRIO DO MEIO AMBIENTE, REPÚBLICA FEDERATIVA DO BRASIL. 2012. Plano de Manejo Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta, Rio Grande do Norte – Volume I: Diagnóstico. MMA, Nísia Floresta.). Within the native forest, the predominant vegetation is seasonal semideciduous forest (“floresta estacional semidecidual”) (≈ 45% of the NFNF total area) in the west-central part of the NFNF, followed by coastal tableland (“tabuleiro litorâneo”) (≈ 15% of the NFNF total area) in the northern part of the NFNF (MMA 2012[MMA] MINISTÉRIO DO MEIO AMBIENTE, REPÚBLICA FEDERATIVA DO BRASIL. 2012. Plano de Manejo Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta, Rio Grande do Norte – Volume I: Diagnóstico. MMA, Nísia Floresta.).
Bat surveys took place at the experimental forestry area in the southeastern part of the NFNF. This area exhibits both regenerating seasonal semideciduous forest and introduced plants, including native and exotic species planted during forestry experiments. The dominant tree species are Tapirira guianensis (family Anacardeaceae), Byrsonima crassifolia (family Malpighiaceae), Mischocarpus sundaicus (family Sapindaceae), Cordia nodosa (family Boraginaceae), Plathymenia reticulata (family Leguminosae), Caesalpinia ferrea (family Leguminosae), and exotic species of Eucalyptus (family Myrtaceae) (MMA 2012[MMA] MINISTÉRIO DO MEIO AMBIENTE, REPÚBLICA FEDERATIVA DO BRASIL. 2012. Plano de Manejo Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta, Rio Grande do Norte – Volume I: Diagnóstico. MMA, Nísia Floresta.). Tapirira guianensis (locally called “cupiúba”) is common throughout the entire area, while the density of the other species varies among different sites within the NFNF experimental forest zone (MMA 2012[MMA] MINISTÉRIO DO MEIO AMBIENTE, REPÚBLICA FEDERATIVA DO BRASIL. 2012. Plano de Manejo Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta, Rio Grande do Norte – Volume I: Diagnóstico. MMA, Nísia Floresta.).
2. Sampling
Bat surveys were conducted using mist nets (12 × 3 m, mesh 19 mm, five shelves, Ecotone®) from December 2011 to December 2012. Sampling was performed during a total of 25 nights, one in December 2011 and two consecutive nights per month from January to December 2012. At each night, eight mist nets were set at ground level along forest trails and edges. The mist nets were set at different sites within the NFNF experimental forestry area in December 2011 and at the same spots from January to December 2012 (six along the first 300 m of the NFNF main trail and two at forest edges near the trailhead). Nets were opened at sunset and remained open for 11 h. The total sampling effort was 79,200 h.m2 (3,168 h.m2 per night), calculated according to Straube & Bianconi (2002)STRAUBE, F.C. & BIANCONI, G.V. 2002. Sobre a grandeza e a unidade utilizada para estimar esforço de captura com utilização de redes-de-neblina. Chiropt. Neotrop. 8(1-2):150-152. by multiplying the following factors: mist net area (m2), hours of exposure (h), number of nets, and number of sampling nights.
Captured bats were removed from nets, kept in individual cotton bags, and checked for sex and reproductive status (according to Racey 2009RACEY, P.A. 2009. Reproductive Assessment of Bats. In Ecological and Behavioral Methods for the Study of Bats (T.H. Kunz & S. Parsons, eds.). The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, p.249-264.), age (according to Brunet-Rossinni & Wilkinson 2009BRUNET-ROSSINNI, A.K. & WILKINSON, G.S. 2009. Methods for Age Estimation and the Study of Senescence in Bats. In Ecological and Behavioral Methods for the Study of Bats (T.H. Kunz & S. Parsons, eds.). The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, p.315-325.), forearm length (using a digital caliper), and body mass (with a spring scale). Bats were then immediately released at the capture site, except a number between 1‒10 individuals per species which were killed by ether inhalation and collected as voucher specimens (permit SISBIO/ICMBio #30730-2), as well as individuals who accidentally died during capturing or handling processes. These specimens were fixed in formaldehyde (10% solution), preserved in ethanol (70% solution), and deposited in the Mammal Collection of the Federal University of Pernambuco (UFPE).
Voucher specimens were taxonomically identified according to the keys and descriptions of Araújo & Langguth (2010)ARAÚJO, P. & LANGGUTH, A. 2010. Caracteres distintivos das quatro espécies de grandes Artibeus (Phyllostomidae) de Paraíba e Pernambuco, Brasil. Chiropt. Neotrop. 16(2):715-722., Cloutier & Thomas (1992)CLOUTIER, D. & THOMAS, D.W. 1992. Carollia perspicillata. Mamm. Species 417:1-9., Fonseca & Pinto (2004)FONSECA, R.M. & PINTO, C.M. 2004. A new Lophostoma (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae: Phyllostominae) from the Amazonia of Ecuador. Occas. Pap. Tex. Tech. Univ. Mus. 242:1-9., Greenhall et al. (1983)GREENHALL, A.M., G. JOERMANN & U. SCHMIDT. 1983. Desmodus rotundus. Mamm. Species 202:1-6., Gregorin & Taddei (2002)GREGORIN, R. & TADDEI, V.A. 2002. Chave artificial para a identificação de molossídeos brasileiros (Mammalia, Chiroptera). Mastozool. Neotrop. 9(1):13-32., Jones & Hood (1993)JONES, J.K. & HOOD, C.S. 1993. Synopsis of South American bats of the family Emballonuridae. Occas. Pap. Tex. Tech. Univ. Mus. 155:1-32., Lim et al. (2010)LIM, B.K., ENGSTROM, M.D., REID, F.A., SIMMONS, N.B., VOSS, R.S. & FLECK, D.W. 2010. A new species of Peropteryx (Chiroptera: Emballonuridae) from western Amazonia with comments on phylogenetic relationships within the genus. Am. Mus. Novit. 3686:1-20., Moratelli et al. (2011)MORATELLI, R., PERACCHI, A.L., DIAS, D. & OLIVEIRA, J.A. 2011. Geographic variation in South American populations of Myotis nigricans (Schinz, 1821) (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae), with the description of two new species. Mamm. Biol. 76(5):592-607., Reis et al. (2007)REIS, N.R., PERACCHI, A.L., PEDRO, W.A. & DE LIMA, I.P. 2007. Morcegos do Brasil. Nelio Roberto dos Reis, Londrina., Simmons & Voss (1998)SIMMONS, N.B. & VOSS, R.S. 1998. Mammals of Paracou, French Guiana, a neotropical lowland rainforest fauna ‒ Part 1: Bats. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 237:1-219., Velazco (2005)VELAZCO, P.M. 2005. Morphological phylogeny of the bat genus Platyrrhinus Saussure, 1860 (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae) with the description of four new species. Fieldiana, Zool. 105:1-53., and Webster (1993)WEBSTER, W.D. 1993. Systematics and evolution of bats of the genus Glossophaga. Special Publications of the Museum, Texas Tech University 36:1-184.. In specimens for which morphological identification was not completely conclusive, tissue samples (liver pieces) were used to molecular identification. DNA extraction was conducted using the Biopur Mini Spin Plus kit according to the manufacturer’s instructions. A conserved region of 360 bp of the cytochrome subunit b gene was amplified by PCR with the universal primers L14841 (5′-AAA AAG CTT CCA TCC AAC ATC TCA GCA TGA TGA AA-3′) and H15149 (5′-AAA CTG CAG CCC CTC AGA ATG ATA TTT GTC CTC A-3′) (Kocher et al. 1989KOCHER, T.D., THOMAS, W.K., MEYER, A., EDWARDS, S.V., PÄÄBO, S., VILLABLANCA, F.X. & WILSON, A.C. 1989. Dynamics of mitochondrial DNA evolution in animals: amplification and sequencing with conserved primers. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86(16):6196-6200.). Amplifications were performed in a final volume of 25 μl containing 12.5 μl of 2X Taq Master Mix (Vivantis Technologies), 0.5 μl of MgCl2 (50 mM), 1.0 μl of each primer (2.0 mM), and 10 ng of extracted DNA, according to Bobrowiec et al. (2015)BOBROWIEC, P.E.D., LEMES, M.R. & GRIBEL, R. 2015. Prey preference of the common vampire bat (Desmodus rotundus, Chiroptera) using molecular analysis. J. Mammal. 96(1):54-63.. The PCR products were purified and sequenced with the sequencing kit Big Dye® Terminator v3.1 (Life Technologies), according to the protocol provided, in both forward and reverse directions, in ABI 3500 automatic sequencer. To obtain a consensus sequence, we aligned and edited the sequences obtained in the program BioEdit v. 7.2.5 (Hall 1999HALL, T. 1999. BioEdit: a user-friendly biological sequence align ment editor and analysis program for Windows 95/98/NT. Nucleic Acids Symp. Ser. 41(2):95-98.). Then, we compared the sequences to homologous sequences of Cytb deposited in GenBank. In addition, we aligned the consensus sequences with sequences of the possible species, based on information on distribution and occurrence of bat species in northeastern Brazil.
Results
We captured a total of 1,379 bats of 16 species and four families (Table 1, Figure 1). The richest family was Phyllostomidae (12 species); the families Vespertilionidae, Emballonuridae, and Molossidae were represented by one to two species each. Artibeus planirostris (Phyllostomidae) was the most frequently captured species (50%), followed by Myotis lavali (Vespertilionidae) (18%) and Phyllostomus discolor (Phyllostomidae) (11%). The capture frequencies of the other species were less than 10%.
Numbers of bat captures by mist-netting in forest trails and edges at the Nísia Floresta National Forest (Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta), state of Rio Grande do Norte, northeastern Brazil, from December 2011 to December 2012.
Bat species (Mammalia, Chiroptera) captured by mist-netting in forest trails and edges at the Nísia Floresta National Forest (Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta), state of Rio Grande do Norte, northeastern Brazil, from December 2011 to December 2012. (a) Peropteryx leucoptera; (b) Artibeus lituratus; (c) Artibeus planirostris; (d)Carollia perspicillata; (e) Dermanura cinerea; (f) Desmodus rotundus; (g)Glossophaga soricina; (h) Lophostoma brasiliense; (i) Phyllostomus discolor; (j)Phyllostomus hastatus; (k) Platyrrhinus lineatus; (l) Sturnira lilium; (m) Trachops cirrhosus; (n) Promops nasutus; (o) Lasiurus blossevillii; e (p) Myotis lavali.
All captured species are vouchered by specimens in the Mammal Collection of the Federal University of Pernambuco (Appendix 1). Molecular taxonomic identification was carried out in three specimens (UFPE 3297, UFPE 3191, and UFPE 3198), in order to confirm the identification of the species from the genera Carollia and Myotis. The taxonomic identification of the specimens was confirmed as Carollia perspicillata and Myotis lavali (similarity was 100% in all cases; see gene sequences in the online Supplementary Material 1 and 2).
Discussion
Although our sampling was limited to one habitat type (experimental forestry area) within the NFNF, this is the first systematic inventory of bats in a protected area in the state of Rio Grande do Norte. Our results are regionally relevant and provide new information on bat composition in this state with a poorly known and described bat fauna. Approximately 44% of all captured species are new state records; we report for the first time the occurrence of Myotis lavali, Phyllostomus discolor, Phyllostomus hastatus, Lophostoma brasiliense, Lasiurus blossevillii, Peropteryx leucoptera, and Promops nasutus in Rio Grande do Norte. In addition, we confirm the occurrence of seven species (Artibeus lituratus, Artibeus planirostris, Carollia perspicillata, Desmodus rotundus, Platyrrhinus lineatus, Sturnira lilium, and Trachops cirrhosus) by providing voucher specimens, which were lacking in the previous records in grey and peer-reviewed literature (reviewed by Garcia et al. 2014GARCIA, A.C.L., E.S.B. LEAL, C. ROHDE, F.G. CARVALHO-NETO & M.A. MONTES. 2014. The bats of northeastern Brazil: a panorama. Anim. Biol. 64(1):141-150.). Only the previous records of Dermanura cinerea and Glossophaga soricina are vouchered by specimens in collections (Handley Jr. 1987HANDLEY JR., C.O. 1987. New species of mammals from northern South America: Fruit-eating bats, genus Artibeus Leach. In Studies in Neotropical mammalogy, essays in honor of Philip Hershkovitz (B.D. Patterson & R.M. Timm, eds.). Fieldiana, Zool. Vol. 39, Chicago, p.163-172., Webster 1993WEBSTER, W.D. 1993. Systematics and evolution of bats of the genus Glossophaga. Special Publications of the Museum, Texas Tech University 36:1-184.). The seven new species records increase the current number of bat species from 25 to 32 in Rio Grande do Norte (Barros 2014BARROS, M.A.S. 2014. First record of Molossus molossus (Pallas, 1766) (Mammalia: Chiroptera) in the state of Rio Grande do Norte, northeastern Brazil. Check List 10(6):1520-1524., Garcia et al. 2014GARCIA, A.C.L., E.S.B. LEAL, C. ROHDE, F.G. CARVALHO-NETO & M.A. MONTES. 2014. The bats of northeastern Brazil: a panorama. Anim. Biol. 64(1):141-150.).
Artibeus planirostris is a primarily frugivorous bat (Hollis 2005HOLLIS, L. 2005. Artibeus planirostris. Mamm. Species 775:1-6.) and accounted for about 50% of total bat captures. This high frequency is probably associated with the availability of food resources in our study area, in which several fruit trees could be identified near the main forest trail. These bats were often captured carrying fruits of Ficus spp. (family Moraceae) and Cecropia spp. (family Urticaceae), which are largely consumed by Artibeus species in the Neotropics (Lobova et al. 2009LOBOVA, T.A., GEISELMAN, C.K. & MORI, S.A. 2009. Seed dispersal by bats in the Neotropics. New York Botanical Garden, New York.). Artibeus planirostris is also often captured by mist-netting in the urban area of Natal city; this species accounted for 96% (N = 260) of bat captures in green areas within the campus of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte (UFRN) (M.A.S. Barros, unpublished data). This suggests that A. planirostris is an abundant bat species both in natural and anthropic areas in the Atlantic Forest biome in this state. Apart from the present study, there are currently six additional records of A. planirostris in Rio Grande do Norte: in Ponta Negra, Natal (Varela-Freire 1997VARELA-FREIRE, A.A. 1997. Fauna Potiguar Vol. 1 – A fauna das dunas costeiras da cidade do Natal e do litoral oriental do Rio Grande do Norte. EDUFRN, Natal.), and in five caves, one (Gruta da Carrapateira) in Felipe Guerra (Ferreira et al. 2010FERREIRA, R.L., PROUS, X., BERNARDI, L.F.O. & SOUZA-SILVA, M. 2010. Fauna subterrânea do estado do Rio Grande do Norte: caracterização e impactos. Revista Brasileira de Espeleologia 1(1):25-51., Cordero-Schmidt et al. 2016CORDERO-SCHMIDT, E., MEDEIROS-GUIMARÃES, M., VARGAS-MENA, J.C., CARVALHO, B., FERREIRA, R.L., RODRIGUEZ-HERRERA, B. & VENTICINQUE, E.M. 2016. Are leaves a good option in Caatinga's menu? First record of folivory in Artibeus planirostris (Phyllostomidae) in the semiarid forest, Brazil. Acta Chiropterol. 18(2):489-497.), one (Caverna do Serrote Preto) in Lajes, one (Gruta Casa de Homens) in Caraúbas, and two (Caverna Lajedo Grande and Caverna da Pedrada) in Governador Dix-Sept Rosado (Cordero-Schmidt et al. 2016CORDERO-SCHMIDT, E., MEDEIROS-GUIMARÃES, M., VARGAS-MENA, J.C., CARVALHO, B., FERREIRA, R.L., RODRIGUEZ-HERRERA, B. & VENTICINQUE, E.M. 2016. Are leaves a good option in Caatinga's menu? First record of folivory in Artibeus planirostris (Phyllostomidae) in the semiarid forest, Brazil. Acta Chiropterol. 18(2):489-497.).
Myotis lavali, the second most frequently captured species (18%), is a recently described species (Moratelli et al. 2011MORATELLI, R., PERACCHI, A.L., DIAS, D. & OLIVEIRA, J.A. 2011. Geographic variation in South American populations of Myotis nigricans (Schinz, 1821) (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae), with the description of two new species. Mamm. Biol. 76(5):592-607.) whose distribution limits and natural history are poorly known. Our record is a new marginal point of occurrence and extends the distribution of the species by about 470 km southeast (from Russo‒CE) and about 210 km north (from São Lourenço da Mata‒PE) (Moratelli & Wilson 2013MORATELLI, R. & WILSON, D.E. 2013. Distribution and natural history of Myotis lavali (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae). J. Mammal. 94(3):650-656.). In northeastern Brazil, this species occurs mainly in xeric forests and shrublands within the Caatinga biome (Novaes & Laurindo 2014NOVAES, R.L.M. & LAURINDO, R.D.S. 2014. Morcegos da Chapada do Araripe, nordeste do Brasil. Pap. Avulsos Zool. 54(22):315-328., Novaes et al. 2015NOVAES, R.L.M., LAURINDO, R.D.S. & SOUZA, R.D.F. 2015. Structure and natural history of an assemblage of bats from a xerophytic area in the Caatinga of northeastern Brazil. Stud. Neotrop. Fauna E. 50(1):40-51., Silva et al. 2015SILVA, S.S., DIAS, D., MARTINS, M.A., GUEDES, P.G., ALMEIDA, J.C., CRUZ, A.P., SERRA-FREIRE, N.M., DAMASCENA, J.S. & PERACCHI, A.L. 2015. Bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera) from the caatinga scrublands of the Crateus region, northeastern Brazil, with new records for the state of Ceará. Mastozool. Neotrop. 22(2):335-348.); this is the second peripheral record of M. lavali in the adjacent Atlantic Forest, besides a specimen captured in a seasonal lowland forest area near the coast of Pernambuco (Moratelli & Wilson 2013MORATELLI, R. & WILSON, D.E. 2013. Distribution and natural history of Myotis lavali (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae). J. Mammal. 94(3):650-656.). The high number of captures in the NFNF suggests these bats often forage at low heights near to the ground and forest edges. In addition, males were highly predominant in our study area (98% of M. lavali captures), in contrast to Caatinga sites in the states of Ceará and Pernambuco where sexes occurred in similar proportions (Willig 1983WILLIG, M.R. 1983. Composition, microgeographic variation, and sexual dimorphism in Caatingas and Cerrado biomes in northeast Brazil. Bull. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. 23:1-131., species originally identified as M. nigricans, but reclassified as M. lavali; see Moratelli & Wilson 2013MORATELLI, R. & WILSON, D.E. 2013. Distribution and natural history of Myotis lavali (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae). J. Mammal. 94(3):650-656.). This extremely male-biased sex ratio suggests the occurrence of sex-specific roosting and/or foraging areas at least in a part of the M. lavali distribution. Spatial sexual segregation has been reported for other Myotis species in temperate regions, whose patterns are related mainly to differences in energetic demands between sexes throughout the year (Barclay 1991BARCLAY, R.M. 1991. Population structure of temperate zone insectivorous bats in relation to foraging behaviour and energy demand. J. Anim. Ecol. 60(1):165-178., Cryan et al. 2000CRYAN, P.M., BOGAN, M.A. & ALTENBACH, J.S. 2000. Effect of elevation on distribution of female bats in the Black Hills, South Dakota. J. Mammal. 81(3):719-725., Russo 2002RUSSO, D. 2002. Elevation affects the distribution of the two sexes in Daubenton’s bats Myotis daubentonii (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) from Italy. Mammalia 66(4):543-552., Dietz et al. 2006DIETZ, M., ENCARNAÇÃO, J.A. & KALKO, E.K. 2006. Small scale distribution patterns of female and male Daubenton's bats (Myotis daubentonii). Acta Chiropterol. 8(2):403-415., Encarnação 2012ENCARNAÇÃO, J.A. 2012. Spatiotemporal pattern of local sexual segregation in a tree-dwelling temperate bat Myotis daubentonii. J. Ethol. 30(2):271-278., Angell et al. 2013ANGELL, R.L., BUTLIN, R.K. & ALTRINGHAM, J.D. 2013. Sexual segregation and flexible mating patterns in temperate bats. PLoS One 8(1):e54194.). These studies observed that males tend to occupy poor quality habitats in terms of food availability and weather conditions (frequently located at higher altitudes) in comparison to reproductive females. We captured only five M. lavali females at the NFNF experimental forestry area: two non-reproductive (in August and December 2012), two lactating (in October and November 2012) and one both pregnant and lactating female (in December 2012). It is possible that females (reproductive or not) occur in higher proportions in more suitable habitats in the northern portion of the NFNF not sampled in our study (e.g. near ponds or in secondary native forest areas), or that sexual segregation occurs in a larger spatial scale. Both hypotheses require investigation; although sexual segregation was observed inside roosts in M. nigricans (Wilson 1971WILSON, D.E. 1971. Ecology of Myotis nigricans (Mammalia: Chiroptera) on Barro Colorado Island, Panama Canal Zone. J. Zool. 163(1):1-13.) and suggested by sperm storage in M. albescens and M. simus (Wilson & Findley 1971WILSON, D.E. & FINDLEY, J.S. 1971. Spermatogenesis in some Neotropical species of Myotis. J. Mammal. 52(2):420-426.), there is no information on possible sex differences in landscape use by Myotis species in the Neotropics.
Phyllostomus discolor was the third most common species (11%) at the NFNF experimental forestry area. This is an omnivorous bat that feeds mainly on nectar and pollen, but also on fruits and insects (Kwiecinski 2006KWIECINSKI, G.G. 2006. Phyllostomus discolor. Mamm. Species 801:1-11.). We believe its generalist diet enables this species to occupy a wide variety of habitats and be one of the most common bats in our study area. Moreover, the availability of flower resources along the NFNF forest trail attract P. discolor bats, which were frequently captured in mist nets near flowering trees of Parkia spp. (family Leguminosae). Flowers of several species of Parkia are often visited and pollinated by P. discolor in northern and northeastern Brazil (Carvalho 1961CARVALHO, C.T. 1961. Sobre os hábitos alimentares de Phillostomídeos (Mammalia, Chiroptera). Rev. Biol. Trop. 9(1):53-60., Hopkins 1984HOPKINS, H.C. 1984. Floral biology and pollination ecology of the neotropical species of Parkia. J. Ecol. 71(1):1-23., Piechowski et al. 2010PIECHOWSKI, D., DÖTTERL, S. & GOTTSBERGER, G. 2010. Pollination biology and floral scent chemistry of the Neotropical chiropterophilous Parkia pendula. Plant Biology 12(1):172-182.); P. discolor possibly plays an important role as pollinator of Parkia species at the FNNF. The record of P. discolor in the state of Rio Grande do Norte was expected, since it occurs in the neighboring states of Ceará (Fabián 2008FABIÁN, M. 2008. Quirópteros do bioma caatinga, no Ceará, Brasil, depositados no Museu de Ciências Naturais da Fundação Zoobotânica do Rio Grande do Sul. Chiropt. Neotrop. 14(1):354-359.) and Paraíba (Feijó & Langguth 2011FEIJÓ, J.A. & LANGGUTH, A. 2011. Lista de Quirópteros da Paraíba, Brasil com 25 novos registros. Chiropt. Neotrop. 17(2):1055-1062.). In northeastern Brazil, this species occurs in moist and dry forests in Caatinga (Souza et al. 2004SOUSA, M.A.N., LANGGUTH, A. & GIMENEZ, E.A. 2004. Mamíferos dos brejos de altitude Paraíba e Pernambuco. In Brejos de altitude em Pernambuco e Paraíba: história natural, ecologia e conservação (K.C. Pôrto, J.J.P. Cabral & M. Tabarelli, orgs.). Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília, p.229-254., Novaes & Laurindo 2014NOVAES, R.L.M. & LAURINDO, R.D.S. 2014. Morcegos da Chapada do Araripe, nordeste do Brasil. Pap. Avulsos Zool. 54(22):315-328.) and Atlantic Forest biomes (Mikalauskas 2005MIKALAUSKAS, J.S. 2005. Morcegos. In Parque Nacional Serra de Itabaiana ‒ Levantamento da biota (C.M. Carvalho & J.C. Vilar, Coord.). UFS, São Cristóvão/Ibama, Aracaju, p.93-103., Faria et al. 2006FARIA, D., SOARES-SANTOS, B. & SAMPAIO, E. 2006. Bats from the Atlantic rainforest of southern Bahia, Brazil. Biota Neotrop. 6(2):1-13. http://www.biotaneotropica.org.br/v6n2/pt/abstract?inventory+bn02406022006 (último acesso em 22/01/2017)
http://www.biotaneotropica.org.br/v6n2/p...
).
As well as Phyllostomus discolor, the species Phyllostomus hastatus, Lophostoma brasiliense, and Lasiurus blossevillii occur both in the states of Ceará and Paraíba (Alencar et al. 1976ALENCAR, J.E., BARROS, N.N., PICCININI, R.S., PINTO, V.A., & TOMÉ, G.S. 1976. Estudo sobre a epidemiologia da doença de Chagas no Ceará. V. Quirópteros infectados com Tripanosomo tipo cruzi. Rev. Soc. Bras. Med. Trop. 10(6):311-321., Mares et al. 1981MARES, M.A., WILLIG, M.R., STREILEIN, K.E. & LACHER JR., T.E. 1981. The mammals of northeastern Brazil: a preliminary assessment. Ann. Carnegie Mus. 50(4):81-137., Fabián 2008FABIÁN, M. 2008. Quirópteros do bioma caatinga, no Ceará, Brasil, depositados no Museu de Ciências Naturais da Fundação Zoobotânica do Rio Grande do Sul. Chiropt. Neotrop. 14(1):354-359., Feijó & Langguth 2011FEIJÓ, J.A. & LANGGUTH, A. 2011. Lista de Quirópteros da Paraíba, Brasil com 25 novos registros. Chiropt. Neotrop. 17(2):1055-1062., Peracchi et al. 2011PERACCHI, A.L., LIMA, I.P., REIS, N.R., NOGUEIRA, M.R. & ORTÊNCIO-FILHO, H. 2011. Ordem Chiroptera. In: Mamíferos do Brasil. 2ª Ed. (N.R. Reis, A.L. Peracchi, W.A. Pedro & I.P. Lima). N.R. dos Reis, Londrina, p.155-234.) and therefore, Rio Grande do Norte is part of their expected distributions. Promops nasutus, however, was recorded only in four localities in the northeastern region of Brazil: at its type locality in Rio São Francisco (Spix 1823SPIX, J.B. 1823. Simiarum et vespertilionum Brasiliensium species novae, ou Histoire naturelle des espèces nouvelles de singes et de chauves-souris, observées et recueilles pendant le voyage dans l´interieur du Brésil; exécuté par ordre de S. M. le Roi de Bavière dan les années 1817, 1818, 1819, 1820. Monachii, Typis Francisci Seraphici Hübschmanni, MDCCCXXIII., Thomas 1915THOMAS, O. 1915 VIII. – On bats of the genus Promops. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. Series 8, 16(91):61-64.), Lamarão (Goodwin & Greenhall 1962GOODWIN, G.G. & GREENHALL, A.M. 1962. Two new bats from Trinidad, with comments on the status of the genus Mesophylla. Am. Mus. Novit. 2080:1-18.), and Rio Preto (Gregorin & Chiquito 2010GREGORIN, R. & CHIQUITO, E.A. 2010. Revalidation of Promops davisoni Thomas (Molossidae). Chiropt. Neotrop. 16(1):648-660.) in the state of Bahia, and at a not informed site in the south of the state of Piauí (Tavares et al. 2008TAVARES, V.C., GREGORIN, R. & PERACCHI, A.L. 2008. A diversidade de morcegos no Brasil: lista atualizada com comentários sobre distribuição e taxonomia. In Morcegos no Brasil: Biologia, Sistemática, Ecologia e Conservação (S.M. Pacheco, R.V. Marques & C.E.L. Esberárd, eds.). Armazém Digital, Porto Alegre, p.25-60.). The present record extends the geographic distribution of this species to 750 km north (from Lamarão‒BA) and at least 700 km east (from the southeastern border of Piauí). It suggests that Promops nasutus is widely distributed throughout northeastern Brazil, probably occurring in the states of Ceará, Paraíba, Pernambuco, Alagoas, and Sergipe. The low number of records is possibly due to the foraging behavior of the genus Promops, whose species hunt insects in the open space high above the ground or canopy (Schnitzler & Kalko 2001SCHNITZLER, H.-U. & KALKO, E.K.V. 2001. Echolocation by Insect-Eating Bats. BioScience 51(7):557-569.), and are therefore rarely captured by mist-netting at the ground level. The species Peropteryx leucoptera is also poorly recorded in northeastern Brazil; it was observed in Sapé in the state of Paraíba (Feijó & Langguth 2011FEIJÓ, J.A. & LANGGUTH, A. 2011. Lista de Quirópteros da Paraíba, Brasil com 25 novos registros. Chiropt. Neotrop. 17(2):1055-1062.), in Itamaracá (Cruz et al. 2002CRUZ, M.A.O.M., CABRAL, M.C.C., SILVA, L.A.M. & CAMPELO, M.L.C.B. 2002. Diversidade da Mastofauna no Estado de Pernambuco. In Diagnóstico da Biodiversidade de Pernambuco ‒ Volume 2 (M. Tabarelli & J.M.C. Silva, eds.). Secretaria de Ciências, Tecnologia e Meio Ambiente, Recife, p.557-559.) and Formoso (Guerra 1980GUERRA, D.Q. 1980. Peropteryx (Peronymus) leucopterus Peters, 1867 no nordeste do Brasil (Chiroptera – Emballonuridae). Rev. Nordest. Biol. 3(especial):137-139.) in the state of Pernambuco, and in Capela in the state of Sergipe (Mikalauskas et al. 2014MIKALAUSKAS, J.S., ROCHA, P.A., DIAS, D. & PERACCHI, A.L. 2014. Update on the distribution of Peropteryx leucoptera Peters, 1867 (Mammalia, Chiroptera, Emballonuridae): First record for the state of Sergipe, northeastern Brazil. Check List 10(2):402-406.). This species apparently has a disjunct geographic distribution, occurring throughout northern South America and separately in the coastal region of extreme northeastern Brazil (Mikalauskas et al. 2014MIKALAUSKAS, J.S., ROCHA, P.A., DIAS, D. & PERACCHI, A.L. 2014. Update on the distribution of Peropteryx leucoptera Peters, 1867 (Mammalia, Chiroptera, Emballonuridae): First record for the state of Sergipe, northeastern Brazil. Check List 10(2):402-406.). Our record extends the distribution of Peropteryx leucoptera to 110 km north (from Sapé‒PB) in the northeastern region of Brazil, corresponding to the northern limit the of distribution of this species in the Atlantic Forest biome.
Among the bat species previously recorded in Rio Grande do Norte, Desmodus rotundus and Trachops cirrhosus (cited as Trachops sp.) were observed inside caves in the western region of the state in the Caatinga biome (Ferreira et al. 2010FERREIRA, R.L., PROUS, X., BERNARDI, L.F.O. & SOUZA-SILVA, M. 2010. Fauna subterrânea do estado do Rio Grande do Norte: caracterização e impactos. Revista Brasileira de Espeleologia 1(1):25-51.). Therefore, we recorded these bat species for the first time in an Atlantic Forest area in the state of Rio Grande do Norte. The species Artibeus lituratus, Carollia perspicillata, Sturnira lilium, Dermanura cinerea, Glossophaga soricina, and Platyrrhinus lineatus were recorded in Atlantic Forest areas near NFNF (≈ 18‒22 km). Artibeus lituratus, Carollia perspicillata, and Sturnira lilium occur at the Parque Estadual do Jiquí in the municipality of Parnamirim, a 398 hectares protected area that exhibits forest remnants and hydric resources (Farias 2009FARIAS, F.H.C. 2009. Caracterização biológica e zoneamento ambiental do Parque Estadual do Jiquí/RN, Brasil: subsídios ao plano de manejo. Dissertação de mestrado, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa.); Dermanura cinerea, Glossophaga soricina, and Platyrrhinus lineatus were recorded in the Parque Estadual do Jiquí and also in the municipality of Natal (Handley Jr. 1987HANDLEY JR., C.O. 1987. New species of mammals from northern South America: Fruit-eating bats, genus Artibeus Leach. In Studies in Neotropical mammalogy, essays in honor of Philip Hershkovitz (B.D. Patterson & R.M. Timm, eds.). Fieldiana, Zool. Vol. 39, Chicago, p.163-172., Webster 1993WEBSTER, W.D. 1993. Systematics and evolution of bats of the genus Glossophaga. Special Publications of the Museum, Texas Tech University 36:1-184., Varela-Freire 1997VARELA-FREIRE, A.A. 1997. Fauna Potiguar Vol. 1 – A fauna das dunas costeiras da cidade do Natal e do litoral oriental do Rio Grande do Norte. EDUFRN, Natal., Farias 2009FARIAS, F.H.C. 2009. Caracterização biológica e zoneamento ambiental do Parque Estadual do Jiquí/RN, Brasil: subsídios ao plano de manejo. Dissertação de mestrado, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa.). Artibeus planirostris occurs both in the Atlantic Forest and Caatinga biomes in the state of Rio Grande do Norte (Ferreira et al. 2010FERREIRA, R.L., PROUS, X., BERNARDI, L.F.O. & SOUZA-SILVA, M. 2010. Fauna subterrânea do estado do Rio Grande do Norte: caracterização e impactos. Revista Brasileira de Espeleologia 1(1):25-51., Varela-Freire 1997VARELA-FREIRE, A.A. 1997. Fauna Potiguar Vol. 1 – A fauna das dunas costeiras da cidade do Natal e do litoral oriental do Rio Grande do Norte. EDUFRN, Natal., Cordero-Schmidt et al. 2016CORDERO-SCHMIDT, E., MEDEIROS-GUIMARÃES, M., VARGAS-MENA, J.C., CARVALHO, B., FERREIRA, R.L., RODRIGUEZ-HERRERA, B. & VENTICINQUE, E.M. 2016. Are leaves a good option in Caatinga's menu? First record of folivory in Artibeus planirostris (Phyllostomidae) in the semiarid forest, Brazil. Acta Chiropterol. 18(2):489-497., Present study).
Although the NFNF is a relatively small protected area in regeneration surrounded by farms and croplands, it apparently is an important habitat for bats. The bats from NFNF are morphologically and ecologically diverse, including species that feed primarily on fruits (Artibeus planirostris, Artibeus lituratus, Dermanura cinerea, Platyrrhinus lineatus, Sturnira lilium, and Carollia perspicillata), pollen/nectar (Glossophaga soricina and Phyllostomus discolor), arthropods and small vertebrates (Trachops cirrhosis and Phyllostomus hastatus), insects (Peropteryx leucoptera, Myotis lavali, Lasiurus blossevillii, Promops nasutus, and Lophostoma brasiliense), and blood (Desmodus rotundus). Thus, the bats recorded in the present study provide ecosystem services such as seed dispersal, pollination, and control of insect populations in the region of the NFNF. Bats from the family Phyllostomidae corresponded to the largest number of captures, which is in accordance with most inventories in the Neotropics (e.g. Bernard et al. 2001BERNARD, E., ALBERNAZ, A.L. & MAGNUSSON, W.E. 2001. Bat species composition in three localities in the Amazon Basin. Stud. Neotrop. Fauna E. 36(3):177-184., Esbérard et al. 2006ESBÉRARD, C.E.L., JORDÃO-NOGUEIRA, T., LUZ, J.L., MELO, G.G.S., MANGOLIN, R., JUCÁ, N., RAÍCES, D.S.L., ENRICI, M.C. & BERGALLO, H.G. 2006. Morcegos da Ilha Grande, Angra dos Reis, RJ, Sudeste do Brasil. Rev. Bras. Zoocienc. 8(2):147-153., Novaes & Laurindo 2014NOVAES, R.L.M. & LAURINDO, R.D.S. 2014. Morcegos da Chapada do Araripe, nordeste do Brasil. Pap. Avulsos Zool. 54(22):315-328.). This pattern is related both to the high abundance of phyllostomid bats in Brazilian tropical areas and to the selectivity of the mist-netting method, which tends to capture bats that forage near the ground and vegetation (such as fruit-eating and nectar-feeding bats). Further inventories, especially using acoustic surveys and sampling areas further north of the NFNF, might add more species to the present bat list.
Supplementary material
The following online material is available for this article:
Supplementary Material 1: Consensus sequences of a specimen of Carollia perspicillata (Chiroptera, Phyllostomidae), collected as voucher (Mammal Collection of the Federal University of Pernambuco; collection number UFPE 3297) in 2012 at the Nísia Floresta National Forest, Rio Grande do Norte, northeastern Brazil.
Supplementary Material 2: Alignment of consensus sequences of two specimens of Myotis lavali (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae), collected as vouchers (Mammal Collection of the Federal University of Pernambuco; collection numbers UFPE 3191 and 3198) in 2012 at the Nísia Floresta National Forest, Rio Grande do Norte, northeastern Brazil, and sequences from Myotis nigricans, Myotis levis and Myotis lavali.
Appendix 1: List of bat specimens collected as vouchers at the Nísia Floresta National Forest (Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta), state of Rio Grande do Norte, northeastern Brazil, from December 2011 to December 2012. This material is deposited in the Mammal Collection of the Federal University of Pernambuco (Universidade Federal de Pernambuco).
Acknowledgments
We thank Patrícia Pereira da Silva Macêdo, Cláudio José Barbosa Pinto (Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade), and Paulo Roberto Fernandes de Medeiros (Floresta Nacional de Nísia Floresta) for logistical support in the study area.
References
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
2017
History
-
Received
04 Apr 2017 -
Accepted
14 May 2017