Abstracts
Species of sheath-tailed bats in the family Emballonuridae are pantropical in distribution. Ghost bats in the genus Diclidurus (Wied-Neuwied, 1820) comprehend four species that occur in the Neotropical regions of Central and South America. However, distributional records are sparsely documented across this vast area. The objective of this study is to report the first occurrence of D. ingens in Central Brazil, representing a range extension of 850 kilometers.
Chiroptera; Mato Grosso State; geographic distribution; greater ghost bat
Espécies de morcegos da familia Emballonuridae são pantropicais. No gênero Diclidurus (Wied-Neuwied, 1820) quatro espécies tem ocorrência nas Américas Central e do Sul. Os registros de ocorrências dessas espécies são esparsamente documentados ao longo dessa vasta distribuição. O objetivo desse estudo é comunicar a primeira ocorrência de D. ingens para o Brasil Central, representando uma extensão de 850 quilômetros na distribuição de D. ingens para o sul do país.
Chiroptera; Mato Grosso; distribuição geográfica; morcego; insetívoro
SHORT COMMUNICATIONS
The first record of Diclidurus ingens Hernandez-Camacho, 1955 (Emballonuridae) in Central Brazil
Primeiro registro de Diclidurus ingens Hernandez-Camacho, 1955 (Emballonuridae) no Brasil Central
Julio Cesar DalponteI; Ludmilla Moura de Souza AguiarII,* * Autor para correspondência: Ludmilla Moura de Souza Aguiar, e-mail ludmillaaguiar@unb.br
IDepartamento de Ciências Biológicas, Campus de Alta Floresta, Universidade do Estado de Mato Grosso - UNEMAT, CEP 78580-000, Alta Floresta, MT, Brazil
IIDepartamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade de Brasília - UnB, CEP 70910-900, Brasília, DF, Brazil
ABSTRACT
Species of sheath-tailed bats in the family Emballonuridae are pantropical in distribution. Ghost bats in the genus Diclidurus (Wied-Neuwied, 1820) comprehend four species that occur in the Neotropical regions of Central and South America. However, distributional records are sparsely documented across this vast area. The objective of this study is to report the first occurrence of D. ingens in Central Brazil, representing a range extension of 850 kilometers.
Keywords: Chiroptera, Mato Grosso State, geographic distribution, greater ghost bat.
RESUMO
Espécies de morcegos da familia Emballonuridae são pantropicais. No gênero Diclidurus (Wied-Neuwied, 1820) quatro espécies tem ocorrência nas Américas Central e do Sul. Os registros de ocorrências dessas espécies são esparsamente documentados ao longo dessa vasta distribuição. O objetivo desse estudo é comunicar a primeira ocorrência de D. ingens para o Brasil Central, representando uma extensão de 850 quilômetros na distribuição de D. ingens para o sul do país.
Palavras-chave: Chiroptera, Mato Grosso, distribuição geográfica, morcego, insetívoro.
Introduction
Species of sheath-tailed bats in the family Emballonuridae are pantropical in distribution, occurring in Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, the Indian subcontinent, Asia, Australian region, and the New World where they are distributed from northern Mexico through Central America into South America to southern Brazil (Jones & Hood 1993, Hood & Gardner 2007). There are eight genera and 22 species in the monophyletic Neotropical tribe Diclidurini (Lim 2007). This phylogenetic hypothesis is supported by biochemical data (Robbins & Sarich 1988), hyoid morphology (Griffiths & Smith 1991), and molecular sequence data (Lim et al. 2008). Therefore, the unique nasal depressions uniting Diclidurus and Cyttarops are considered a derived morphological synapomorphy within the tribe Diclidurini and not as a separate subfamily as suggested by Jones & Hood (1993) and Hood & Gardner (2007).
The whitish fur pattern present in the majority of Diclidurus has given them the common name of ghost bats (Ceballos & Medellin 1988, Jones & Hoods 1993). All are aerial insectivores that hunt flying insects in open spaces, away from vegetation, in edge spaces near vegetation, or mainly over water (Jung et al. 2007). Within Diclidurus there are four species, namely D. albus, D. ingens, D. isabellus and D. scutatus, that occur South America, except for D. albus, which is also found in middle America (Jones & Hood 1993, Simmons 2005, Hood & Gardner 2007. Within Central Brazil there is only one record of Diclidurus, which was based on a photo and thus not properly identified to species-level (Bezerra & Cunha 2007). The objective of this study is to report the first occurrence and range extension of D. ingens in Central Brazil.
Material and Methods
The new occurrence area is Alta Floresta municipality, which was founded in 1976 in the State of Mato Grosso, Central Brazil. It is 830 km from Cuiabá, the state's capital. Alta Floresta covers 8,947.07 km2 and has 47,236 in habitants, and is one of the cities that has undergone native vegetation modification for economic purposes in what is known as the Deforestation Arc in the Legal Amazon. The climate is tropical with a marked dry season, and daily mean temperature varies from 20 to 38 ºC during the year. Total rainfall is high at 2,750 mm per year. Vegetation is composed of tropical humid rain forest, seasonal forest and cerrado. Urban areas have remnants of secondary non-flooded forest and seasonally flooded forest associated with small water courses.
Results and Discussion
The new record of D. ingens described herein is an adult female that was found dead on June 23, 2007 inside a garage in Alta Floresta (09º 52' 57.52"S e 56º 4' 42.84"W) (Figure 1). The specimen was collected in a suburban area located near a small fragment of remnant forest. It may have been attracted to roosting opportunities in the building, or to insects around the nearby street lamps. Indeed, previous research has found that some bat species thrive in urban areas (e.g., Furlonger et al. 1987, Mantilla-Meluk et al. 2009). The specimen is deposited at the University of Mato Grosso (number LMSA72).
Diclidurus ingens is by far the largest species of the genus with a forearm measuring 70-73 mm. This size character is sufficient to distinguish D. ingens from its congenerics (Ceballos & Medellin 1988, Eisenberg 1989, Peracchi & Nogueira 2007). The fur of D. ingens is white, long and silky. The dorsal fur has no color variation between basal and distal hair extremities, whereas the ventral fur has grayish brown bases that contrast with the otherwise pure white hair (Figure 2). Long white hairs occur on the ventral side of the forearm and on the dorsal side of the wing at the base of first digit. Wings are pinkish due to the blood vessels in the skin membrane. Specimen measurements are presented in Table 1.
The known distribution of D. ingens Hernandez-Camacho 1955 includes its type locality in Puerto Leguizano, Colombia (Jones & Hood 1993), as well as localities in Venezuela (Ojasti & Linares 1971, Handley 1976, Linares & Rivas 2004), Colombia (Mantilla-Meluk et al. 2009) and Guyana (Eisenberg 1989, Jones & Hood 1993, Lim et al. 1999). Pacheco et al. (1995) cite the species in Peru, but with no indication of voucher specimens. In Brazil, this species was previously known from one individual captured in a forest fragment in Alter do Chão, Tapajós River, State of Pará, Central Amazon (Bernard & Fenton 2002). Thus, our specimen represents the second record of this species in Brazil, and the first occurrence of D. ingens for the State of Mato Grosso, Central Brazil. This specimen extends the distribution of D. ingens nearly 850 kilometers southwards, to the southern limit of the Amazon.
The limited information on D. ingens suggests that this species is associated with mature evergreen forest near moist areas and urban areas (Handley 1976, Mantilla-Meluk et al. 2009). In the Brazilian Central Amazon, D. ingens was collected in a fragment of tropical forest surrounded by savanna habitat in the county of Alter do Chão (Bernard & Fenton 2002). Diclidurus ingens is sparsely represented in museums collections (Jones & Hood 1993).
Globally, species of Diclidurus are considered of Least Concern or Data Deficient by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (CSG - IUCN 2007). Diclidurus ingens in Brazil is known from two records, with one found in an urban area and the other in a fragment of Amazon forest. Therefore, given the paucity of records, D. ingens should be considered as Data Deficient or Least Concern in accordance with IUCN guidelines (CSG - IUCN 2007). Further survey work will probably move the species out of the Data Deficient category.
Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful to Claudio Vicenti who gave us the opportunity to learn a little more about a Diclidurus species, and two anonymous referees whose comments improved a lot this note. We are also grateful to Sandra Peters for revising the English version of this manuscript.
Recebido em 22/04/09
Versão reformulada recebida em 07/08/09
Publicado em 01/10/09
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Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
01 Apr 2010 -
Date of issue
Dec 2009
History
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Reviewed
07 Aug 2009 -
Received
22 Apr 2009 -
Accepted
01 Oct 2009