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Journal ArticleDOI

Diet variability of Micronycteris megalotis in pristine and disturbed habitats of Northwestern Ecuador

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TLDR
This study is the first to determine differences not only through time, but also among habitats in the diet of M. megalotis, and suggests that, within the margin of potential preys, there was a level of diet plasticity related to differences in habitat.
Abstract
Feeding strategies in foliage-gleaning bats should be affected by insect availability and the constraints imposed by the environment. Under strong preferences for particular insect prey, habitat should not have an effect on the expected similarities in diet among conspecific bat colonies occupying different environments. We compared the diet of Micronycteris megalotis individuals in two colonies located at different sites in the Andean slopes of northwestern Ecuador, based on insect remains collected at feeding roosts. Our analysis revealed that lepidopterans were extremely abundant in the diet of bats that forage in grasslands (52% of all insect remains), whereas the diet of bats that roost in primary forest consists mostly of coleopterans (85%). Log-linear analyses suggested that Lepidoptera is an influential group determining differences in feeding habits between both colonies, and that there are temporal fluctuations in diet independent of the habitats that were sampled. Analyses of the famil...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Predation on Dung Beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae): A Literature Review

TL;DR: 610 records of predation on dung beetles by 409 species of birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians from around the world are presented, establishing predation as a potentially major factor in the evolution and current behavior and ecology of dung beetle.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Population and Community Ecology.

E. C. Pielou
- 01 Jun 1976 - 
Book ChapterDOI

CHAPTER 16 – Organization, Diversity, and Long-Term Dynamics of a Neotropical Bat Community

TL;DR: For example, this article found that ecomorphologically similar species may be clearly differentiated by behavioral traits such as spatial segregation in habitat use, roost site selection, foraging strategies, and diet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Feeding Ecology of a Temperate Insectivorous Bat (Myotis Velifer)

Thomas H. Kunz
- 01 Jul 1974 - 
TL;DR: Emigration of males from nursery colonies in late spring and early summer and emigration of adult females soon after young were weaned may provide a mechanism to reduce competition for available food.
Journal ArticleDOI

A North Temperate Bat Community: Structure and Prey Populations

TL;DR: Food habits and food partitioning were investigated in a North Temperate insectivorous bat community and analysis of fecal material showed a differential utilization of moths and beetles—the two groups of insects that generally contribute the greatest to diets of insectivory bats.
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