The early history of netting bats
Palabras clave:
Chiroptera, Japanese mist net, mist nets, Neotropical bats, Neotropics, netting bats, netting birdsResumen
The Japanese-style mist net that mammalogists and ornithologists use extensively came into regular use by scientists in the 1950s and early 1960s and its use in capturing bats and birds unharmed is now worldwide. The history of the innovative mist net, which was originally made of silk and brought to the U.S. by ornithologist Oliver L. Austin, Jr., shortly after WW II, was reviewed recently by Genoways et al. (2020). However, the mist net was not the first net to be used for the scientific capture of bats and birds—that was the Italian trammel net.Citas
AUSTIN, O. L., JR. 1947. Mist netting for birds in Japan. General Headquarters, Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers, Natural Resources Section Report, Tokyo 88:1–24.
CHIGI, F. 1933. Methods of capturing birds at the ornithological station Castel Fusano, Italy. Bird-Banding: A Journal of Ornithological Investigation 4:59–67 (translated into English from Italian by Margaret Morse Nice, a prominent ornithologist of the era).
CLENCH, M. H., AND J. W. HARDY. 1989. In Memoriam: Oliver L. Austin, Jr. Auk 106:706–723.
DALQUEST, W. W. 1954. Netting bats in tropical Mexico. Transactions of Kansas Academy of Science 57:1–10.
GENOWAYS, H. H., S. B. MCLAREN, AND R. M. TIMM. 2020. Innovations that changed mammalogy: the Japanese mist net. Journal of Mammalogy 101:627–629.
HERSHKOVITZ, P. 1987. A history of the recent mammalogy of the Neotropical region from 1492 to 1850. Pp. 11–98 in Studies in Neotropical mammalogy: essays in honor of Philip Hershkovitz (Patterson, B. D., and R. M. Timm, eds.). Fieldiana: Zoology (New Series) 39:viii + 1–506.
KUNZ, T. H. 2005. Becoming a mammalogist: on the wings of heroes. Pp. 141–170 in Going afield: lifetime experiences in exploration, science, and the biology of mammals (Phillips, C. J., and C. Jones, eds.). Museum of Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas.
MACPHERSON, H. A. 1897. A history of fowling. David Douglas. Edinburgh, Scotland.
MURIE, A. 1935. Mammals from Guatemala and British Honduras. Miscellaneous Publications of the Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan 26:1–30.
VAN TYNE, J. 1933. The trammel net as a means of collecting bats. Journal of Mammalogy 14:145–146.
VAN TYNE, J. 1935. The birds of northern Petén, Guatemala. Miscellaneous Publications of the Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan 27:1–46.
Descargas
Publicado
Número
Sección
Licencia
La revista THERYA, con base en su política de acceso abierto, permite descargar en forma gratuita el contenido completo de la revista en formato digital. También autoriza al autor a colocar el artículo en el formato publicado por la revista en su sitio web personal, o en un repositorio de acceso abierto, distribuir copias del artículo publicado en formato electrónico o impreso a quien él considere conveniente, y reutilizar parte o la totalidad del artículo en sus artículos o libros futuros, dando los créditos correspondientes. Se utiliza la licencia Creative Commons CC BY-NC-SD. La que se especifica en las publicaciones.