Food items of Macrotus waterhousii (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae) in central Mexico

Autores/as

  • Oscar Sánchez
  • Don E. Wilson Division of Mammals, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA.

Palabras clave:

diet, Estado de México, insectivory, Macrotus waterhousii, Querétaro.

Resumen

Macrotus waterhousii is a phyllostomid bat whose diet is poorly known, particularly in semiarid and temperate central Mexico. In this work additional information is reported from food remains discarded by this bat, including taxonomic composition, frequencies and size range of consumed insects; the assessment of a prediction on prey hardness of food insects, at the ordinal level; relative energy reward of insect prey in the sample; a comparison of the composition of the food sample from the arid study locality against one from a subtropical-temperate site; and brief comments on the known ecological importance of particular prey in the arid site. A sample of insect food remains discarded by Macrotus waterhousii bulleri, was recovered from under a roost in semiarid northern Querétaro, Mexico. The taxonomic identity, estimated relative abundance, size, hardness, and ecological relations of prey species in the sample were studied and results were compared with reference to feeding ecology. A comparison of the data with available information on food taken by Macrotus waterhousii mexicanus in temperate-subtropical central Mexico was made. Information on the importance of the most relevant identified insects was extracted from literature and analyzed. In Querétaro, Lepidoptera, Hymenoptera, and Coleoptera were frequent; moths dominated but, as a single species, the (winged) ant, Atta mexicana was most frequent. Nocturnal insects were frequent; diurnal ones may have been gleaned at night. A sample from Estado de México featured Orthoptera, Coleoptera, and Lepidoptera. Wingspan range of frequent prey in Querétaro was 25-80 mm, but moths over 70 mm were over one fifth of the sample. Prey hardness estimation was similar to that for Macrotus californicus. Some insects identified are of ecologic and agricultural relevance. Insects known to be seasonally abundant in the environment were also abundant in the sample, presumably captured according to that availability. However this bat, aside from eating insects of moderate size in proportion to its jaw size, is also capable of capturing large moths and these may represent a significant energy intake. Most insects are nocturnal species. The taxonomic composition of the food samples from both areas suggests that M. waterhousii (sensu lato) may be mostly an opportunistic predator. Local insect fauna composition and dynamics may be hypothesized to influence food taken by M. waterhousii. Several insect species consumed by this bat in semiarid Querétaro have crucial roles in the ecology of arid land vegetation, as well as some economic importance for agriculture as pests.

Citas

Acuña, A. M., L. Caso, M. M. Aliphat, and C. H. Vergara. 2011. Edible insects as part of the traditional food system of the Popoloca town of Los Reyes Metzontla, Mexico. Journal of Ethnobiology 31:150–169.

Aguilar-Ortigoza, C. A. 1994. La vegetación de la zona núcleo del parque Sierra de Nanchititla. Revista de la Escuela de Ciencias de la Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México 4:6–16.

Anderson, S. 1969. Macrotus waterhousii. Mammalian Species 1:1–4.

Ball, E. D., E. R. Tinkham, R. Flock, and C. T. Vorhies. 1942. The grasshoppers and other Orthoptera of Arizona. Arizona Agricultural Experimental Station, Technical Bulletin 93:255–373.

Bantill, J. C., and M. A. Brusven. 1973. Food habits and ecology of grasshoppers in the Seven Devils Mountains and Salmon River Breaks of Idaho. Melanderia 12:1–21.

Barboza-Eguiluz, C., and A. Bernal-Jiménez. 1992. Estudio preliminar de la dieta de Macrotus waterhousii en la Reserva Ecológica de Nanchititla, Tejupilco, Estado de México. Resúmenes del 3er. Encuentro regional de Flora y Fauna de la Región Centro-Sur de México. Cuernavaca, Morelos.

Beerwinkle, K. R., J. D. López, J. A. Witz, P. G. Schleider, R. S. Eyster, and P. D. Lingren. 1994. Seasonal radar and meteorological observations associated with nocturnal insect flight at altitudes to 900 m. Environmental Entomology 223:676–683.

Bell, G. P. 1985. The sensory basis of prey location by the California leaf-nosed bat Macrotus californicus (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae). Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 16:343–347.

Bell, G. P., G. A. Bartholomew, and K. A. Nagy. 1986. The roles of energetics, water economy, foraging behavior, and geothermal refugia in the distribution of the bat, Macrotus californicus. Journal of Comparative Physiology, B 156:441–450.

Bell, G. P., and M. B. Fenton. 1986. Visual acuity, sensitivity and binocularity in a gleaning insectivorous bat, Macrotus californicus (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae). Animal Behavior 34:409–414.

Bug Guide Group. 2014. Identification, Images, & Information For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin For the United States & Canada. Hosted by the Iowa State University. http://bugguide.net/node/view/15740. Consulted: January 20, 2015.

Brown, J. W., and J. P. Donohue. 1989. The Sphingidae (Lepidoptera) of Baja California, Mexico. Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 43:184–209.

CONABIO. 2012. Portal de Geoinformación. Sistema Nacional de Información sobre Biodiversidad. Comisión Nacional para el Conocimiento y Uso de la Biodiversidad. http://www.conabio.gob.mx/informacion/gis/. Consulted: January 26, 2016.

Deloach, C. J., and J. P. Cuda. 1994. Host range of the mesquite cutworm, Melipotis indomita (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), a potential biocontrol agent for mesquite (Prosopis spp.). Biological Control 4:38–44.

Dobson, G. E. 1878. Catalogue of the Chiroptera in the collection of the British Museum. British Museum (Natural History). London, United Kindom.

Dunkle, S. W., and J. J. Belwood. 1982. Bat depredation on Odonata. Odonatologica 11:225–229.

Emrich, M. A., E. L. Clare, W. O. C. Symondson, S. E. Koenig, and M. B. Fenton. 2013. Resource partitioning by insectivorous bats in Jamaica. Molecular Ecology 23:3648–3656.

Flint, M. L. 1985. Corn earworm, Heliothis zea. Pp. 51-55 in Integrated Pest Management for Cole crops and Lettuce. University of California Publications 3307. Oakland, EE. UU.

Freeman, P. W. 1981. Correspondence of food habits and morphology in insectivorous bats. Journal of Mammalogy 62:166–173.

Gardner, A. L. 1977. Feeding habits. Pp. 293-350 in Biology of bats of the New World Family Phyllostomidae. Part II (Baker, R. J., J. Knox Jones, Jr., and D. C. Carter, eds.). Special Publications. The Museum, Texas Tech University 13:1–364.

Griffiths, D. 1980. Foraging costs and relative prey size. The American Naturalist 116:743–752.

Hammer, Ø. 2015. PAST3 Paleontological Statistics Reference Manual. Natural History Museum, University of Oslo. Oslo, Norway.

Hewitt, G. B. 1977. Review of forage losses caused by rangeland grasshoppers. USDA Miscellaneous Publications 1348:1–24.

Hoffmeister, D. F. 1986. Mammals of Arizona. The University of Arizona Press and the Arizona Game and Fish Department. Tucson, EE. UU.

Hoy, R. R. 1992. The evolution of hearing in insects as an adaptation to predation by bats. Pp. 115–129 in The Evolutionary Biology of Hearing (Webster, D., R. Fay, and A. Popper, eds.). The Evolutionary Biology of Hearing. Springer Verlag. New York, EE. UU.

Jones, J. K., Jr., and D. C. Carter. 1976. Annotated Checklist, with Keys to Subfamilies and Genera. Pp. 7–38 in Biology of bats of the New World family Phyllostomatidae. Part I. (Baker, R. J., J. K. Jones, Jr., and D. C. Carter, eds.). Special Publications No. 10. The Museum, Texas Tech University.

Magurran, A. E., and B. J. McGill. 2011. Biological Diversity: Frontiers in measurement and assessment. Oxford University Press. Oxford, United Kindom.

McCarthy, T. J. 1982. Bats records from the Caribbean lowlands of El Peten, Guatemala. Journal of Mammalogy 63:683–685.

McCracken, G. F. 1996. Bats aloft: a study of high-altitude feeding. Bat Conservation International Newsletter 14:7–10.

Medellín, R. A., H. T. Arita, and O. Sánchez. 1997. Identificación de los murciélagos de México. Clave de campo. Publicaciones especiales No. 2, Asociación Mexicana de Mastozoología, A. C. Ciudad de México, México.

Mintzer, A. 1979. Foraging activity of the Mexican leafcutting ant Atta mexicana (F. Smith) in a Sonoran Desert habitat (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Insectes Sociaux (Paris) 26:364-–372.

Murray, K. L., E. Fraser, C. Davy, T. H. Fleming, and M. B. Fenton. 2009. Characterization of the Echolocation Calls of Bats from Exuma, Bahamas. Acta Chiropterologica 11:415–424.

Osburn, W. 1865. Notes on the Chiroptera of Jamaica. Proceedings of Zoology of Society of London 1865:61–85.

Ross, A. 1967. Ecological aspects of the food habits of insectivorous bats. Proceedings Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology 1:205–263.

Schondube, J. E., L. G. Herrera-M., and C. Martínez del Rio. 2001. Diet and the evolution of digestion and renal function in phyllostomid bats. Zoology 104:59–73.


Segura-Trujillo, C. A., W. Z. Lidiker, Jr., and S. T. Álvarez-Castañeda. 2016. New perspectives on trophic guilds of arthropodivorous bats in North and Central America. Journal of Mammalogy 97: DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyv212.

Sih, A., and B. Christensen. 2001. Optimal diet theory: when does it work, and when and why does it fail? Animal Behaviour 61:379–390.

Simmons, N. B. 2005. Order Chiroptera. Pp. 312–529 in Mammal species of the World: a taxonomic and geographic reference, Third Edition, Volume 1 (Wilson, D. E., and D. M Reeder, eds.). Johns Hopkins University Press. Baltimore, EE. UU.

Smith, M. R. 1963. Notes on the leaf-cutting ants Atta sp. of the United States and Mexico. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 65:299–302.

Tuskes, P. M., J. P. Tuttle, and M. M. Collins. 1996. The wild silk moths of North America. Comstock Publications Associates of Cornell University Press. Ithaca, EE. UU.

Villa-Ramírez, B. 1967. Los Murciélagos de México. Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Ciudad de México, México.

Williams, C. B. 1935. The times of activity of certain nocturnal insects, chiefly Lepidoptera as indicated by a light trap. Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London 83:523–555.

Wilson, D. E. 1973. Bat faunas: a trophic comparison. Systematic Zoology 22:14–29.

Woodruff, R. E., and B. M. Beck. 1989. The scarab beetles of Florida (USA) (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) Part II. The May or June beetles (Genus Phyllophaga). Arthropods of Florida and Neighboring land areas. Gainesville, EE. UU.

Zamudio, S. 1984. La vegetación de la Cuenca del Río Estórax, en el Estado de Querétaro y sus relaciones fitogeográficas. Tesis profesional, Facultad de Ciencias, UNAM. Ciudad de México, México.

Publicado

2016-01-28

Número

Sección

Articles