Activity Patterns, Habitat Use, and Prey Selection by Some African Insectivorous Bats
- 1 June 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Biotropica
- Vol. 9 (2) , 73-85
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2387662
Abstract
Between Jan. 10 and Feb. 14, 1976, activity patterns, habitat use and selection of prey by some insectivorous bats were studied in mopane and brachystegia deciduous woodlands in the Sengwa Wild Life Research Area of the Hostes Nicolle Institute of Wild Life Research in Rhodesia, using ultrasonic detectors, light tags and analysis of insect remains from bat feces. Some bats were active throughout the night, in part feeding, but in general bat activity was reduced from around midnight until just before dawn. Rain tended to suppress bat activity, although the timing of the rain was important. Since insects remained active in the rain, the responses of the bats to rain probably reflected problems of thermoregulation associated with wet fur, and the effect of multiple echoes and attenuation of high-frequency sound on echolocation. Bright moonlight suppressed bat activity and altered the foraging patterns of light-tagged Scotophilus viridis, Eptesicus capensis and Nycticeius schlieffeni which on dark nights fed above the canopy and along the grassland sides of meadow/woodland interfaces, but which were mainly restricted within the woodland on bright moonlight nights. Since a pair of bat hawks (Macheiramphus alcinus) nested near the study area and fed mainly on bats, the bats'' responses to moonlight are probably predator-avoidance behaviors. S. viridus (15-20 g), E. capensis (5-6 g), and N. schlieffeni (5-6 g) appeared to feed on concentrations of insects and responded quickly to aggregations of insect around lights. These bats fed mainly on beetles (S. viridis, 85%; E. capensis, 68%; N. schlieffeni, 72%), although E. capensis also took moths (18.5%) and N. schlieffeni took flies (19%). Other insectivorous bats in the study area fed mainly on moths (Hipposideros caffer, Laephotis angolensis, Glauconycieris Variegata) or beetles (S. nigrita), or both (Rhinolophus hildebrandti, Pipistrellus nanus). Data for some insectivorous bats from the vicinity of Salisbury, Rhodesia, indicated a similar separation for some bats (moths, Nycteris thebaica, R. landeri; beetles, R. clivosus) in addition to 2 spp. of Miniopterus which took mainly aquatic Diptera. The data with those from other works, are used to illustrate partitioning of insect prey by the species of bats known to occur in the Sengwa Wild Life Research Area.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: