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Latitudinal gradients in the ecology of New World bats
by
Alroy, John
in
Abundance
/ Annual precipitation
/ Bats
/ biocenosis
/ Biota
/ Body mass
/ Chao 1
/ Chiroptera
/ Diet
/ Environmental factors
/ Factor analysis
/ Feeding
/ feeding guilds
/ feeding methods
/ Frugivores
/ fruits
/ geographical distribution
/ Guilds
/ habitat destruction
/ Inventories
/ landscapes
/ latitudinal diversity gradients
/ Nectar
/ nectar feeding
/ Neotropics
/ New World bats
/ Offsets
/ Phyllostomidae
/ Radiation
/ Regression analysis
/ Research Papers
/ Seasonal variations
/ Species richness
/ temperate zones
/ Temperature
/ variance
2019
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Latitudinal gradients in the ecology of New World bats
by
Alroy, John
in
Abundance
/ Annual precipitation
/ Bats
/ biocenosis
/ Biota
/ Body mass
/ Chao 1
/ Chiroptera
/ Diet
/ Environmental factors
/ Factor analysis
/ Feeding
/ feeding guilds
/ feeding methods
/ Frugivores
/ fruits
/ geographical distribution
/ Guilds
/ habitat destruction
/ Inventories
/ landscapes
/ latitudinal diversity gradients
/ Nectar
/ nectar feeding
/ Neotropics
/ New World bats
/ Offsets
/ Phyllostomidae
/ Radiation
/ Regression analysis
/ Research Papers
/ Seasonal variations
/ Species richness
/ temperate zones
/ Temperature
/ variance
2019
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Do you wish to request the book?
Latitudinal gradients in the ecology of New World bats
by
Alroy, John
in
Abundance
/ Annual precipitation
/ Bats
/ biocenosis
/ Biota
/ Body mass
/ Chao 1
/ Chiroptera
/ Diet
/ Environmental factors
/ Factor analysis
/ Feeding
/ feeding guilds
/ feeding methods
/ Frugivores
/ fruits
/ geographical distribution
/ Guilds
/ habitat destruction
/ Inventories
/ landscapes
/ latitudinal diversity gradients
/ Nectar
/ nectar feeding
/ Neotropics
/ New World bats
/ Offsets
/ Phyllostomidae
/ Radiation
/ Regression analysis
/ Research Papers
/ Seasonal variations
/ Species richness
/ temperate zones
/ Temperature
/ variance
2019
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Journal Article
Latitudinal gradients in the ecology of New World bats
2019
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Overview
Aim The aim was to quantify gradients in local richness levels, feeding strategies and body mass distributions in bats and relate them to environmental variation and habitat disturbance. Location The New World. Time period Present day. Major taxa studied Bats. Methods I assembled 152 local species inventories from the published literature, which include 245 species, along with body mass measurements and dietary categorizations. I quantified species richness using the Chao 1 extrapolator, obtained mean mass values for the inventories and computed proportions of species and of individuals belonging to different feeding guilds. I reduced the dimensonality of environmental variables using factor analysis and regressed richness values upon the factor scores. Results South of the Tropic of Cancer, bats exhibit sharp increases in local diversity, the abundance of frugivores and nectarivores, and mean body mass. These offsets are driven by increases in the richness and abundance of the leaf‐nosed bats (Phyllostomidae). Richness steeply declines near the Tropic of Capricorn, but the other variables do not trend strongly at this point. Most of the variance is explained by mean annual temperature, temperature seasonality and precipitation. There is no direct evidence that richness is lower in disturbed landscapes. Main conclusions The great radiation of phyllostomids in the Neotropics has created a uniquely rich biota. The reason that phyllostomids are now absent from the northern temperate zone might be that they are mostly frugivores or nectarivores. Therefore, they have prospered only in regions that provide fruit and nectar year‐round. Thus, biotic interactions might be the immediate cause of the latitudinal diversity gradient in New World bats. If so, then the biogeographical break is driven by environmental factors and is not a historical artefact. These results suggest that a more nuanced consideration of latitudinal gradients will prove to be helpful when it comes to studying many taxonomic groups.
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