Antrozous pallidus: Arroyo-Cabrales, J. & de Grammont, P.C.

Author(s):  
Keyword(s):  
1981 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 795 ◽  
Author(s):  
John W. Hermanson ◽  
J. Scott Altenbach

PeerJ ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. e6065
Author(s):  
Nicholas J. Czaplewski ◽  
Katrina L. Menard ◽  
William D. Peachey

The pallid bat (Antrozous pallidus) is a species of western North America, inhabiting ecoregions ranging from desert to oak and pine forest. They are primarily insectivorous predators on large arthropods that occasionally take small vertebrate prey, and are at least seasonally omnivorous in certain parts of their geographic range where they take nectar from cactus flowers and eat cactus fruit pulp and seeds. Until recently, mesquite bugs were primarily tropical-subtropical inhabitants of Mexico and Central America but have since occupied the southwestern United States where mesquite trees occur. Using a noninvasive method, we investigated the bats’ diet at the Cienega Creek Natural Preserve, Arizona, by collecting food parts discarded beneath three night roosts in soil-piping cavities in a mesquite bosque. We also made phenological and behavioral observations of mesquite bugs, Thasus neocalifornicus, and their interactions with the mesquite trees. We determined that the bats discarded inedible parts of 36 species in 8 orders of mainly large-bodied and nocturnal insects below the night-roosts. In addition, one partial bat wing represents probable predation upon a phyllostomid bat, Choeronycteris mexicana. About 17 of the insect taxa are newly reported as prey for pallid bats, as is the bat C. mexicana. The majority of culled insect parts (88%) were from adult mesquite bugs. Mesquite bug nymphs did not appear in the culled insect parts. After breeding in late summer, when nighttime low temperatures dropped below 21 °C, the adult bugs became immobile on the periphery of trees where they probably make easy prey for opportunistic foliage-gleaning pallid bats. Proximity of night-roosts to mesquite bug habitat probably also enhances the bats’ exploitation of these insects in this location.


1960 ◽  
Vol XXXIV (IV) ◽  
pp. 586-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walter W. Sadler ◽  
Walter S. Tyler

ABSTRACT Hibernation was induced in groups of the bats Antrozous pallidus (family Vespertilionidae) and Tadarida mexicana (family Molassidae) by holding them for various periods of time in an ambient temperature of 4° C while control groups were held at 22° C and since the bat Macrotus californicus will not hibernate, groups of these were held at 22° C and 37° C to test for differences in thyroid activity as measured by its uptake of 131I over a 24 hour period. It was found that, in contradistinction to reports on other species, the thyroid of Antrozous and Tadarida bats is active during periods of low metabolic levels encountered in hibernation, as evidenced by its uptake of iodine, although the log uptake shows a linear regression with time in hibernation. Season, sex, sexual activity, species, ambient temperature, and length of time in a given ambient temperature were each found to be responsible for significant differences in the percentage uptake of 131I. The activity of the thyroid of the Macrotus bats was found not to be responsive to changes in ambient temperature over the range employed.


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