Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
1 June 2004 Observations on the Role of Frugivorous Bats as Seed Dispersers in Costa Rican Secondary Humid Forests
Jorge E. Lopez, Christopher Vaughan
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The role of frugivorous bats as seed dispersers in humid neotropical tropical forests was evaluated between January and August 1995. Thirty germination trials were set up using seeds defecated by six bat species. Seeds of Piper multiplinervium and Ficus insipida, defecated by Carollia brevicauda and Artibeus jamaicensis, respectively, showed significantly higher germination percentages than seeds not ingested by bats. Of seven seed species regurgitated by bats, only Markea neurantha showed significant increases in percent germination compared to seeds not ingested by bats. Of 19 tents and three active feeding roosts found, 12 tents and three feeding roosts were in primary forest, while six tents were in abandoned plantations. For tent construction, four bat species used six plant species. Fifty-two percent of seeds found under tents and feeding roosts were from secondary forest species. Twenty-two percent of seed species in fecal samples from netted bats in three secondary forest types were primary forest species. Bats in our study dispersed seeds between different habitat types.

LITERATURE CITED

1.

F. J. Bonaccorso 1979. Foraging and reproductive ecology in a Panamanian bat community. Bulletin Florida State Museum Biological Science, 24: 359–408. Google Scholar

2.

A. Estrada , and R. Coates-Estrada . 1984. Fruit eating and seed dispersal by howling monkeys (Alouatta palliata) in the tropical rain forest of Las Tuxtlas, Mexico. American Journal of Primatology, 6: 79–81. Google Scholar

3.

T. H. Fleming 1986. Opportunism versus specialization: the evolution of feeding strategies in frugivorous bats. Pp. 105–118, in Frugivores and seed dispersal ( A. Estrada and H. Fleming , eds.). Dr W. Junk, The Hague, 392 pp. Google Scholar

4.

T. H. Fleming 1988. The short-tailed fruit bat. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 365 pp. Google Scholar

5.

T. H. Fleming , and E. R. Heithaus . 1981. Frugivorous bats, seed shadows and the structure of tropical forests. Biotropica, 13 (supplement): 45–53. Google Scholar

6.

T. H. Fleming , C. F. Williams , F. J. Bonaccorso , and L. H. Herbst . 1985. Phenology, seed dispersal, and colonization in Muntingia calabura, a neotropical pioneer tree. American Journal of Botany, 72: 383–391. Google Scholar

7.

G. W. Frankie , H. G. Baker , and P. A. Opler . 1974. Comparative phenological studies of trees in tropical wet and dry forests in the lowlands of Costa Rica. Journal of Ecology, 62: 881–919. Google Scholar

8.

A. Gardner 1977. Feeding habits. Pp. 293–350, in Biology of bats in the New World family Phyllostomatidae. Part II ( R. J. Baker , J. K. Jones , and D. C. Carter , eds.). Special Publications of the Museum Texas Tech University, Lubbock, 364 pp. Google Scholar

9.

C. O. Handley Jr ., A. L. Gardner , and D. E. Wilson 1991. Food habits. In Demography and natural history of the common fruit bat, Artibeus jamaicensis, on Barro Colorado Island, Panamá ( C. O. Handley Jr ., D. E. Wilson , and A. L. Gardner , eds.). Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, 511: 141–146. Google Scholar

10.

G. S. Hartshorn , and B. E. Hammel . 1994. Vegetation types and floristic patterns. Pp. 73–89, in La Selva: ecology and natural history of a neotropical rain forest ( L. A. Mcdade , K. S. Bawa , H. E. Hespenheide , and G. S. Hartshorn , eds.). The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 466 pp. Google Scholar

11.

E. R. Heithaus , T. H. Fleming , and P. A. Opler . 1975. Foraging patterns and resource utilization in seven species of bats in a seasonal tropical forest. Ecology, 56: 841–854. Google Scholar

12.

H. F. Howe , and J. Smallwood . 1982. Ecology of seed dispersal. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 13: 201–228. Google Scholar

13.

H. F. Howe , and G. A. Vanderkerckhove . 1981. Removal of wild nutmeg (Virola surinamensis) crops by birds. Ecology, 62: 1093–1106. Google Scholar

14.

D. J. Howell , and D. Burch . 1974. Food habits of some Costa Rican bats. Revista de Biología Tropical, 21: 284–334. Google Scholar

15.

D. H. Janzen 1970. Herbivores and the number of tree species in the tropical forests. American Naturalist, 104: 501–528. Google Scholar

16.

D. H. Janzen 1978. Seed predation by animals. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 2: 501–508. Google Scholar

17.

D. H. Janzen 1983. Dispersal of seeds by vertebrate guts. Pp. 232–261, in Coevolution. ( D. J. Futuyama and M. Slatkin , eds.). Sinauer Associates Inc., Sunderland, 555 pp.  Google Scholar

18.

D. J. Levey , T. C. Moermond , and J. S. Denslow . 1994. Frugivory: an overview. Pp. 282–294, in La Selva: ecology and natural history of a neotropical rain forest ( L. A. Mcdade , K. S. Bawa , H. E. Hespenheide , and G. S. Hartshorn , eds.). The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 466 pp. Google Scholar

19.

D. Lieberman , J. B. Hall , M. D. Swaine , and M. Lieberman . 1979. Seed dispersal by baboons in the Shai Hills, Ghana. Ecology, 60: 65–73. Google Scholar

20.

J. E. Lopez 1996. Habitos alimentarios de murcielagos frugivoros y su participacion en la dispersion de semillas en bosques secundarios humedos de Costa Rica. M.Sc. Thesis, Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica, 73 pp. Google Scholar

21.

L. A. McDade , and G. S. Hartshorn . 1994. La Selva Biological Station. Pp. 6–14, in La Selva: ecology and natural history of a neotropical rain forest ( L. A. Mcdade , K. S. Bawa , H. E. Hespenheide , and G. S. Hartshorn , eds.). The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 466 pp. Google Scholar

22.

D. McKey 1975. The ecology of coevolved seed dispersal systems. Pp. 159–191, in Coevolution of animals and plants ( L. E. Gilbert and P. H. Raven , eds.). University of Texas Press, Austin, 246 pp. Google Scholar

23.

D. W. Morrison 1978. Foraging ecology and energetics of the frugivorous bat Artibeus jamaicensis. Ecology, 59: 716–723. Google Scholar

24.

P. A. Opler , G. W. Frankie , and H. G. Baker . 1980. Comparative phenological studies of treelet and shrub species in tropical wet and dry forests in the lowlands of Costa Rica. Journal of Ecology, 68: 167–188. Google Scholar

25.

A. Orozco-Segovia , C. Vasquez , M. A. Armella , and N. Correa . 1985. Interacciones entre una poblacion de murcielagos de la especie Artibeus jamaicensis y la vegetacion del area circundante, en la region de los Tuxtlas, Veracruz. Pp. 365–377, in Investigaciones sobre la regeneracion de selvas altas en Veracruz ( A. Gomezpompa and P. Del Amo , eds.). Editorial Alhamba, Mexico D.F., 400 pp. Google Scholar

26.

J. M. Palmeirim , D. L. Govchov , and S. Stolenson . 1989. Trophic structure of a neotropical frugivore community: Is there competition between birds and bats? Oecologia, 79: 403–411. Google Scholar

27.

M. Quijada , and J. R. Salinas . 1981. Normas para las pruebas de semillas forestales. Universidad de los Andes, Merida, 13 pp. Google Scholar

28.

J. F Rohlf. . 1985. Biomstat — package of statistical programs to accompany the text of Biometry. State University of New York, New York, 83 pp. Google Scholar

29.

R. L. Sanford , P. Paaby , J. C. Luvall , and E. Phillips . 1994. Climate, geomorphology, and aquatic systems. Pp 19–33, in La Selva: ecology and natural history of a neotropical rain forest ( L. A. Mcdade , K. S. Bawa , H. E. Hespenheide , and G. S. Hartshorn , eds.). The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 466 pp. Google Scholar

30.

R. R. Sokal , and F. J. Rohlf . 1981. Biometry. Freeman, New York, 859 pp. Google Scholar

31.

Timm R. M. 1987. Tent construction by bats of the genera Artibeus and Uroderma . Pp. 187–212, in Studies in neotropical mammalogy. Essays in honor of Philip Hershkovitz ( B. D. Petterson and R. M. Timm , eds.). Fieldiana: Zoology (N.S.), 1–506. Google Scholar

32.

C. Vazquez-Yanes 1977. Germination of a pioneer tree (Trema guineensis Ficahlo) from Equatorial Africa. Turrialba, 27: 301–302. Google Scholar

33.

C. Vazquez-Yanes 1981. Germinacion de dos especies de Tiliaceas arboreas de la vegetacion secundaria tropical: Belotia campbellii y Heliocarpus doneil-smithii. Turrialba, 31: 81–83. Google Scholar

34.

C. Vazquez-Yanes , and H. Smith . 1982. Phytochrome control of seed germination in the tropical rain forest pioneer trees Cecropia obtusifolia and Piper auritum and its ecological significance. New Phytology, 92: 477–485. Google Scholar

35.

C. Vazquez-Yanes , and A. Orozco-Segovia . 1986. Dispersal of seeds by animals: effect of light-controlled dormancy in Cecropia obtusifolia. Pp. 71–77, in Frugivores and seed dispersal ( A. Estrada and T. H. Fleming , eds). W. Junk Publishers, Dordrecht, 392 pp. Google Scholar
© Museum and Institute of Zoology PAS
Jorge E. Lopez and Christopher Vaughan "Observations on the Role of Frugivorous Bats as Seed Dispersers in Costa Rican Secondary Humid Forests," Acta Chiropterologica 6(1), 111-119, (1 June 2004). https://doi.org/10.3161/001.006.0109
Received: 11 February 2003; Accepted: 1 April 2004; Published: 1 June 2004
KEYWORDS
Costa Rica
frugivorous bats
germination
La Selva Biological Station
seed dispersal
Back to Top