Foraging ecology of three species of hipposiderid bats in tropical rainforest in north-east Australia
Chris R. Pavey and Chris J. Burwell
Wildlife Research 27(3) 283 - 287
Abstract
We studied the foraging ecology of three
species of hipposiderid bats –
Hipposideros diadema (mean forearm length: 82 mm),
H. cervinus (47 mm) and H. ater
(41 mm) – in tropical, lowland rainforest in north-east Queensland,
Australia. H. diadema foraged by perching within gaps
and flying out to intercept slow-flying insects. The two smaller species
typically foraged during flight, in undisturbed forest and gaps, and captured
insects by aerial hawking. Seven arthropod taxa were identified in faeces of
H. cervinus, with Coleoptera and Lepidoptera being
present in most faeces. Percentage volume of moth scales was generally low: 35
of 60 faeces had a volume of <10%, whereas all faeces
(n = 60) of H. ater had a
moth scale volume of >90%. No other taxa were frequently present in
faeces of H. ater. Differences in foraging ecology
between H. diadema and the smaller species were related
to its large size and low manoeuvrability. The dietary differences we found
between H. ater and H. cervinus
were unexpected, because both species have high-frequency echolocation calls
(160–164 and 144–145 kHz, respectively), which suggested that both
would capture predominantly moths. Our data show that pairs of hipposiderid
species with only small differences in call frequencies may consume different
prey taxa; however, we contend that dietary variation is more likely to result
from differences in body size, wing morphology, and tooth, jaw, and cranial
morphology.
Full text doi:10.1071/WR99054
© CSIRO 2000





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