Title
Bats diversity and composition in montane forest of Pampa Hermosa National Sanctuary, Junin, Peru
Other title
Diversidad y composicién de murciélagos en los bosques montanos del Santuario Nacional Pampa Hermosa, Junín, Perú
Date Issued
2016
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos
Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos
Publisher(s)
Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Fac. Of Biological Sci.
Abstract
The Pampa Hermosa national sanctuary (SNPH) is an important area because it preserves relict montane forests of the Peruvian central Yungas where studies of bat's diversity are scarce. Our objective was to document the species diversity and composition of bats communities in Pampa Hermosa and make comparisons with other Peruvian Yungas forests ranging between 1200-2000 m. We sampled four localities: Podocarpus (1900 m), Los Cedros (1600 m), Santa Isabel (1450 m) and Nueva Italia (1370 m) by using 560 mist-nights. Our results show 36 species distributed in families Phyllostomidae (30 spp.), Vespertilionidae (5 spp.) and Molossidae (1 sp.). According to the estimators Chao 1 and Chao 2, we found 77% and 42% of the species in the study area, respectively. The rank-abundance curves point to Carollia brevicauda as the most abundant in all localities; abundance of Vampyressa melissa is highlighted in Los Cedros and Podocarpus. There is a significant inverse relationship between species richness and elevation (r =-0.90, P = 0.014). Altitudes of 1200-1600 m show a species richness (35 spp.) higher than other Yungas forests, and a greater similarity to those in Manu (Ij = 0.59); on the other hand, richness at altitudes of 1600-2000 (14 spp.) was the second highest after Manu (21 spp.) and more similar to San Ramon (Ij = 0.30). Values of complementarity were higher between Pampa Hermosa and other forests in the Peruvian Yungas, ranging from 55-76% (1200-1600 m) to 70-83% (1600-2000 m). These results indicate there is a high β diversity in the bat communities from the Peruvian Yungas; however, we have to take into account the disparate sampling efforts among the evaluated localities and that additional research in areas of the SNPH not yet explored must give a stronger support to our results.
Start page
103
End page
116
Volume
23
Issue
2
Language
Spanish
OCDE Knowledge area
Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Forestal
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84988943939
Source
Revista Peruana de Biologia
ISSN of the container
15610837
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus