Texas Tech University Press
Menu


   

B O O K S

Bats of Puerto Rico: An Island Focus and a Caribbean Perspective

Click for larger image



07/2005. xv, 239 pages. Illus., maps
0896725510
978-0-89672-551-5

$19.95 paper



Coming soon: online ordering! In the meantime, please call 800.832.4042 or 806.742.2982 to order.

Bats of Puerto Rico: An Island Focus and a Caribbean Perspective

By Michael R. Gannon, Allen Kurta, Armando Rodriguez-Duran, and Michael R. Willig
Drawings by Jeffrey Martz

"An interesting and enjoyable read. . . . Rich detail presented in well-written, logical fashion about the bat fauna of this interesting island."—Acta Chiropterologica

The Caribbean islands are home to some of the most unusual species of bats. A number of them are endemic, living in no other region of the world. On Puerto Rico alone, thirteen different species have been found. Bats are the only naturally occurring mammals there; all others were introduced after settlement of the island, first by the Taíno Indians and later by the Spanish.

Puerto Rico is important for study because of its human history, tropical climate, size, relief, and isolation from the mainland. It is a useful model for understanding how historical, geographic, and environmental factors interact in a controlled environment to affect the diversity and complexity of its resident species.

This volume is the first complete compilation of the distribution, natural history, taxonomy, and ecology of the bats of Puerto Rico. The coauthors, all experienced researchers, introduce the book with a discussion of Puerto Rican ecosystems and an overview of facts and misconceptions about bats in general. The main text provides detailed descriptions of each of the thirteen Puerto Rican species, as well as illustrations of their faces and skulls. The book concludes with keys to the characters of these bats and a complete glossary. Maps show the distribution of each species on the island.

Bats of Puerto Rico is designed to be an easily used source of information for the general public as well as a complete descriptive record for ecologists, mammalogists, and wildlife biologists.


Geography
Geological History
Temperature and Rainfall
Hurricanes
Forest Types and Life Zones
The Human Influence
An Overview of Puerto Rican Mammals
Island Biology
Community Ecology within the Caribbean Basin
Structure of a Bat
Seeing With Sound
Nocturnal Behavior
Shelter and Insulation
Food, Guano, Ecology, and the Economy
Bats and Pre-Columbian Residents of Puerto Rico
Vampire Bats and the Vampire Myth
Bats and Public Health
Eliminating Bats from Buildings
Noctilionidae, Bulldog or Fishing Bats
Noctilio leporinus, Greater Bulldog Bat
Mormoopidae, Mustached or Ghost-faced Bats
Mormoops blainvillii, Antillean Ghost-faced Bat
Pteronotus parnellii, Parnell's Mustached Bat
Pteronotus quadridens, Sooty Mustached Bat
Phyllostomidae, American Leaf-nosed Bats
Artibeus jamaicensis, Jamaican Fruit Bat
Brachphylla cavernarum, Antillean Fruit Bat
Erophylla sezekorni, Brown Flower Bat
Monophyllus redmani, Greater Antillean Long-tongued Bat
Stenoderma rufum, Red Fig-eating Bat
Vespertilionidae, Plain-nosed or Vesper Bats
Eptesicus fuscus, Big Brown Bat
Lasiurus borealis, Red Bat
Molossidae, Free-tailed Bats
Molossus molossus, Velvety Free-tailed Bat
Tadarida brasiliensis, Brazilian Free-tailed Bat
Threats to Bats
Why Protect Bats?
Recommendations
Resources
Key to Adult Bats Using External Characters
Key to Adult Bats Using Cranial and Dental Characters




Home  |  Search  |  TTUP News  |  Books  |  Journals  |  About the Press  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy  |  Site Map Texas Tech University logo


© 2006 Texas Tech University Press  |  2903 4th Street, Suite 201  |  Lubbock, TX 79409-1037  |  800.832.4042