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El. knyga: 50 Years of Bat Research: Foundations and New Frontiers

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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Serija: Fascinating Life Sciences
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-Jan-2021
  • Leidėjas: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030547271
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Serija: Fascinating Life Sciences
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-Jan-2021
  • Leidėjas: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030547271

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With more than 1,400 species, bats are an incredibly diverse and successful group of mammals that can serve as model systems for many unique evolutionary adaptations. Flight has allowed them to master the sky, while echolocation enables them to navigate in the dark. Being small, secretive, nocturnal creatures has made bats a challenge to study, but over the past 50 years, innovative research has made it possible to dispel some of the mystery and myth surrounding them to give us a better understanding of the role these animals play in the ecosystem.





The structure of the book is based on several broad themes across the biological sciences, including the evolution of bats, their ecology and behavior, and conservation of biodiversity. Within these themes are more specific topics on important aspects of bat research, such as morphology, molecular biology, echolocation, taxonomy, systematics, threats to bats, social structure, reproduction, movements, and feeding strategies.





Given its scope, the book will appeal to the wider scientific community, environmental organizations, and government policymakers who are interested in the interdisciplinary aspects of biology and nature.

Recenzijos

This volume will be of interest to mammalogists and anyone else who works with bats . As a bat researcher who has attended NASBR meetings for 30 years, I found this volume both fascinating and humbling. It will be a delight to seasoned bat biologists but, more importantly, it will provide an inspirational introduction for younger researchers interested in bat biology. It belongs on the bookshelf of anyone who works with batsor thinks that they might want to. (Nancy B. Simmons, The Quarterly Review of Biology, Vol. 97 (3), September, 2022)

Part I History
1 NASBR Origins 1970-2020: From an Informal Gathering to a Scientific Society
3(20)
Gary G. Kwiecinski
G. Roy Horst
2 Contributions of Women and Creating a Culture of Inclusivity at the North American Society for Bat Research
23(20)
Winifred F. Frick
Amy Russell
Erin H. Gillam
Part II Echolocation
3 The Evolution of Acoustic Methods for the Study of Bats
43(18)
Veronica Zamora-Gutierrez
M. Cristina MacSwiney G.
Santiago Martinez Balvanera
Everardo Robredo Esquivelzeta
4 How Noise Affects Bats and What It Reveals About Their Biosonar Systems
61(18)
Michael S. Smotherman
Andrea Megela Simmons
James A. Simmons
Part III Ecology
5 All the Better to Eat You with: The Legacy of James S. Findley's Phenetic Approach to Bat Biology
79(14)
Hector T. Arita
Fabricio Villalobos
6 Bats in Temperate Forests: Where Are the Trends in Bat Populations?
93(12)
Bradley S. Law
Rachel V. Blakey
7 The Importance of Water Availability to Bats: Climate Warming and Increasing Global Aridity
105(18)
Rick A. Adams
Mark A. Hayes
Part IV Feeding
8 Bats and the Ecological and Evolutionary Consequences of Resource Spatio-temporal Predictability (STP)
123(12)
Theodore H. Fleming
9 Fur, Wings, and Flowers: Development and Progress on Nectarivorous Bat Research in the Last 50 Years
135(16)
Juan I. Moreira-Hernandez
Camilo A. Calderon-Acevedo
Nathan Muchhala
10 Penguins, Falcons, and Mountain Lions: The Extraordinary Host Diversity of Vampire Bats
151(22)
Gerald Carter
Bridget Brown
Imran Razik
Simon Ripperger
Part V Flight
11 There and Back Again: Homing in Bats Revisited
173(16)
Erin F. Baerwald
Theodore J. Weller
Dana M. Green
Richard A. Holland
12 Bats Flying at High Altitudes
189(20)
Gary F. McCracken
Ya-Fu Lee
Erin H. Gillam
Winifred Frick
Jennifer Krauel
Part VI Heterothermy
13 The Winter Worries of Bats: Past and Present Perspectives on Winter Habitat and Management of Cave Hibernating Bats
209(14)
Joseph S. Johnson
Anna S. Blomberg
Justin G. Boyles
Thomas M. Lilley
14 Torpor and Tinbergen: Integrating Physiological and Behavioral Traits with Ontogeny, Phylogenetic History, Survival and Fitness to Understand Heterothermy in Bats
223(18)
Yvonne A. Dzal
Allyson K. Menzies
Quinn M. R. Webber
Craig K. R. Willis
Part VII Methods
15 A NASBR History of Radio telemetry: How Technology Has Contributed to Advances in Bat Biology
241(14)
Jeff Clerc
R. Mark Brigham
Justin G. Boyles
Liam P. McGuire
16 Introduction and Implementation of Harp Traps Signal a New Era in Bat Research
255(18)
Iroro Tanshi
Tigga Kingston
Part VIII Molecular Systematics
17 Molecular Biology in the Evolution of Bats: A Historical Perspective
273(16)
Diana D. Moreno-Santillan
Jorge Ortega
18 A Global Review of Phylogeographic Studies on Bats
289(24)
Giovani Hernandez-Canchola
Luis D. Verde Arregoitia
Pablo Colunga-Salas
Yire A. Gomez-Jimenez
Livia Leon-Paniagua
Part IX Parasitology
19 Bats as Reservoirs of Viral Zoonoses
313(18)
Sonia Cheetham
Wanda Markotter
20 Bats as Hosts of Important Unicellular Endoparasites
331(18)
Pablo Colunga-Salas
Giovani Hernadez-Canchola
Estefania Grostieta
Ingeborg Becker
21 Bats, Bat Flies, and Fungi: Exploring Uncharted Waters
349(24)
Danny Haelewaters
Carl W. Dick
Kristel Paola Cocheran Pitti
Katharina Dittmar
Bruce D. Patterson
Afterword 373
Dina K. N. Dechmann
Burton Lim is an Assistant Curator of Mammalogy at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Canada.  Holding a Ph.D. in ecology and evolutionary biology from the University of Toronto, his research interests are in the biodiversity and evolution of mammals with a particular focus on neotropical bats. Burton is currently the chair of the board of directors of the North American Society for Bat Research.

Brock Fenton is a Professor Emeritus at the Department of Biology at Western University.  He received a Ph.D. in zoology from the University of Toronto.  His research involves using bats to explore the interfaces between animal behavior, ecology and evolution. Brock is the author or editor of several books, including Bat Bioacoustics with Springer.





Mark Brigham is a Professor of Biology at the Department of Biology, University of Regina. Holding a Ph.D. from York University (1988), his research focuses on the behavior and ecology of bats and nightjars (nocturnal insect-eating birds). He is one of two co-editors of the Canadian Journal of Zoology.

Shahroukh Mistry is an Adjunct Professor of biology at California State University Chico and Professor of biology at Butte College.  He received his Ph.D. in ecology from the University of New Mexico.  His latest research project involves acoustic monitoring of bat diversity and activity in northern California.  Shahroukh is currently an associate program director for the North American Society for Bat Research.









Allen Kurta is a Professor at the Biology Department, Eastern Michigan University.  He received his Ph.D. from Boston University.  His research interests are in the ecology, behavior, and natural history of mammals, with an emphasis on bats.  Al is past chair of the board of directors of the North American Society for Bat Research.





Erin Gillam is an Associate Professor at the Department of Biological Sciences, North Dakota State University.  She received her Ph.D. in ecology and evolutionary biology from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville in 2007.  Dr. Gillams research focuses on the bioacoustics of bats, including echolocation and social calling. She also has an active research program focused on the conservation of bats in the Northern Great Plains of the United States.





Amy Russell is an Associate Professor at the Department of Biology, Grand Valley State University.  She received a Ph.D. in ecology and evolutionary biology from the University of Tennessee.  Her research interests lie at the intersection of multiple fields: where phylogenetic and population genetic approaches can inform questions of recent speciation, where coalescent approaches can help to discriminate among biogeographic hypotheses, and where molecular ecology and simulation-based analyses can discriminate among demographic scenarios.





Jorge Ortega is a Professor at the Departamento de Zoologķa, Instituto Politécnico Nacional in Mexico City.  Holding a Ph.D. in ecology from the Universidad Nacional Autonóma de México, his research interests are in the eco-immunogenetics, behavioral ecology, and molecular biology of bats.  He is the editor of several books, including Sociality in Bats by Springer.