Distributional patterns of the Brazilian free-tailed bat Tadarida brasiliensis in the Peruvian territory

Abstract: The molossid bat Tadarida brasiliensis has a wide and apparently continuous distribution in South America. Although it has been reported in several localities of both versants of the Peruvian Andes, the potential distribution for this species has not been formally analyzed. Therefore, we describe its distributional pattern in the territory and provide comments about the possible influence of the Andes in its distribution. We gathered occurrence records from museums, acoustic surveys, literature, GBIF and Vertnet sources, and we selected localities to minimize spatial correlation. After defining a minimum-convex polygon of Peruvian records as background area, we use Maxent software with bioclimatic variables to construct species distribution models. Several models were evaluated using different metrics, and the model with the lowest AICc was selected. Then, the model was projected for Peruvian territory. Tadarida brasiliensis is reported for the first time in Cajamarca, Piura and Ica departments. The potential distribution model showed two disjunct suitable areas, one for the Pacific versant and other for the Amazonian versant of the Andes, but connected with moderate suitable conditions in the Huancabamba Depression region in northern Perú. Mean diurnal range and annual mean temperature were identified as the main limiting factors for the potential distribution of this species in this territory. Tadarida brasiliensis exhibits a discontinuous distribution in the Peruvian territory. In northern part, the Huancabamba depression zone has climatic conditions that may allow the east-west dispersal for this species. In central and southern parts, the higher crest of the Andes (> 4,500 m) has low suitable conditions due to the extreme climate. In the eastern, the lowland Amazonian forests has low suitability for this species, probably due to high temperatures. We suggest that the Andes could be acting a biogeographical barrier that limits the dispersal for this species, but population-genetic studies are needed to confirm this hypothesis. We identified that temperature is the main climatic factor that limit the dispersal of this bat. In conclusion, T. brasiliensis is mainly associated with desert and Andean slopes ecosystems in Perú, and we highlight the importance of incorporating acoustic records in the analysis of its distribution patterns.

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Main Authors: Zegarra,Orlando, Pacheco,Jaime, Pacheco,Víctor
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Asociación Mexicana de Mastozoología A.C. 2020
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2007-33642020000300495
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spelling oai:scielo:S2007-336420200003004952021-04-29Distributional patterns of the Brazilian free-tailed bat Tadarida brasiliensis in the Peruvian territoryZegarra,OrlandoPacheco,JaimePacheco,Víctor Andes geographic barrier maxent potential distribution suitability Abstract: The molossid bat Tadarida brasiliensis has a wide and apparently continuous distribution in South America. Although it has been reported in several localities of both versants of the Peruvian Andes, the potential distribution for this species has not been formally analyzed. Therefore, we describe its distributional pattern in the territory and provide comments about the possible influence of the Andes in its distribution. We gathered occurrence records from museums, acoustic surveys, literature, GBIF and Vertnet sources, and we selected localities to minimize spatial correlation. After defining a minimum-convex polygon of Peruvian records as background area, we use Maxent software with bioclimatic variables to construct species distribution models. Several models were evaluated using different metrics, and the model with the lowest AICc was selected. Then, the model was projected for Peruvian territory. Tadarida brasiliensis is reported for the first time in Cajamarca, Piura and Ica departments. The potential distribution model showed two disjunct suitable areas, one for the Pacific versant and other for the Amazonian versant of the Andes, but connected with moderate suitable conditions in the Huancabamba Depression region in northern Perú. Mean diurnal range and annual mean temperature were identified as the main limiting factors for the potential distribution of this species in this territory. Tadarida brasiliensis exhibits a discontinuous distribution in the Peruvian territory. In northern part, the Huancabamba depression zone has climatic conditions that may allow the east-west dispersal for this species. In central and southern parts, the higher crest of the Andes (> 4,500 m) has low suitable conditions due to the extreme climate. In the eastern, the lowland Amazonian forests has low suitability for this species, probably due to high temperatures. We suggest that the Andes could be acting a biogeographical barrier that limits the dispersal for this species, but population-genetic studies are needed to confirm this hypothesis. We identified that temperature is the main climatic factor that limit the dispersal of this bat. In conclusion, T. brasiliensis is mainly associated with desert and Andean slopes ecosystems in Perú, and we highlight the importance of incorporating acoustic records in the analysis of its distribution patterns.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAsociación Mexicana de Mastozoología A.C.Therya v.11 n.3 20202020-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2007-33642020000300495en10.12933/therya-20-995
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country México
countrycode MX
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-mx
tag revista
region America del Norte
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Zegarra,Orlando
Pacheco,Jaime
Pacheco,Víctor
spellingShingle Zegarra,Orlando
Pacheco,Jaime
Pacheco,Víctor
Distributional patterns of the Brazilian free-tailed bat Tadarida brasiliensis in the Peruvian territory
author_facet Zegarra,Orlando
Pacheco,Jaime
Pacheco,Víctor
author_sort Zegarra,Orlando
title Distributional patterns of the Brazilian free-tailed bat Tadarida brasiliensis in the Peruvian territory
title_short Distributional patterns of the Brazilian free-tailed bat Tadarida brasiliensis in the Peruvian territory
title_full Distributional patterns of the Brazilian free-tailed bat Tadarida brasiliensis in the Peruvian territory
title_fullStr Distributional patterns of the Brazilian free-tailed bat Tadarida brasiliensis in the Peruvian territory
title_full_unstemmed Distributional patterns of the Brazilian free-tailed bat Tadarida brasiliensis in the Peruvian territory
title_sort distributional patterns of the brazilian free-tailed bat tadarida brasiliensis in the peruvian territory
description Abstract: The molossid bat Tadarida brasiliensis has a wide and apparently continuous distribution in South America. Although it has been reported in several localities of both versants of the Peruvian Andes, the potential distribution for this species has not been formally analyzed. Therefore, we describe its distributional pattern in the territory and provide comments about the possible influence of the Andes in its distribution. We gathered occurrence records from museums, acoustic surveys, literature, GBIF and Vertnet sources, and we selected localities to minimize spatial correlation. After defining a minimum-convex polygon of Peruvian records as background area, we use Maxent software with bioclimatic variables to construct species distribution models. Several models were evaluated using different metrics, and the model with the lowest AICc was selected. Then, the model was projected for Peruvian territory. Tadarida brasiliensis is reported for the first time in Cajamarca, Piura and Ica departments. The potential distribution model showed two disjunct suitable areas, one for the Pacific versant and other for the Amazonian versant of the Andes, but connected with moderate suitable conditions in the Huancabamba Depression region in northern Perú. Mean diurnal range and annual mean temperature were identified as the main limiting factors for the potential distribution of this species in this territory. Tadarida brasiliensis exhibits a discontinuous distribution in the Peruvian territory. In northern part, the Huancabamba depression zone has climatic conditions that may allow the east-west dispersal for this species. In central and southern parts, the higher crest of the Andes (> 4,500 m) has low suitable conditions due to the extreme climate. In the eastern, the lowland Amazonian forests has low suitability for this species, probably due to high temperatures. We suggest that the Andes could be acting a biogeographical barrier that limits the dispersal for this species, but population-genetic studies are needed to confirm this hypothesis. We identified that temperature is the main climatic factor that limit the dispersal of this bat. In conclusion, T. brasiliensis is mainly associated with desert and Andean slopes ecosystems in Perú, and we highlight the importance of incorporating acoustic records in the analysis of its distribution patterns.
publisher Asociación Mexicana de Mastozoología A.C.
publishDate 2020
url http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2007-33642020000300495
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AT pachecovictor distributionalpatternsofthebrazilianfreetailedbattadaridabrasiliensisintheperuvianterritory
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