2003
DOI: 10.1590/s0101-81752003000200030
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Ocorrência de Glyphonycteris sylvestris Thomas (Chiroptera, Phyllostomidae) no Estado do Rio de Janeiro, sudeste do Brasil

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The specimen matches diagnostic characters for the species (Figure 2) having two pairs of upper premolars, and being a relatively small Glyphonycteris (FA = 39 mm, GLS = 18.8 mm). All measurements of ICN 13313 fall within the range of size variation reported for specimens from French Guiana (Simmons and Voss 1998), from Brazil (Dias et al 2003), and from Panama (Jones and Carter 1979; Table 1). San Luis is located in the eastern slope of the Cordillera Central, nested in the Magdalena River valley.…”
supporting
confidence: 67%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The specimen matches diagnostic characters for the species (Figure 2) having two pairs of upper premolars, and being a relatively small Glyphonycteris (FA = 39 mm, GLS = 18.8 mm). All measurements of ICN 13313 fall within the range of size variation reported for specimens from French Guiana (Simmons and Voss 1998), from Brazil (Dias et al 2003), and from Panama (Jones and Carter 1979; Table 1). San Luis is located in the eastern slope of the Cordillera Central, nested in the Magdalena River valley.…”
supporting
confidence: 67%
“…Furthermore the individual was previously photographed and unambiguously identified based on external characters ( Figure 3B-C). The vegetation in Tame is dominated by flooded savannahs adjacent to riparian forest and palm swamps ( Figure 4A), in contrast, San Martin gallery forests and palm swamps are situated in a matrix of high plain savannas ( Figure 4B-C Simmons and Voss (1998) from French Guiana, Dias et al (2003) from Brazil, and Jones and Carter (1979) 12.0 -10.3 10.9 10.3, 10.8 10.5, 10.7 10.6 10.6 10.5 CM3 11.7 -10.3 11.1 10.5, 10.7 10.9, 11.0 10.5 10.5 10.2 M3M3 9.2 -8.9 9.3 8.5, 9.0 9.3, 9.6 9.1 9.1 8.8 Table 2. External and cranial measurements of the specimen of Glyphonycteris daviesi reported here (ICN 21552), compared to the specimens reported by Hill (1964) from Guyana, Jones and Carter (1979) from Panama, McCarthy and Ochoa (1991) from Venezuela, Simmons and Voss (1998) from French Guiana, Clark and Racey (2003) from Trinidad, and Gregorin and Rossi (2005) and Jones and Carter (1979) Colombia.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chama a atenção o número de ampliações de distribuições geográficas e novos registros (e.g. DIAS et al, 2003;NOGUEIRA et al, 2003;POL et al, 2003;GREGORIN et al, 2004;CAMARGO & FISCHER, 2005;BORDIGNON, 2005;AGUIAR et al, 2006;FABIÁN et al, 2006;MELLO & POL, 2006;MIKALUSKAS et al, 2006;MIRANDA et al, 2006bMIRANDA et al, , 2007aMIRANDA et al, , 2007bSODRÉ & UIEDA, 2006;WEBER et al, 2006WEBER et al, , 2007BERNARDI et al, 2007;GAZARINI & BERNARDI, 2007;LONGO et al, 2007;SCULTORI et al, 2009). Além dessas novas ocorrências, foram realizadas descrições de novas espécies para o Brasil: Xeronycteris vierai Gregorin & Diethfield, 2006, Thyroptera devivoi Gregorin, Gonçalves & Engstron, 2006 e Eptesicus taddeii Miranda, Bernardi & Passos, 2006(GREGORIN & DIETCHFIELD, 2006MIRANDA et al, 2006a).…”
unclassified
“…Glyphonycteris sylvestris is patchily distributed in Central and South America, from western Mexico through Panama to east of the Andes in Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad Island, Surinam, French Guiana, Peru. There is also an isolated population in southeastern Brazil (Williams and Genoways 2008), in the states of Paraná (Sekiama et al 2001), Rio de Janeiro (Dias et al 2003), and São Paulo (Trajano 1982;Pedro et al 2001). This bat species prefers low elevations and tropical evergreen forest (Eisenberg and Redford 1999).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This bat species prefers low elevations and tropical evergreen forest (Eisenberg and Redford 1999). Published records include elevations from 15 to 890 m (Handley 1976;Koopman 1978;Reid 1997;Linares 1998;Dias et al 2003;Williams and Genoways 2008;Orrell 2013). Glyphonycteris sylvestris inhabits forest habitats (Handley 1966(Handley , 1976Williams and Genoways 1980), mainly in humid and tropical areas, but also is found in deciduous lowland forest (Goodwin and Greenhall 1961;Williams and Genoways 2008).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%