2009
DOI: 10.1590/s1984-46702009000100025
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Status taxonômico e distribucional do complexo Eumops bonariensis (Chiroptera: Molossidae) no sul do Brasil

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Cited by 13 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 6 publications
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“…Revisions also contributed to the refinement of species distribution in the country: Eumops patagonicus was confirmed in Brazil, correcting its distribution in the southern cone of South America (González 2003, Bernardi et al 2009); the vulnerable Chiroderma doriae is now not restricted to the Atlantic Forest sensu stricto, being also present in more open and xeromorphic areas (Gregorin 1998b); Natalus stramineus had its distribution extended beyond the Amazon Basin, down to the Cerrado of Central Brazil (Taddei & Uieda 2001); after records in Pantanal, Molossus pretiosus was included in the country list, extending its known distribution by nearly 3000km (Gregorin & Taddei 2000); Promops centralis had its distribution extended through the Amazon Basin (Gregorin 2000); Neoplatymops mattogrossensis and Molossops neglectus had their distributions extended by hundreds of kilometres based on specimens from Amazonas, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro (Gregorin 1998a, Gregorin & Taddei 2000; and Thyroptera discifera was recorded in the Atlantic Forest, extending its known distribution nearly by 1300km to the west . Some taxonomic studies have suggested disruptive distributions for some Brazilian bat species and indicated the potential for the division of species in complexes of new ones (Tavares 2008).…”
Section: The Advance Of Systematicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Revisions also contributed to the refinement of species distribution in the country: Eumops patagonicus was confirmed in Brazil, correcting its distribution in the southern cone of South America (González 2003, Bernardi et al 2009); the vulnerable Chiroderma doriae is now not restricted to the Atlantic Forest sensu stricto, being also present in more open and xeromorphic areas (Gregorin 1998b); Natalus stramineus had its distribution extended beyond the Amazon Basin, down to the Cerrado of Central Brazil (Taddei & Uieda 2001); after records in Pantanal, Molossus pretiosus was included in the country list, extending its known distribution by nearly 3000km (Gregorin & Taddei 2000); Promops centralis had its distribution extended through the Amazon Basin (Gregorin 2000); Neoplatymops mattogrossensis and Molossops neglectus had their distributions extended by hundreds of kilometres based on specimens from Amazonas, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro (Gregorin 1998a, Gregorin & Taddei 2000; and Thyroptera discifera was recorded in the Atlantic Forest, extending its known distribution nearly by 1300km to the west . Some taxonomic studies have suggested disruptive distributions for some Brazilian bat species and indicated the potential for the division of species in complexes of new ones (Tavares 2008).…”
Section: The Advance Of Systematicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regiões como o norte e o noroeste, que até então haviam experimentado esforços amostrais principalmente em unidades de conservação (e.g. WALLAUER & ALBUQUERQUE, 1986), vem recebendo maior atenção nos últimos anos e já apresentam importantes registros para a quiropterofauna gaúcha (WEBER et al, 2006BERNARDI et al, 2007BERNARDI et al, , 2009. Tanto o registro de Myotis dinellii no noroeste quanto o de Eptesicus taddei no nordeste confirmam a carência de informações quiropterológicas nessas áreas.…”
Section: Trachops Cirrhosus Artibeus Cinereus Platyrrhinus Recifinus unclassified
“…Esta deficiência dificulta o esclarecimento de aspectos taxonômicos e por vezes inviabiliza considerações distribucionais mais apuradas (e.g. BERNARDI et al, 2009). Somente com a disponibilização de séries mais numerosas procedentes destas regiões é que estas e outras questões poderão ser elucidadas com mais clareza.…”
Section: Trachops Cirrhosus Artibeus Cinereus Platyrrhinus Recifinus unclassified
“…Platyrrhinus lineatus (E. Geoffroy, 1810) -De ocorrência presumível para o Rio Grande do Sul (Fabián et al 1999) foi capturado no Estado apenas recentemente (Weber et al 2006). Em Frederico Introdução Das 168 espécies de quirópteros com ocorrência conhecida para o Brasil (Miranda et al 2006, Reis et al 2007, 38 possuem registros no Rio Grande do Sul (Silva 1985, 1994, González 2003, Pacheco & Marques 2006, Weber et al 2006, Bernardi et al 2007, 2009, Pacheco et al 2007. Apesar de o Rio Grande do Sul, a partir da década de 80, ter recebido um incremento considerável no conhecimento quiropterológico, a grande maioria dos estudos esteve concentrada na porção leste e nordeste, restando extensas áreas do Estado que receberam pouco ou nenhum esforço amostral (Pacheco & Marques 2006;Pacheco et al 2007).…”
Section: Resultsunclassified
“…Eumops bonariensis (Peters, 1874) -Listada como espécie com "dados insuficientes" por Pacheco & Freitas (2003), E. bonariensis foi capturado em uma única oportunidade no interior de uma residência na área urbana do município. A identificação do espécime em questão seguiu os critérios apresentados em Sanborn (1932), Eger (1977), López-González (1998), Barquez et al (1999), Gregorin & Taddei (2002) e Bernardi et al (2009).…”
Section: Agradecimentosunclassified