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Presents Rain Forest Allies A SLIDE PROGRAM Bat Conservation International P.O. Box 162603 Austin, TX 78716 Phone: (512) 327-9721 Fax: (512) 327-9724 Catalog orders and inquiries: 1-800-538-BATS www.batcon.org © Bat Conservation International Photos copyright: Merlin D. Tuttle, Bat Conservation International, Inc.

Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

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Page 1: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

P r e s e n t s

Rain Forest Allies A S L I D E P R O G R A M

Bat Conservation International P.O. Box 162603 Austin, TX 78716

Phone: (512) 327-9721 Fax: (512) 327-9724

Catalog orders and inquiries: 1-800-538-BATS

www.batcon.org

© Bat Conservation International Photos copyright: Merlin D. Tuttle,

Bat Conservation International, Inc.

Page 2: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

R A I N F O R E S T A L L I E S

IMAGES SCRIPT

1. Title Slide

Rain Forest Allies

2. Aerial view of South American rain forest habitat (#0002101)

Rain forests are home to more than half of Earth's plant and animal species, including...

3. Gambian epauletted fruit bats (Epomophorus gambianus) roosting in family group (#0002102)

almost 700 k ds of bats that play key ecological roles.

in

4. Pallas' long-tongued nectar bat (Glossophaga soricina) pollinating Tricanthera (#0002103)

They pollinate many kinds of flowers...

5. Gambian epauletted fruit bat (Epomophorus gambianus) picking fig from bunch (#0002104)

disperse seeds essential to reforestation...

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 2

Page 3: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

keep vast numbers of night-flying insects in check, and help in

ways to maintain the health of rain forests and nomies.

6. Waterhouse's leaf-nosed bat (Macrotus n flight with katydid (#0002105) waterhousii) i

many otherassociated human eco

7. Gray-p in

headed flying foxes (Pteropus oliocephalus) colony roost g near Sydney,

Australia (#0002106)

In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide.

8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei) roosting (#0002107)

Flying foxes that live in Australia, Asia and Africa come in a an

amazing variety,

9. Lp

ittle red flying fox (Pteropus scapulatus) ortrait (#0002108)

some with winsome faces,

10. Gambian epauletted fruit bat (Epomophorus gambianus) portrait (#0002109)

others with fluffy fur and doe-like eyes,

11. Spectacled flying fox (Pteropus conspicillatus) portrait (#0002110)

and a few with spectacles.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 3

Page 4: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

12. Tome's sword-nosed bat (Lonchorhina aurita) portrait (#0002111)

Some Latin American bats seem to resemble dinosaurs,

13. Wrinkle-faced bat (Centurio senex) portrait (#0002112)

while others have bizarre faces like aliens from another planet,

14. Chapin's free-tailed bat (Chaerephon chapini) portrait (#0002113)

read like peacock tails,

crests they can sp

15. Australian ghost bat (Macroderma gigas) portrait (#0002114)

o

r even ears that would make a jackrabbit jealous. This Australian ghost-faced bat (Macroderma gigas) is a carnivore that uses its huge ears to detect the footsteps of mice and other small animals upon which it feeds.

16. Spix's disk-winged bats (Thyroptera tricolor) roosting in banana leaf (#0002115)

Disc-winged bats have suction-cups on their wrists and feet, enabling them to walk on the slick inner surfaces of unfurling leaves where they live.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 4

Page 5: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

A variety of other bats have learned to cut the midribs of large

aves to form tents that protect them from tropical rains and predators. le

17. Heliconia leaf (#0002116)

18. White fruit bats (Ectophylla alba) roosting in leaf tent (#0002201)

These Honduran white bats (Ectophylla alba) have cut a large Heliconia leaf,

19. White fruit bats (Ectophylla alba) roosting in leaf tent (close up) (#0002202)

in which small groups live for several weeks at a time before having to make new tents.

20. Long-tongued dawn fruit bats (Eonycteris spelaea) roosting in cave (#0002203)

Most rain forest bats form larger colonies in caves, some including millions of individuals

21. Wrinkle-lipped free-tailed bat (Chaerephon plicata) emergence over Thai rain forest (#0002204)

whose spectacular twilight emergences can be seen for miles around. Such colonies can have enormous ecological and even economic impact.

22. Mexican free-tailed bat (Tadarida brasiliensis) in flight with moth (#0002205)

Free-tailed bats from a single cave that’s home to 20 million bats can consume 200 tons of insects nightly. Since many of these insects are capable of laying up to a thousand eggs each, bats are vitally important in controlling insect populations and maintaining the balance of nature.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 5

Page 6: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

23. Niceforo's big-eared bat (Micronycteris Bats hunt a wide variety of insects, including many that are

serious pests of humans.

nicefori) roosting with roach in mouth (#0002206)

24. D'Orbigny's round-eared bat (Tonatia syvicola) listening to footsteps of katydid

0002207) (#

Some bats use their large ears to hear even the faintest footsteps of a walking katydid.

25. Fringe-lipped bat (Trachops cirrhosus) atching frog from pond

Frog-eating bats simply home in on their prey by listening for a frog's mating calls. The bats identify each species by its unique c

(#0002208)

voice and avoid those that are poisonous or too large to eat.

26. Greater bulldog bat (Noctilio leporinus) in 002209) flight with echolocation diagram (#0

Most bats, including fishing bats that live in Latin America, use cy

p of a minnow's fin at a pond's surface.

extremely sophisticated echolocation. They emit high-frequencalls that bounce off objects in their paths. The echoes allow bats to form visual images of their surroundings and in this caseto detect the tiny ti

27. Greater bulldog bat (Noctilio leporinus) shing (#0002210)

Once the minnow is located, the bat dips its huge hind feet into the water with split-second timing to snatch the unsuspecting fi

minnow,

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 6

Page 7: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

which will be carried off to a convenient perch and eaten. 28. Greater bulldog bat (Noctilio leporinus)

with fish in feet (#0002211)

29. African long-tongued fruit bat (Megaloglossus woermanni) pollinating African

tter and tallow (Pentadesma butyracea) ower (#0002212

Other bats use large eyes and sensitive noses to detect a wide variety of tropical fruits and flowers that produce unique odors and visual cues designed specifically to attract bats. Flowers that rely on bats are typically light colored, making them more

bufl )

visible at night.

30. Hummingbird at Ipomoea guamoclit ower (#0002213)

Red flowers more often attract birds. These are shaped specifically to accommodate a hummingbird's narrow bill. They also open and produce most of their nectar during the day,

fl

when hummingbirds are active. The diversity of tropical forest vegetation is largely a result of co-evolution between flowering plants and the animals that pollinate them.

31. Butterfly at Lantana flower (#0002214)

Flowers, such as this Lantana, are so tiny that only a butterfly's tongue can enter.

32. "Wrong" bee at Senna flower (#0002215)

In some cases, the relationship between a plant and its pollinator is so precise that only a single species of insect, bird or bat can successfully pollinate its flowers. Senna flowers are pollinated by bumblebees. This bee is too small to extract pollen or to contact the flower's reproductive organs.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 7

Page 8: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

33. Bumblebee at Senna flower (#0002216)

When the larger bumblebee arrives, its weight tips the flower downward, releasing pollen. The bee's thick body contacts the flower's reproductive organs in the manner required to transfer pollen.

34. Gray-headed flying fox (Pteropus poliocephalus) pollinating bloodwood tree flowers (#0002301)

A flower's size is not necessarily indicative of the size of itspollinator. In Au

stralia many trees of the Eucalypt family

produce large clumps of tiny flowers, enabling giant flying foxes with four-foot wing-spans (1.2 m.) to visit hundreds at once. Plants that rely on bats for pollination are remarkably varied.

35. Southern blossom bat (Syconycteris australis) pollinating swamp banksia flower (#0002302)

Some, such as this swamp banksia from Australia, hardly looklike flowers.

36. Commissaris' nectar bats (Glossophaga commissarisi) approaching mucuna flowers

0002303)

These mucuna flowers open and release pollen only when visited by small nectar-feeding bats. Special triggering devices fire pollen onto bats but are not tripped by insects. As plants (#

and animals adapt to each other, the odds of survival in relatively stable tropical environments increase. However, any change that harms one, threatens both.

37. Underwood's long-tongued bat (Hylonycteris underwoodi) pollinating Matisia flower (#0002304)

Matisia flowers are apparently so highly specialized that only the Underwood's long-tongued bat is attracted.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 8

Page 9: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

38. Close-up of Underwood's long-tongued inating

r (#0002305) bat (Hylonycteris underwoodi) pollMatisia flowe

The flower's unique shape requires a tiny bat with a long nose to arrive at a relatively high speed. In order to reach the nectar

deep inside, the bat's rump must contact the flower's hand-shaped reproductive organs.

39. Black flying fox (Pteropus alecto) at bottle rush flower (#0 2306) b 00

Some flowers, such as this Australian bottle brush, are adapted to accommodate a wide variety of pollinators, including both birds and bats. They may not be as efficiently pollinated, but they are also less dependent on a single type of pollinator.

4 00. Bat-dependent fruits (# 002307)

Many rain forest plants that rely on bats to pollinate their

ngoes and many more exotic plants, such as jack fruit and durian.

flowers or disperse their seeds are familiar and of great economic value. These include bananas and plantains, peaches, avocados, ma

41. Durian market (#0002308)

The durian alone, seen here in Singapore, is worth more than $230 million a year to Southeast Asian markets. A single fruit can sell for as much as $40.

42. Durian flowers at dusk (#0002309)

Durian flowers open at dusk and are visited by small flying foxes.

43. Long-tongued dawn fruit bat (Eospelaea) pollinating durian flowers (#0002310)

nycteris

The bats play an important role because the flowers must be pollinated in order to produce fruit.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 9

Page 10: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

44. Short-nosed fruit bat (Cynopterus sphinx) pollinating wild banana flower (#0002311)

This short-nosed fruit bat (Cynopterus sphinx) is pollinating wild banana flowers in Thailand. Although cultivated bananas do not produce seeds or need pollination, wild ancestral varieties continue to rely on bats. These plants are sometimes the only source of genes required to combat disease or improve the productivity of commercial bananas.

45. Jamaican fruit bat (Artibeus jamaicensis) pollinating balsa flower (#0002312)

In Latin America, balsa wood harvests continue to rely on batfor pollination, as do many other tropical timber trees worldwide.

s

46. Spectacled flying fox (Pteropus conspicillatus) pollinating black bean (#0002313)

The black bean tree, here being pollinated by a spectacled flyingfox (Pteropus conspicillatus), is one of Australia's most prized sources of wood for veneers, furniture and carving. Rain forest bats also play essent

ial roles as they migrate seasonally into surrounding habitats.

47. Baobab trees in African savannah (#0002314)

The famous baobab of East African savannas is often referred to as the “Tree of Life” because so many other plants and animals depend on it for their survival. Yet it relies on bats as key pollinators.

48. Wahlberg's epauletted fruit bat Epomophorus wahlbergi) approaching baobab ower (#0002315)

(fl

The baobab's snowy white flowers open soon after sundown and are specifically adapted to be pollinated by bats.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 10

Page 11: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

49. Wahlberg's epauletted fruit bat (Epomophorus wahlbergi) pollinating baobab flower (#0002316)

As a bat lands on the flower to sip nectar, its neck and chest become coated with pollen, which it then transports to othflowers while feeding.

er

50. Baobab trees silhouetted at sunset (#0002401)

Without bats, the baobab could die out, threatening the survival of many other plants and animals throughout the region.

51. Seba's short-tailed batperspicillata) approaching piper fruit (#0002402)

(Carollia

Worldwide, bats that eat fruit also play key roles in maintaining tropical ecosystems. Fruits are produced as an incentive to induce animals to transport seeds away from parent plants. This short-tailed fruit bat (Carollia perspicillata) is about to take a piper fruit in Costa Rica.

52. Seba's short-tailed bat (Carollia perspicillata) in flight with piper fruit (#0002403)

Piper fruits are specifically designed so bats can snatch them quickly as they fly by.

53. Seba's short-tailed bat (Carollia perspicillata) eating p(#0002404)

iper fruit while roosting

The fruit is carried away to a safe perch, allowing the bat to avoid predators, such as owls and snakes, which often hunt at fruit trees. Just one short-tailed fruit bat (Carollia perspicillata) may transport as many as 60,000 seeds to new locations in a single night. Thus even a small colony can account for enormous numbers of seedlings growing in new locations each year.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 11

Page 12: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

As more and more rain forest areas are cut, reforestation by seed-dispersing bats becomes ever more important.

54. Slash-and-burn of rain forest (#0002405)

55. Peters' dwarf epauletted fruit bat (Micropteropus pusillus) eating fig (#0002406)

In West Africa small flying foxes account for up to 98 percent of forest regeneration on abandoned farm lands.

In Latin America, yellow-shouldered (Sturnira lilium) and other small fruit bats also can have a dramatic impact through their

5 (p6. Yellow-shouldered bat Sturnira lilium) icking Solanum (#0002407)

nightly transport of seeds.

57. Yellow-shouldered bat (Sturnira lilium) in ight with Solanum fruit (# 02408) fl 00

Solanum seeds are just some of many pioneer types carried into clearings almost exclusively by bats.

58. Barren area showing early re-growth of Solanum (#0002409)

In this South American clearing, the first pioneer plants to regrow came from seeds carried by bats. These extra-hardy species assure shade and moisture in the barren clearing, conditions essential to the survival and growth of delicate forest

vegetation.

59. Same barren area three years later (#0002410)

Three years later, reforestation has progressed to a point whereother

animals, especially birds, can assist the process begun by

bats. Birds, too, serve as essential seed dispersers, but since they primarily drop seeds only beneath existing perches, they have little impact until the first pioneer plants grow.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 12

Page 13: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

60. Pallas' long-tongued nectar bats (Glossophaga soricina) roosting in cave (#0002411)

Unfortunately, rain forest bats, especially those that live in cavare among the most rapidly declining of tropical anim

es, als.

61. Common vampire bats (Desmodus rotundus) roosting in cave (#0002412)

In Latin America, they are often confused with vampire bats.

62. Common vampire bat (Desmodus rotundus) The common vampire does feed on the blood of cattle and other feeding on cow (#0002413)

livestock, has become overpopulated and often must be controlled.

63. Wrinkle-lipped free-tailed bat (Chaerephon plicata) emergence from cave (#0002414)

Unfortunately, beneficial bats that form far larger, more conspicuous colonies in caves are the most easily found and are often mistakenly killed, sometimes by the millions, instead of

mpires. va

64. Marianas flying foxes (Pteropus mariannus) colony on Guam (#0002415)

Rain forest bats on Pacific islands are killed for other reasoSeveral flying fox species are already endangered or extinct due to unregulat

ns.

ed commercial hunting for food. These are among the last survivors on the island of Guam, where game wardens are working diligently to protect both local and imported species from illegal trade.

65. Inspection officers in Guam (#0002416)

Hundreds of thousands have been killed, though populations can recover where protection is afforded.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 13

Page 14: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

66. Marianas flying fox (Pteropus mariannus) 01) pollinating Frycinetia flower (#00025

Protection of flying foxes is essential because island trees and shrubs are especially dependent upon them both for pollination and seed dispersal.

67. Guam rain forest habitat (#0002502)

More than half of Guam's tree species rely on flying foxes.

68. Marianas flying fox (Pteropus mariannus) g on cycad (#0002503) feedin

Most of the island's fruits are too large for birds or any other animals to carry...

69. Marianas flying fox (Pteropus mariannus) feeding on chuite fruit (#0002504)

making survival of the endangered Marianas fruit bat especially vital. Some progress is being made.

70. American Samoa rain forest habitat 0002505)

For example this rain forest in American Samoa is now protected as a flying fox sanctuary. It is a part of the United States National (#

Park System.

71p

. Gray-headed flying foxes (Pteropus oliocephalus) roosting in small camp

(#0002506)

Many flying foxes throughout the Old World tropics are intenselypersecuted out of concern from fruit growers

72. Fruit harvest near Sydney, Australia who fear the bats will damage crops.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 14

Page 15: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

(#0002507)

73. Gray-headed flying fox (Pteropus

(#0002508) poliocephalus) pollinating brush box

Flying foxes typically feed on native fruits and flowers.

74. Farmers picking green mangoes (#0002509)

Most commercial fruits, such as these mangoes, must be picked green for shipment and thus do not appeal to bats.

75. Egyptian rousette fruit bat (Rousettus aegyptiacus) eating mango (#0002510)

Flying foxes do visit orchards to eat fruits that ripen prematurely

ing bats search for alternative food.

or that are missed by pickers. Such fruits cannot be marketed anyway. Growers seldom lose marketable fruit except during times of extreme drought when starv

76. Netting over Australian fruit orchard 0002511) (#

Smart growers near Sydney, Australia, are increasingly covering their crops with netting that protects fruit from flying foxes as well as from birds and hail that cause even greater damage. The netting also promotes early ripening.

77. Little red flying fox (Pteropus scapulatus) ollinating bloodwood tree (#0002512) p

Such progress is encouraging and vital not only to Australia's flying foxes, but also to the native forests that rely on them.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 15

Page 16: Presents Rain Forest Allies - BCIAustralia (#0002106) In fact, bats are the most abundant and diverse of tropical rain forest mammals worldwide. 8. Lyle's flying fox (Pteropus lylei)

78. Lyle's flying foxes (Pteropus lylei) returning to roost at sunrise (#0002513)

Single flying fox colonies once numbered into the hundreds of thousands and even millions, but today several species are alreadyextinct and many have declined to less than 10 percent of former numbers. They, and the rain forests that depend on them, urgently need our help and understanding in order to survive.

79. Gambian epauletted fruit bat (Epomophorus gambianus) mother roosting with young (#0002514)

Bat Conservation International is constantly working to reverse years of neglect and misunderstanding of bats. We cannot do this without your help.

80. Large flying fox (Pteropus vampyrus) roosting (#0041672)

We urge you to become involved in supporting both bats and tropical rain forest issues.

81. Credit Slide Bat Conservation International. For more information visit: www.batcon.org

Learn more about bats...

he following resources offer more information about tropical bats and conservation issues:

f the . L. and G.P. Nabhan. 1996. The For

Eisenberg, J.F. 1989. Mammals of the NeotropicSuriname, French Guiana. University of

Emmons, L.H. 1997. Neotropical Rainforest Mammals: A Field Guide. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 281 pp. Fenton, M.B. 1992. Bats. Facts on File Inc., New York, NY, 207 pp. Kingdon, J. 1974. East African Mammals: Volume IIA, Insectivores and Bats. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 341 pp. he Rain Forest and the Flying Foxes (3rd Edition). 1998. Fa’asao Savai’i Foundation, Savai’i, Western Samoa,

ma , Uruguay, Press,

Reid, F. 1998. Field Guide to the Mammals of Central America and Southeast Mexico. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 334 pp.

Wilson, D.E. 1997. Bats in Question: The Smithsonian Answer Book. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C., 168 pp.

formation about BCI projects and other resources can be found at www.batcon.org

T Bates, P.J. and D.L. Harrison. 1997. Bats oBuchmann, S.

Indian Subcontinent. Harrison Zoological Museum, Kent, UK, 285 ppgotten Pollinators. Island Press, Tucson, AZ, 320 pp. s--The Northern Neotropics, Volume I: Panama, Columbia, Venezuela, Guyana, Chicago Press, Chicago, 449 pp.

T127 pp.

Redford, K.H. and J.F. Eisenberg. 1992. MamParaguay. University of Chicago

ls of the Neotropics--The Southern Cone, Volume II: Chile, Argentina Chicago, 420 pp.

In . More educational media available at www.batcatalog.com.

RAIN FOREST ALLIES 16