|
Thyropteridae - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Disc-winged bats are a small group of bats of the family Thyropteridae. They are found in Central and South America, usually in moist tropical rain forests. It is a very small family, consisting of a...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thyropteridae |
|
The New World disk-winged bats, a family of the Chiroptera found in Central and South America, characterized by a stalked sucking disk and a well-developed ...
|
|
Nov 18, 2009 ... eBay: Find Silicon Power 820 4G 4GB USB Flash Pen Drive Disk Bat in the Computers Networking , Drives Storage , Flash Memory Drives category ...
|
|
I keep getting this error when I run start.bat on WinXP: The disk w is busy. Use start.bat [disk letter]; . Press any key to continue . . . I uninstalled Skype, Google Earth and anything else that I could think of that might be conflicting.
|
|
Spix's Disk-winged Bat - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spix's Disk-winged Bat , Thyroptera tricolor , is a bat species from South and Central America.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spix's_Disk-winged_Bat |
|
Peter's Disk-winged Bat - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter's Disk-winged Bat , Thyroptera discifera , is a bat species from South and Central America.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter's_Disk-winged_Bat |
|
Like many species of bat, T. tricolor is insectivorous and can eat up to one-quarter of its body weight in prey during a single night’s activities. ... Thyroptera tricolor, Disk-winged Bat; Dr. Nancy Simmons - American Museum of Natural History ;
|
|
This bat is poorly known. It is found in evergreen forest and is seldom caught in mist nets. Its diet is insectivorous. It is an aerial insectivore, captured in forests near streams. The basic ecology of this species is poorly known (Patterson pers.
|
|
The suction disks allow them to cling to the smooth surface of leaves. Unlike most species, this bat roosts upright, and individuals line up one above another inside the leaf. Tree falls, stream banks, and other small, natural forest gaps provide good conditions for host plants and bats.
|
|
Spix's disk-winged bat ... Morphological specialization's of the bats probably limit them to rolled leaves as roosting sites. Their tendency to roost head up is well adapted to rolled leaves, but not to the more normal bat roosting sites such as caves or hollow trees.
|