Browsing by Autor "Ronald Castellanos Florez"
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Item type: Item , First record of Eastern Cloud Forest Rat Nephelomys nimbosus (Rodentia: Cricetidae) for Colombia(Asociacion Mexicana de Mastozoología A.C., 2018) Sebastiàn Bautista Plazas; Abelardo Rodríguez-Bolaños; Ronald Castellanos FlorezCurrently, four species of Nephelomys (N. childi, N. maculiventer, N. meridiensis and N. pectoralis) are known from Colombia. Here we present the first records of a fifth species, the rare Eastern Cloud Forest rat N. nimbosus, previously considered endemic to Ecuador and so far recorded only at five localities in the forests of the Eastern Cordillera. Four individuals of N. nimbosus were captured with Sherman traps at National Natural Park Cueva de los Guacharos in Huila Department, southern Colombia. Individuals were captured at two locations, a subandine primary forest at 2,000 m and at small cave ‘Cueva de los Guacharos’, at 1,900 m. Individuals were identified as N. nimbosus according to the following characteristics: ventral patche of self - colored white hairs in the gular region, ventral pelage ochraceous yellow with a golden tone, medium head-body size between 122 to 140 mm, incisive foramina between 4.6 and 5.1 mm with lateral margins rounded, posterolateral palatal pits small to big shallow and simple, hourglass shaped interorbital region, with supraorbital margins rounded or squared and a thin and delicate face. These new records increase the known species distribution by 760 kilometers to the north and present the first record of the species in Colombia. This first record of N. nimbosus for Colombia potentially extends the species distribution for northeastern Ecuadorian Cordillera and southern Colombian Cordillera. These results show the need to continue with the collection of specimens in poorly known species as N. nimbosus and in poorly known areas in Colombia, such as montane forests.Item type: Item , HIGH FREQUENCY OF BATS IN THE DIET OF THE BARN OWL TYTO ALBA IN A LOWLAND DRY FOREST IN TOLIMA, COLOMBIA(2024) Laura María Baldrich; Ronald Castellanos Florez; Ana Gabriela de Luna; Andrés LinkThe cosmopolitan distribution of the Barn Owl Tyto alba and its relatively well documented diet through the study of pellets have provided evidence of the broad diversity of prey it relies on. In most studies, both in tropical and temperate regions, rodents are its main prey, with other small mammals and vertebrates, and insects complementing its diet. Although bats have been recorded in the diet of T. alba at many localities, they seldom represent an important part of its diet. This study describes the diet of a small colony of T. alba from a mosaic of agricultural fields, pastures for cattle ranching and tropical dry forests in Tolima, central Colombia. Overall, we collected 516 pellets between 2016 and 2017 in a non-systematic manner, and recovered 335 skulls of rodents (67%), bats (29%), birds (3%) and shrews (1%), as well as invertebrate prey. The large proportion of bats in the diet of T. alba in this study is only matched by a few other studies, and further documents the wide range of prey included in the diet of this nocturnal raptor. This is one of the first studies on the diet of T. alba in tropical dry forests in Colombia and complements the existing data on its diet in the American tropics and worldwide.