“…Folivory has been reported in eight species of phyllostomid bats from the genera Artibeus (Leach 1821), Platyrrhinus (Saussure 1860) and Carollia (Gray 1838) (Greenhall 1957, Van der Pijl 1957, Zortéa and Mendes 1993, Kunz and Ingalls 1994, Kunz and Díaz 1995, Zortéa 1996, Bernard 1997, Esberard et al 1998, Aguiar 2005, Acosta and Aguanta 2006, Novaes and Nobre 2009, Bobrowiec and Cunha 2010, Ruiz-Ramoni et al 2011, Cordero-Schmidt et al 2016, da Rocha et al 2016, Pereira et al 2017. Most observations of leaf consumption document bats chewing small portions of the leaf, extracting the leaf liquids and discarding the remaining fibers (Kunz and Díaz 1995), with the exception of one case [Carollia perspicillata (Linnaeus 1758)] of young leaves which were consumed whole, presumably because they were less fibrous and more digestible (Pereira et al 2017). Folivory is seen as a strategy that might provide vitamins and micronutrients not always available in fruits, and/or proteins that are particularly important during pregnancy and lactation but usually scarce in fruits.…”