1982
DOI: 10.2307/3503843
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Lasiurus borealis

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Cited by 57 publications
(50 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
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“…As identificações atuais baseiam-se ou em chaves já defasadas, ou em chaves mais abrangentes para morcegos da América do Sul (Gardner 2008), ou áreas mais restritas, como as Guianas (Lim & Engstrom 2001). São usadas ainda chaves restritas a famílias, como Molossidae (Gregorin & Taddei 2002), ou ainda gêneros como, por exemplo, Sturnira (Giannini & Barquez 2003), Diclidurus (Ceballos & Medellín 1988), Micronycteris (Simmons 1996), Lasiurus (Shump Jr. & Shump 1982), Lonchorhina (Lassieur & Wilson 1989), Mimon (Ortega & Arita 1997) …”
Section: Chaves De Identificaçãounclassified
“…As identificações atuais baseiam-se ou em chaves já defasadas, ou em chaves mais abrangentes para morcegos da América do Sul (Gardner 2008), ou áreas mais restritas, como as Guianas (Lim & Engstrom 2001). São usadas ainda chaves restritas a famílias, como Molossidae (Gregorin & Taddei 2002), ou ainda gêneros como, por exemplo, Sturnira (Giannini & Barquez 2003), Diclidurus (Ceballos & Medellín 1988), Micronycteris (Simmons 1996), Lasiurus (Shump Jr. & Shump 1982), Lonchorhina (Lassieur & Wilson 1989), Mimon (Ortega & Arita 1997) …”
Section: Chaves De Identificaçãounclassified
“…The eastern red bat (Lasiurus borealis) is an insectivorous bat that is widely distributed throughout a large portion of North America (Shump and Shump, 1982). It is the most frequently captured forest-dwelling bat in most of Arkansas (Baker and Ward, 1967;Gardner and McDaniel, 1978;Saugey et al, 1989).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Red bats are solitary tree bats (Carter 1950, Izor 1979, Shump and Shump 1982b, Kunz 1982, Barclay et al 1988. Historically, silver-haired bats were believed to roost alone under loose bark, but more recent studies have documented maternal colonies of silver-haired bats (e.g., Betts (1996)).…”
Section: Bat Mortality and Use At Wind Plantsmentioning
confidence: 99%