Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-04T18:47:29.463Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Elevational zonation of mammals in the central Philippines

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Lawrence R. Heaney
Affiliation:
Division of Mammals, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. 20560, USA
Paul D. Heideman
Affiliation:
Division of Mammals, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. 20560, USA Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA
Eric A. Rickart
Affiliation:
Utah Museum of Natural History, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA
Ruth B. Utzurrum
Affiliation:
Biology Department, Silliman University, 6200 Dumaguete City, Negros Oriental, Philippines
J. S. H. Klompen
Affiliation:
Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA

Abstract

Trapping and netting of small mammals on a land-bridge island (Leyte) and on an oceanic island (Negros) revealed similar patterns of elevational change in abundance and species richness. Fruit bats (Pteropodidae) reached their greatest local densities in agricultural areas, and were least abundant in montane mossy forest. The fruit bats found to be common in agri-cultural areas are widespread in Southeast Asia: in contrast, species that were most common in forested areas are Philippine endemics. Fruit bat abundance was greater on the oceanic island than on the land-bridge island. Trappable small mammals (families Soricidae and Muridae) showed no change in species richness with increasing elevation, but did show a gradual increase in overall abundance. Even though the oceanic island was depauperate of non-volant mammal species, it had the higher abundance of non-volant mammal individuals; however, this may have been due primarily to differences associated with the elevation of sampling sites. Murid rodents at the higher elevations on Leyte tend to be those that are members of the old endemic group of Philippine murids, and those at lower elevations tend to be members of more recently arrived groups. Most non-volant small mammals at all elevations on the oceanic Negros, and in agri-cultural areas on Leyte, are non-native species.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE CITED

Beehler, B. 1981. Ecological structuring of forest bird communities in New Guinea. Monographiae Biologicae 42:837861.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, W. H. 1919. The vegetation of Philippine mountains. Monographs of the Bureau of Science, Manila 13:1434.Google Scholar
Case, T. J. & Cody, M. L. 1987. Testing theories of island biogeography. American Scientist 75:401–411.Google Scholar
Cox, R. 1987. The Philippine spotted deer and the Visayan warty pig. Oryx 21:3742.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diamond, J. M. 1972. Avifauna of the eastern highlands of New Guinea. Monographs of the Nuttall Ornithological Club, Cambridge, Mass. 438 pp.Google Scholar
Diamond, J. M. 1975. Assembly of species communities. Pp. 342444 in Cody, M. L. & Diamond, J. M. (eds). Ecology and evolution of communities. Belknap Press, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. 545 pp.Google Scholar
Graham, G. L. 1983. Changes in bat species diversity along an elevational gradient up the Peruvian Andes. Journal of Mammalogy 64:559571.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heaney, L. R. 1985. Zoogeographic evidence for middle and late Pleistocene land bridges to the Philip-pine Islands. Modem Quaternary Research in SE Asia 9:127143.Google Scholar
Heaney, L. R. 1986. Biogeography of mammals in SE Asia: estimates of rates of colonization, extinct-tion, and speciation. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 28:127165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heaney, L. R., Heideman, P. D. & Mudar, K. M. 1981. Ecological notes on mammals in the Lake Balinsasayao Region, Negros Oriental, Philippines. Silliman Journal 28:122131.Google Scholar
Heaney, L. R. & Patterson, B. D. (eds) 1986. Island biogeography of mammals. Academic Press, 271 pp.Google Scholar
Heideman, P. D. 1987. The reproductive ecology of a community of Philippine fruit bats (Pteropodidae, Megachiroptera). Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. 320 pp.Google Scholar
Heideman, P. D. 1988. The timing of reproduction in Haplonycteris fischeri Lawrence (Pteropodidae): geographic variation and delayed development. Journal of Zoology 215:577595.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heideman, P. D. & Erickson, K. R. 1988. The climate and hydrology of the Lake Balinsasayao watershed, Negros Oriental, Philippines. Silliman Journal, in press.Google Scholar
Heideman, P. D. & Heaney, L. R. 1989. Population biology and estimates of abundance of fruit bats (Pteropodidae) in Philippine submontane forest. Journal of Zoology (in press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heideman, P. D., Heaney, L. R., Thomas, R. L. & Erickson, K. R. 1987. Patterns of faunal diversity and species abundance of non-volant small mammals on Negros Island, Philippines. Journal of Mammalogy 68:884888.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honacki, J. H., Kinman, K. E. & Koeppl, J. W. (eds) 1982. Mammal species of the World. Assoc. Systematic Collections, Lawrence, Kansas. 694 pp.Google Scholar
Hoogstraal, H. 1951. Philippine Zoological Expedition 1946–1947. Narrative and Itinerary. Fieldiana Zoology 33:186.Google Scholar
Lack, D. 1976. Island biology, illustrated by the land birds of Jamaica. University of California Press, Berkeley. 445 pp.Google Scholar
Langham, N. 1983. Distribution and ecology of small mammals in three rain forest localities of Penin-sular Malaysia with particular reference to Kedah Peak. Biotropica 15:199206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawlor, T. E. 1983. The mammals. Pp. 265–289 inCase, T.J. & Cody, M. L.Island biogeography in the Sea of Cortez. University of California Press, Berkeley. 508 pp.Google Scholar
Medway, L. 1966. The mammals. Bulletin of the National Museum, Singapore 34:932.Google Scholar
Medway, L. 1972. The distribution and altitudinal zonation of birds and mammals on Gunong Benom. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) 23:103154.Google Scholar
Musser, G. G. 1977. Epimys benguetensis, a composite, and one zoogeographic view of the rat and mouse faunas of the Philippines and Celebes. American Museum Novitates 2624:115.Google Scholar
Musser, G. G. 1982. Results of the Archbold Expeditions. No. 108. The definition of Apomys, a native rat of the Philippine Islands. American Museum Novitates 2746:143.Google Scholar
Payne, J., Francis, C. M. & Phillipps, K. 1985. A field guide to the mammals of Borneo. The Sabah Society, Kota Kinabalu. 322 pp.Google Scholar
Ohsawa, M., Nainggolan, P. H. J., Tanaka, N. & Anwar, C. 1985. Altitudinal zonation of forest vegetation on Mount Kerinci, Sumatra: with comparisons to zonation in the temperate region of east Asia. Journal of Tropical Ecology 1:193216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabor, D. S. 1955. Notes on mammals and birds of the central northern Luzon highlands, Philippines. Pt. 1. Notes on mammals. Silliman Journal 2:193218.Google Scholar
Rabor, D. S. 1977. Philippine birds and mammals. University of the Philippines Press, Quezon City. 284 pp.Google Scholar
Ricklefs, R. E. & Cox, G. W. 1972. Taxon cycles in the West Indian avifauna. American Naturalist 106:195219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanborn, C. C. 1952. Philippine zoological expedition 1946–1947. Mammals. Fieldiana: Zoology 33:89158.Google Scholar
Taylor, E. H.. 1934. Philippine land mammals. Monographs of the Bureau of Science, Manila 30:1548.Google Scholar
Terborgh, J. 1977. Bird species diversity on an Andean elevational gradient. Ecology 58:10071019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Utzurrum, R. C. B. 1984. Fig fruit consumption and seed dispersal by frugivorous bats in the primary tropical rain forest of Lake Balinsasayao, Negros Oriental, Philippines. Unpublished MS. thesis, Silli-man University, Dumaguete City. 109 pp.Google Scholar
Whitmore, T. C. 1984. Tropical rain forests of the Far East, 2nd ed.Oxford University Press, Oxford. 352 pp.Google Scholar
Williamson, M. 1981. Island populations. Oxford University Press, Oxford. 286 pp.Google Scholar