horseshoe bat - significado y definición. Qué es horseshoe bat
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Qué (quién) es horseshoe bat - definición

FAMILY OF MAMMALS
Rhinolophus; Horseshoe bats; Rhinolophidae; List of Rhinolophus species; Rhinolophus species list; Rhinolophinae
  • alt=Craseonycteris thonglongyai
  • alt=Hipposideros gigas
  • alt=Lesser Mouse- tailed Bat
  • alt=Mariana Fruit Bat
  • alt=Megaderma spasma
  • alt=A simple outline of the face of a horseshoe bat, facing forward. A large, leaf-like structure is at the center of its face. The pointed tip arising between the eyes is labeled as the lancet; the u-shaped bottom of the nose-leaf is labeled as the horseshoe; the knob projecting outwards from the center of the nose-leaf is the sella
  • alt=A black-and-white sketch of three views of a fossil bat's jaws and teeth
  • alt=Pteronotus parnellii
  • alt=Two bat silhouettes. The top, a horseshoe bat, has shorter, broad wings. The second, a free-tailed bat, has very long and narrow wings.
  • alt=A photograph of a bat skull against a white background. The lower jaw is missing. The molars and [[premolar]]s have triangular cusps, and the canines are pronounced. It has a large swelling of bone on its snout.
  • alt=A horseshoe bat viewed in profile with its left wing closest to the camera. The sella is pronounced from this angle, sticking straight out of the center of the nose-leaf. The bat has grayish-brown fur, and the skin on its forearm is pinkish.
  • alt=Rhinolophus rouxii
  • alt=A photograph of a horseshoe bat hanging upside down from a rocky surface, with the photographer below the bat. It has shockingly bright orange fur, and dark gray wings, ears, and nose.
  • alt=Rhinonicteris aurantia

horseshoe bat         
¦ noun an insectivorous bat with a horseshoe-shaped ridge on the nose. [Genus Rhinolophus: many species.]
Horseshoe bat         
Horseshoe bats are bats in the family Rhinolophidae. In addition to the single living genus, Rhinolophus, which has about 106 species, the extinct genus Palaeonycteris has been recognized.
Francis's woolly horseshoe bat         
SPECIES OF MAMMAL
Rhinolophus francisi; Francis’ woolly horseshoe bat
Francis's wooly horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus francisi) is a species of bat in the family Rhinolophidae found in Malaysia and Thailand. It was named in honor of Charles M.

Wikipedia

Horseshoe bat

Horseshoe bats are bats in the family Rhinolophidae. In addition to the single living genus, Rhinolophus, which has about 106 species, the extinct genus Palaeonycteris has been recognized. Horseshoe bats are closely related to the Old World leaf-nosed bats, family Hipposideridae, which have sometimes been included in Rhinolophidae. The horseshoe bats are divided into six subgenera and many species groups. The most recent common ancestor of all horseshoe bats lived 34–40 million years ago, though it is unclear where the geographic roots of the family are, and attempts to determine its biogeography have been indecisive. Their taxonomy is complex, as genetic evidence shows the likely existence of many cryptic species, as well as species recognized as distinct that may have little genetic divergence from previously recognized taxa. They are found in the Old World, mostly in tropical or subtropical areas, including Africa, Asia, Europe, and Oceania.

Horseshoe bats are considered small or medium-sized microbats, weighing 4–28 g (0.14–0.99 oz), with forearm lengths of 30–75 mm (1.2–3.0 in) and combined lengths of head and body of 35–110 mm (1.4–4.3 in). The fur, long and smooth in most species, can be reddish-brown, blackish, or bright orange-red. They get their common name from their large nose-leafs, which are shaped like horseshoes. The nose-leafs aid in echolocation; horseshoe bats have highly sophisticated echolocation, using constant frequency calls at high duty cycles to detect prey in areas of high environmental clutters. They hunt insects and spiders, swooping down on prey from a perch, or gleaning from foliage. Little is known about their mating systems, but at least one species is monogamous, while another is polygynous. Gestation is approximately seven weeks and one offspring is produced at a time. A typical lifespan is six or seven years, but one greater horseshoe bat lived more than thirty years.

Horseshoe bats are relevant to humans in some regions as a source of disease, as food, and for traditional medicine. Several species are the natural reservoirs of various SARS-related coronaviruses, and data strongly suggests they are a reservoir of SARS-CoV, though humans may face more exposure risk from intermediate hosts such as masked palm civets.

They are hunted for food in several regions, particularly sub-Saharan Africa, but also Southeast Asia. Some species or their guano are used in traditional medicine in Nepal, India, Vietnam, and Senegal.

Ejemplos de uso de horseshoe bat
1. I‘d been out, and I had this quite big horseshoe bat flapping around my sitting room.
2. The baby greater horseshoe bat, now aged six months, was ringed at birth in Woodchester Mansion in Gloucestershire in July.
3. The endangered greater horseshoe bat is a highly sedentary species and rarely flies far from its roost.
4. His most unusual meal was a greater horseshoe bat, which he reckons is not dissimilar in taste to grey squirrel, if the comparison helps.
5. All three species of horseshoe bat – of the genus Rhinolophus – that were studied by the groups were found to carry coronavirus SL–CoV, which causes Sars.