Handbook of the Mammals of the WorldVolume 9: Bats

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Publicado por Lynx Edicions en asociación con Conservación Internacional y la UICN ¡Hemos dejado lo mejor para el final! El volumen 9 completa la serie Handbook of Mammals of the World, y trata de los murciélagos, orden Chiroptera. Nuestro conocimiento de los murciélagos se ha disparado en las dos últimas décadas, y toda esa información se refleja en este volumen. El número de especies reconocidas ha aumentado en más de 400 durante ese tiempo y sigue creciendo. Los murciélagos ocupan casi todos los hábitats de los seis continentes y su ecología es increíblemente diversa. Polinizadores y dispersores de semillas de miles de especies de plantas, los murciélagos son fundamentales para el mantenimiento de los ecosistemas tropicales. Como siempre, el texto incluye información actualizada sobre cada especie, y cada una está cuidadosamente ilustrada. Los relatos familiares incluyen fotografías en color que documentan diversos comportamientos de estos interesantes mamíferos.

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Código de producto: HMW0009

ISBN: 978-84-16728-19-0

SKU: HMW0009 Categorías: , , Etiqueta:

«Este último libro es una hazaña notable en sí mismo. Pero piensa en la cantidad de trabajo que ha llevado producir toda la serie: ordenar la taxonomía más reciente; encontrar miles de fotografías; escribir descripciones de cada especie y encontrar a las personas adecuadas para que las escriban; preparar ilustraciones para cada mamífero del planeta. Ha sido un proyecto hercúleo y estoy seguro de que muchos observadores de mamíferos están muy agradecidos a todos los implicados. /…/ El volumen final garantiza que el manual termine con una nota alta. Aún no lo he leído en detalle, y estoy seguro de que habrá desacuerdos con algunas de las opciones taxonómicas. Pero las fotografías son fabulosas, y en ellas aparecen varias personas que informan regularmente en este sitio – rápidamente vi fotos de Vladimir Dinets Jose Gabriel Martinez y algunas mías. Algunas de las imágenes en vuelo son magníficas; probablemente no debería añadir ninguna aquí por motivos de derechos de autor, pero echa un vistazo a una selección en el sitio web de la editorial. También reconocí a la mayoría de los autores colaboradores, muchos de los cuales han tenido la amabilidad de responder a mis preguntas a lo largo de los años. La gente de los murciélagos suele ser la más amable y apasionada de todos los mastozoólogos».

Jon Hall Observación de Mamíferos , 27 de octubre de 2019

Peso

4.3 kg

Dimensiones

24 × 31 cm

Formato

Tapa dura

Páginas

1008

Fecha de publicación

October 2019

Publicado por

Lynx Edicions

Descripción

¡Hemos dejado lo mejor para el final! El volumen 9 completa la serie Handbook of Mammals of the World, y trata de los murciélagos, orden Chiroptera.

Nuestro conocimiento de los murciélagos se ha disparado en las dos últimas décadas, y toda esa información se refleja en este volumen. El número de especies reconocidas ha aumentado en más de 400 durante ese tiempo y sigue creciendo. Los murciélagos ocupan casi todos los hábitats de los seis continentes y su ecología es increíblemente diversa. Polinizadores y dispersores de semillas de miles de especies de plantas, los murciélagos son fundamentales para el mantenimiento de los ecosistemas tropicales.

Como siempre, el texto incluye información actualizada sobre cada especie, y cada una está cuidadosamente ilustrada. Los relatos familiares incluyen fotografías en color que documentan diversos comportamientos de estos interesantes mamíferos.

Galardonado como Título Académico Sobresaliente, 2020 CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries’.

Choice publica una lista de Títulos Académicos Destacados que fueron revisados durante el año natural anterior. Esta prestigiosa lista refleja lo mejor de los títulos académicos revisados por Choice y conlleva el extraordinario reconocimiento de la comunidad de bibliotecas académicas.

Contenidos y autores:

Encargar CHIROPTERA

Familia Pteropodidae (Murciélagos frugívoros del Viejo Mundo)Norberto Giannini, Connor Burgin, Victor Van Cakenberghe, Susan Tsang, Stefan Hintsche, Tyrone Lavery, Frank Bonaccorso, Francisca Almeida y Brian O’Toole
Familia Rhinopomatidae (Murciélagos de cola de ratón)Ivan Horáček
Familia Craseonycteridae (Murciélago narigudo)Tigga Kingston y Pipat Soisook
Familia Megadermatidae (Murciélagos falsos vampiros)Charles M. Francis
Familia Rhinonycteridae (Murciélagos Tridentes)Petr Benda
Familia Hipposideridae (Murciélagos hocicudos del Viejo Mundo)Ara Monadjem, Pipat Soisook, Vu Dinh Thong y Tigga Kingston
Familia Rhinolophidae (Murciélagos herradura)Gábor Csorba, Anthony Hutson, Steve Rossiter y Connor Burgin
Familia Emballonuridae (Murciélagos de cola envainada)Frank Bonaccorso
Familia Nycteridae (Murciélagos de cara hendida)Ara Monadjem
Familia Myzopodidae (Murciélagos chupadores de Madagascar)Steve Goodman
Familia Mystacinidae (Murciélagos de cola corta de Nueva Zelanda)Cory Toth
Familia Noctilionidae (Murciélagos Bulldog)Rodrigo Medellín
Familia Furipteridae (Murciélago ahumado y Murciélago sin pulgar)Joaquín Arroyo-Cabrales
Familia Thyropteridae (Murciélagos aliblancos)Thomas Lee, Jr
Familia Mormoopidae (Murciélagos de cara fantasma, murciélagos de espalda desnuda y murciélagos bigotudos)Ana Pavan
Familia Phyllostomidae (Murciélagos hocicudos del Nuevo Mundo)Sergio Solari, Rodrigo Medellín, Bernal Rodríguez-Herrera, Valeria da Cunha Tavares, Guilherme Garbino, M. Alejandra Camacho, Diego Tirira Saá, Burton Lim, Joaquín Arroyo-Cabrales, Armando Rodríguez-Durán, Elizabeth Dumont, Santiago Burneo, Luis F. Aguirre Urioste, Marco Tschapka & Deborah Espinosa
Familia Natalidae (Murciélagos de orejas en embudo)Adrián Tejedor
Familia Molossidae (Murciélagos de cola libre)Peter Taylor, Burton Lim, Michael Pennay, Pipat Soisook, Tigga Kingston, Livia Loureiro y Ligiane Moras
Familia Miniopteridae (Murciélagos de dedos largos)Carlos Ibáñez y Javier Juste
Familia Cistugidae (Murciélagos alados)Manuel Ruedi
Familia Vespertilionidae (Murciélagos Vesper)Ricardo Moratelli, Connor Burgin, Vinícius Cláudio, Roberto Novaes, Adrià López-Baucells & Rudolf Haslauer
  • 73 láminas en color
  • Más de 450 fotografías en color
  • 1423 mapas de distribución

4 valoraciones en Handbook of the Mammals of the WorldVolume 9: Bats

  1. Inglés

    Mark Tasker

    Truly excellent compilation. It will take me some time more to read it, but as a volume to dip into it is wonderful. Well done all. My only slight quibble is that it would have been good to show sonograms of typical echolocation calls (for those bats that do echolocate of course). Lovely artwork too.

  2. Inglés

    Mansur AL-Fahad (propietario verificado)

    Ended, saved the best for last!!Thanks everyone for completing the series.

  3. Inglés

    Mansur AL-Fahad (propietario verificado)

    Great work, and as usual the authors and illustrators made a great effort to the success of the work. Finally I congratulate everyone on the completion of the series

  4. Inglés

    Gehan de Silva Wijeyeratne

    The final volume in the Handbook of the Mammals of the World marks the end of an epic scientific journey which has seen a multidisciplinary team of administrators, editors, fund raisers, scientists, artists, designers and a host of other skilled professionals document all of the living mammals on our planet in a series of books where every mammal is illustrated for the first time with succinct information provided on every species together with a distribution map. I did not see this making the headline news on TV in the same way as a major landmark in space exploration. But it is odd that it has taken fifty years after we put a human on the moon, to get around to documenting and illustrating in this way, all the living species of the most popular taxonomic group of life forms on our own planet. Also, it is remarkable that it has been achieved not by governments with astronomical budgets but by private enterprise; led by a team of visionaries. The completion of Handbook of the Mammals of the World (HMW) also strengthens Lynx Edicions as a publisher with an Aladdin’s cave of natural history material that will enable it to (and it has already begun to do so) publish a series of country or regional level guides to mammals.

    The final volume follows (well nearly) the standard format for the series. A few preliminaries are followed by expansive family introductions which are grouped under standard categories including Systematics, Morphological Aspects, Habitat, General Habits, Communication, Food and Feeding, Breeding, Movements, Home Range and Social Organisation, Relationships with Humans and finally Status and Conservation. These sections are interspersed with stunning images of a generous size afforded by the larger encyclopaedia size of the pages. Some images occupy a full page combining a coffee-table presentational format to a book underpinned by solid science. One surprise with this volume is that the index and the references are on a CD and can also be downloaded freely from the Lynx Edicions website. The latter is essential because technology has evolved and people demand slimmer and lighter laptops and CD readers are no longer included as standard. In the very first page of the introduction this departure from other volumes is explained. The rapid increase in the number of species to over 1,400 species had resulted in a book which would have exceeded 1,200 pages; larger than the size that could have been bound into a single volume.

    I suspect the references of 102 pages and the index of 23 pages being available only as pdfs will produce a mixed reaction. Of course in a book, it is nice to have them all in the book. But there is a huge advantage with the pdfs. It is very easy now to search the index and pdf on your laptop and also very easy to copy over any references if you are working on an article and paper. This book arrived after I had sent back the first page layouts of ‘A Naturalist Guide to the Mammals of Sri Lanka’ to be published by John Beaufoy Publishing. I had been able to cover 31 of the 33 species of bats in Sri Lanka, helped enormously by the work done in Sri Lanka by Professor Wipula Yapa and his students. In a jiffy I was able to search the references pdf for ‘Yapa’ and Chocolate Pipistrelle Falsistrellus affinis. I searched for the latter because it was one of the species for which I had not been able to source an image for the first edition of my book. I for one would be happy if the references for all of the HMW series were to be made available in the future as searchable pdfs on their website

    With all of the volumes in the HMW, the species accounts are very much in the vein of something you refer to, but the extensive family accounts are pages that you could happily dip into at random and find the content utterly absorbing if you have an interest in mammals. The family accounts in the other volumes were almost always in accessible language. However, with this volume some of the text is necessarily technical when matters such as vocal frequencies, dentition and bone structure are discussed in separating genera. No less than 52 authors are responsible for the text and a team of seven artists have painted the plates to create definitive reference work under the chief editorship of two of the most respected and published mammalogists in the world. As always, the images are stunning, whether it is a fruit bat flying and carrying one of its young or a day roost of bats under a branch looking like some strange tree fungi.

    When I first wrote and photographed a guide to the mammals of Sri Lanka a few decades ago, fruit bats were in the Megachiroptera and the insectivorous bats were in the Microchiroptera suborders. The long established classical taxonomy has been overturned by molecular phylogenetics showing that the megabats are nested within the microbats. In the first three pages of introduction there is an explanation of how the 21 families are now grouped with seven families in the suborder Yinpterochiroptera and the remaining 14 in the suborder Yangochiroptera. There is also a thumbnail summary of the families in the first three pages. I would have liked to have seen something like a stylised phylogenetic diagram to illustrate the relationship between the families. Although this is absent, nevertheless, the more taxonomically complex families such as Old Word Fruit Bats (family Pteropididae) and Vesper Bats (family Vespertilionidae) for example, have simple diagrams to show how the families break down into subfamilies and tribes. The Old World Fruit Bats for example comprise eight subfamilies with the subfamily Rousettinae having seven tribes.

    For some people the taxonomic details might be just technical noise and irrelevant to enjoying these wonderful mammals which show so much variety (21 families!). But for others like me, knowing some of these levels of taxonomic groupings, makes it easier to have a ‘mental filing system’ to deal with a large number of species. Quite often (but not always) subfamilies and tribes have a geographic node as colonising mammals speciated. For someone like me who has a home in two continents it is always interesting to understand which families are found where. In Asia, I would go up to the roof top with my youngest daughter when she was a little child and watch the sky pepper with dark dots at dusk as a swarm of Indian Flying Foxes left a city park and flew over our house with purposeful wingbeats. In the UK the fruit bats are absent, but we join the bat walks at the London Wetland Centre to see and hear on bat detectors, species that represent families found in both Asia and Europe. As with many birders who have a fascination with taxonomic matters, I always find the Systematics section of the family accounts very interesting. A study of how we have grouped families is also a study of how science has changed.

    By comprehensively documenting and illustrating every species of mammal in the world, the HMW sets a new baseline of reference for researchers. It is a milestone, but not the end of a project to document mammals; it marks yet another beginning since there is so much more to learn in a world where new and sometimes even large mammals are still found hidden in plain sight.

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