The modern history of Jamaica is entwined with European exploration of the New World beginning with the landing of Columbus at Discovery Bay on May 4, 1494, during his second voyage to the Americas. Since that time the word Jamaica has conjured thoughts of tropical beaches, trade winds, pleasant tropical nights, Spaniards, British navy, Empire, sugar, rum, plantations, slavery, revolt, maroons, pirates, Port Royal, disasters, hurricanes, and in more recent years independence, tourism, Reggae, and welcoming and happy residents. Our knowledge of Jamaican natural history begins with Browne (1789). He and other early naturalists displayed a broad interest in plants and animals, including bats, but thorough surveys of the island’s chiropteran fa...
The chiropteran fauna of Barbados includes representatives of four families — Noctilionidae, Phyllos...
The island of Grenada is the southernmost of the Lesser Antilles, lying 130 km north of Trinidad and...
Because the islands in the Caribbean long have interested students of mammals and zoogeography, cons...
The modern history of Jamaica is entwined with European exploration of the New World beginning with ...
Jamaica has 22 native mammal species. One of these is an endangered rodent, the Jamaican hutia Geoca...
Five species of bats are known in the literature from Anguilla—Monophyllus plethodon, Brachyphylla c...
Five species of bats are known to occur on the Lesser Antillean island of Barbuda—Noctilio leporinus...
The bat fauna of the Lesser Antillean chain is of considerable interest because it is composed of a ...
The bat fauna of the Caribbean island of Sint Eustatius consists of five documented species—Monophyl...
Located off the northeastern coast of Venezuela, Trinidad is a small tropical island with a rich div...
No comprehensive survey of the chiropteran fauna of the Antillean island of Antigua has been underta...
29 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 28-29)."The foregoing account has, in t...
As currently understood the bat fauna of the British Virgin Islands consists of five species – Nocti...
Goodwin and Greenhall (1961) in their monograph of the bats of Trinidad and Tobago recorded 58 speci...
The chiropteran fauna of the island of Saint Vincent, represented by 12 species, is among the most c...
The chiropteran fauna of Barbados includes representatives of four families — Noctilionidae, Phyllos...
The island of Grenada is the southernmost of the Lesser Antilles, lying 130 km north of Trinidad and...
Because the islands in the Caribbean long have interested students of mammals and zoogeography, cons...
The modern history of Jamaica is entwined with European exploration of the New World beginning with ...
Jamaica has 22 native mammal species. One of these is an endangered rodent, the Jamaican hutia Geoca...
Five species of bats are known in the literature from Anguilla—Monophyllus plethodon, Brachyphylla c...
Five species of bats are known to occur on the Lesser Antillean island of Barbuda—Noctilio leporinus...
The bat fauna of the Lesser Antillean chain is of considerable interest because it is composed of a ...
The bat fauna of the Caribbean island of Sint Eustatius consists of five documented species—Monophyl...
Located off the northeastern coast of Venezuela, Trinidad is a small tropical island with a rich div...
No comprehensive survey of the chiropteran fauna of the Antillean island of Antigua has been underta...
29 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 28-29)."The foregoing account has, in t...
As currently understood the bat fauna of the British Virgin Islands consists of five species – Nocti...
Goodwin and Greenhall (1961) in their monograph of the bats of Trinidad and Tobago recorded 58 speci...
The chiropteran fauna of the island of Saint Vincent, represented by 12 species, is among the most c...
The chiropteran fauna of Barbados includes representatives of four families — Noctilionidae, Phyllos...
The island of Grenada is the southernmost of the Lesser Antilles, lying 130 km north of Trinidad and...
Because the islands in the Caribbean long have interested students of mammals and zoogeography, cons...