While there is no firm evidence either way, the fact of long cultural contact and that birds and lizards have been introduced by Comorians to Mafia and other East African islands, suggests that the flying-fox Pteropus comorensis is more likely to have been introduced to Mafia Island by humans than to have arrived there by itself as generally assumed.Keywords: Comoros, Zanzibar, Unguja, fruit-bat, Pteropus comorensis, trans-oceanicJournal of East African Natural History 100(1&2): 59–68 (2011
v. ill. 23 cm.QuarterlyFive bones, representing one adult of the Pacific Flying Fox, Pteropus tongan...
The study on the specimens of Masked Flying Fox, Pteropus personatus from Gag and Moluccas Islands, ...
Two new species of flying foxes (genus Pteropus) from the Samoan archipelago are described on the ba...
The natural colonisation of many remote oceanic islands by bats, including those of the western Indi...
The taxonomy, biology, and population status of flying foxes (Pteropus spp.) remain little investiga...
Flying foxes of the genus Pteropus are predominantly island taxa, with high levels of endemism, and ...
This study assesses the current population of Pemba Flying Fox, Pteropusvoeltzkowi, at four key loca...
International audienceBackground: Babesiae are erythrocytic protozoans, which infect the red blood c...
SEVERE disease epidemics are a rare but widely distributed phenomenon among flying foxes (genus Pter...
Globally, island bats are vulnerable to subsistence hunting, with widespread population declines, lo...
The spectacled flying fox (Pteropus conspicillatus) is a difficult species to manage due to its dual...
Distribution. Originally distributed throughout the Indo-Malayan Region and S China, including Taiwa...
Fruit bats of the genus Pteropus (commonly known as flying-foxes) are the natural hosts of several r...
Pteropus samoensis and P. tonganus (Chiroptera: Pteropodidae) are two species of flying fox bats fou...
During past centuries, the increases of human mobility and activities (e.g. agriculture, aquaculture...
v. ill. 23 cm.QuarterlyFive bones, representing one adult of the Pacific Flying Fox, Pteropus tongan...
The study on the specimens of Masked Flying Fox, Pteropus personatus from Gag and Moluccas Islands, ...
Two new species of flying foxes (genus Pteropus) from the Samoan archipelago are described on the ba...
The natural colonisation of many remote oceanic islands by bats, including those of the western Indi...
The taxonomy, biology, and population status of flying foxes (Pteropus spp.) remain little investiga...
Flying foxes of the genus Pteropus are predominantly island taxa, with high levels of endemism, and ...
This study assesses the current population of Pemba Flying Fox, Pteropusvoeltzkowi, at four key loca...
International audienceBackground: Babesiae are erythrocytic protozoans, which infect the red blood c...
SEVERE disease epidemics are a rare but widely distributed phenomenon among flying foxes (genus Pter...
Globally, island bats are vulnerable to subsistence hunting, with widespread population declines, lo...
The spectacled flying fox (Pteropus conspicillatus) is a difficult species to manage due to its dual...
Distribution. Originally distributed throughout the Indo-Malayan Region and S China, including Taiwa...
Fruit bats of the genus Pteropus (commonly known as flying-foxes) are the natural hosts of several r...
Pteropus samoensis and P. tonganus (Chiroptera: Pteropodidae) are two species of flying fox bats fou...
During past centuries, the increases of human mobility and activities (e.g. agriculture, aquaculture...
v. ill. 23 cm.QuarterlyFive bones, representing one adult of the Pacific Flying Fox, Pteropus tongan...
The study on the specimens of Masked Flying Fox, Pteropus personatus from Gag and Moluccas Islands, ...
Two new species of flying foxes (genus Pteropus) from the Samoan archipelago are described on the ba...