1. Constricted spatiotemporal foraging of the regenerating salamander, Bolitoglossa mombachoensis
- Author
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Jose M. Zolotoff Pallais, Roger A. Mendieta Donaire, Elinor M. Ketelhohn Clancy, Jiehong Jun Lee, Martin Miguel Casco-Robles, Ji Suk Chung, Roberto M. Sandino Jaen, Maria A. Cobos Rizo, and Marcelo De los Santos Rosales
- Subjects
life history ,Bolitoglossa ,Ecology ,Foraging ,Zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,foraging ,Bolitoglossa mombachoensis ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,biology.animal ,arboreal habitat ,Salamander ,endemic ,lcsh:Ecology ,Life history ,caudate ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Bolitoglossa mombachoensis is an endemic neotropical salamander of the Mombacho Volcano, Nicaragua. Canopy communities within the tropics are hubs for biodiversity, and many tropical plethodontids have a foraging preference for epiphytic plants, such as bromeliads, which provide moist microclimates for shelter, foraging, and nesting. Habitat loss continues to be the biggest threat to amphibians worldwide. This species is highly dependent on nocturnal arboreal climbing. We describe their plant preference, which extends beyond bromeliads, and their arboreal dependence used for refuge and foraging. Foraging behavior is constricted to nighttime, plant availability, geography, and altitude.
- Published
- 2019
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