TL;DR: In this article, the effects of Hurricane Hugo on three common phyllostomid bats (Artibeusjamaicensis, Stenoderma rufum, and Monophyllus redmani) were examined for three years prior and three years after the hurricane.
Abstract: Natural disturbances can have large effects on ecosystem structure and function depending on their scale, intensity, and frequency. On 18 September 1989 Hurricane Hugo struck Puerto Rico, with the eye of the hurricane passing within 10 km of the Luquillo Experimental Forest. This provided a rare opportunity to evaluate the effects of an infrequent but large scale and high intensity disturbance on tropical bat species. Data on demographic parameters of three common phyllostomid bats (Artibeusjamaicensis, Stenoderma rufum, and Monophyllus redmani) were examined for three years prior and three years after the hurricane. Population levels as estimated by captures per net hour of all three species were affected by Hurricane Hugo. Populations of A. jamaicensis and M. redmani returned to predisturbance levels within two years. In contrast, population levels of S. rufum declined to about 30 percent of prehurricane levels and have not recovered after three years. Moreover, telemetry data indicate that foraging and home range size expanded to encompass an area approximately five times larger than its prehurricane size. The cost of foraging, in terms of time and energy, may be considerably elevated over prehurricane scenarios. In fact, a significant change in the age structure of the population (juvenile individuals have been absent from the population since Hurricane Hugo) as well as significant decline in the percent of reproductively active females indicate a failure to reproduce in the posthurricane environment.
TL;DR: Level of ectoparasite infestation differed because of host age, but not sex, with juveniles harboring higher numbers than adults, and no ectoparsite attribute differed with season.
Abstract: Incidence, prevalence, and density of ectoparasites are reported for 3 species of tropical bats, Stenoderma rufum Demarest, Artibeus jamaicensis Leach, Monophyllus redmani Leach, from the tabonuco forest of Puerto Rico. In addition, patterns of ectoparasite associations were examined with respect to several host characteristics including age and sex, as well as with respect to season. Levels of ectoparasite infestation differed because of host age, but not sex, with juveniles harboring higher numbers than adults. No ectoparasite attribute differed with season. Significantly different assemblages of parasites occurred on adult male, adult female, and juvenile A. jamaicensis. Moreover, S. rufum, A. jamaicensis, and M. redmani each have a significantly different ectoparasite assemblage.