Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana Home
Help & FAQ
Link opens in a new tab
Español
English
Search content at Pontificia Universidad Javeriana
Home
Profiles
Units
Research output
Projects
Equipment
Courses
Activities
Prizes
Press/Media
Datasets
Impacts
Student theses
Dietary variation during reproduction in Seba's short-tailed fruit bat
Erin E. Bohlender
,
Jairo Pérez-Torres
, Natalia A. Borray-Escalante
, Richard D. Stevens
Department of Biology
Functional and applied ecology
Texas Tech University
Universidad Javeriana
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
12
Scopus citations
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Dietary variation during reproduction in Seba's short-tailed fruit bat'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Pregnant Women
100%
Non-pregnant Women
100%
Fruit Bat
100%
Lactating Females
100%
Dietary Variation
100%
Lactate
66%
Nitrogen Compounds
66%
Lactation
66%
Colombia
33%
Eating
33%
Fecal Samples
33%
Santander
33%
Developmental Stages
33%
Foraging Strategy
33%
Carollia Perspicillata
33%
Piper
33%
Piperaceae
33%
Female-to-male
33%
During Pregnancy
33%
Fetal Development
33%
Ficus
33%
High Energy
33%
Food Items
33%
Dietary Consumption
33%
Piperales
33%
Foraging Decisions
33%
Calcium Requirements
33%
Pepper Plant
33%
Offspring Development
33%
Moraceae
33%
Calcium-rich Foods
33%
Nutrient Availability
33%
Generalist Diet
33%
Diet Analysis
33%
Expected Frequency
33%
Calcium Minerals
33%
Energy Availability
33%
Rosales
33%
INIS
reproduction
100%
variations
100%
fruits
100%
diet
100%
bats
100%
females
85%
males
42%
calcium
42%
food
28%
energy
28%
nitrogen
28%
nutrients
28%
offsprings
28%
peppers
28%
lactation
28%
colombia
14%
pregnancy
14%
availability
14%
insects
14%
caves
14%
expenditures
14%
figs
14%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Lactating Females
100%
Isotopes of Calcium
100%
Offspring
66%
Developmental Stage
33%
Carollia
33%
Piperaceae
33%
Piperales
33%
Moraceae
33%
Nutrient Availability
33%
Ficus
33%
Rosales
33%
Ficus Carica
33%