919513a5-3e40-498c-896a-f2df02dc9ceb
https://cloud.gbif.org/bifa/resource?r=bifa04-24-09
Bats of southern Vietnam
Mao Ning
Tuanmu
Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica
Researcher
TW
mntuanmu@gate.sinica.edu.tw
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=_QsSNR4AAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao
Joe Chun Chia
Huang
Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
TW
ecojoe.huang@gmail.com
0000-0001-5081-5900
Vy Tran
Nguyen
Institute of Tropical Biology, Vietnamese Academy of Science and Technology
Researcher
VN
vychim@yahoo.com
Bach Thanh
Hai
Rescuer Center, Cat Tien National Park
Director
VN
vychim@yahoo.com
Joe Chun Chia
Huang
School of Environmental and Natural Resource Sciences, Faculty of Science and Technology, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
Visiting scholar
ecojoe.huang@gmail.com
0000-0001-5081-5900
Joe Chun-Chia
Huang
School of Environmental and Natural Resource Sciences, Faculty of Science and Technology, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
ecojoe.huang@gmail.com
0000-0001-5081-5900
principalInvestigator
Gábor
Csorba
Hungarian Natural History Museum
Budapest
HU
csorba.gabor.hnhm@gmail.com
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Gabor_Csorba2
curator
Tigga
Kingston
Southeast Asian Bat Conservation and Research Unit
TW
tigga.kingston@ttu.edu
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Tigga_Kingston
pointOfContact
2020-06-25
eng
Bat records collected from Dong Nai Province, including Cat Tien National Park, and Ho Chih Minh City in Vietnam.
Occurrence
GBIF Dataset Type Vocabulary: http://rs.gbif.org/vocabulary/gbif/dataset_type.xml
Observation
GBIF Dataset Subtype Vocabulary: http://rs.gbif.org/vocabulary/gbif/dataset_subtype.xml
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY-NC) 4.0 License.
Dong Nai province and Ho Chih Minh TP in the southern Vietnam
106.029
107.432
11.458
10.082
All bats were identified to species. at least 16 species belonging to 7 genera of 4 families of bats (Mammalia: order Chiroptera) are reported. However, there are a few with identification uncertainty due to the restriction of taxonomy dilemma in the study area
Hipposideros cineraceus
Hipposideros galeritus
Hipposideros gentilis
Hipposideros grandis/larvatus
Hipposideros cf. lyeli
Kerivoula cf. hardwickii
Megaderma spasma
Murina cyclotis
Myotis rosseti
Pipistrellus cf. abramus
Pipistrellus sp.
Rhinolophus affinis
Rhinolophus affinis 84k
Rhinolophus chaseni
Rhinolophus lepidus
Rhinolophus macroglobosus
Rhinolophus pussilus
unkown
Joe Chun Chia
Huang
School of Environmental and Natural Resource Sciences, Faculty of Science and Technology, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
ecojoe.huang@gmail.com
0000-0001-5081-5900
Tigga
Kingston
Southeast Asian Bat Conservation and Research Unit
Chair
TW
tigga.kingston@ttu.edu
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Tigga_Kingston
Tamás
Görföl
Hungarian Natural History Museum
Mammal Curator
Budapest
HU
gorfol.tamas@gmail.com
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Tamas_Goerfoel
Mao Ning
Tuanmu
Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica
Researcher
TW
mntuanmu@gate.sinica.edu.tw
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=_QsSNR4AAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao
Species data were either extracted from sound files recorded from captured animals or/and capture records in the field note.
This data set is one of data assembled through the BIFA04_24 Project, which covered primarily SE Asia and nearby countries, e.g. Taiwan. This particular data is focused mostly on bats from Dong Nai Province, including Cat Tien National Park, with occasionaly data from the Ho Chih Minh City in the southern Vietnam.
Bats were captured using mist nets and harp traps in forest and caves and, then, released after reference calls were taken using a digital audio recorder.
The data were first assembled in a standard form designed for the Asian Bat Call Database (ABCD).The contributor(s) has been trained via a workshop fund by a GBIF-BIFA grant to use controlled language for data entry. The contents and format have been reviewed by the BIFA04-24 project investigator, Dr. Joe Chun-Chia Huang, and the ABCD manager, Dr. Tamas Golfol, under the supervision of Dr. Gabor Csorba from Hungarian Natural History Museum and Dr. Tigga Kingston from Southeast Asian Bat Conservation and Research Unit. The taxonomy of the species records has been carefully reviewed by Dr. Gabor Csorba which is very experienced of bat taxonomy in Asia. After all reviews and data cleaning, the data is migrated and reformatted using Darwin Core with support from the help desk (Miss Melissa Liu) of Taibif.
Implementation of acoustics to fill the gaps of bat biodiversity information for Southeast Asia
Joe Chun Chia
Huang
0000-0001-5081-5900
principalInvestigator
Mao-Ning
Tuanmu
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=_QsSNR4AAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao
contentProvider
With 380 species, bats make up nearly 40% of Southeast Asia’s mammal species but have received limited attention in biodiversity studies. To redress this, Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit (SEABCRU, www.seabcru.org/) developed a database for bat locality data across SE Asia. The database is a full implementation and designed to push new records to GBIF. The database has c. 40K records including cleaned and manually georeferenced GBIF records, data from literature, museums and field notes. Our prior research shows that SE Asian bat data in open-source resources are strongly biased taxonomically, spatially, and ecologically with consequences for models that underpin conservation policy. Of note is the lack of data for open-space insectivorous species that forage in non-forested habitats. Despite comprising over 30% of SE Asian bat diversity, these species are hard to record using conventional methods. However, occurrence data for these bats can be generated through acoustic sampling, but this requires a dedicated call database. In our review, call descriptions from over 40% of the 270 echolocating species have been reported in literature, but none of the recordings are accessible and many of the species occurrence attached are not published. The Hungarian Natural History Museum (HNHM, www.nhmus.hu) has recently received government support to develop the Asian Bat Call Database (ABCD). To fill current gaps in bat diversity in GBIF, we will (1) integrate the occurrence and acoustic databases to capture species occurrence data represented by acoustic recordings, (2) train researchers to assemble and format existing data following the Darwin Core standard through workshops, webinars and development of tools, (3) publish completed datasets to GBIF. We are confident that with additional support from GBIF, we could properly address the issues listed through the proposed activities and elevate the impact of GBIF network to biodiversity research in Southeast Asia
GBIF-BIFA
2020-03-25T08:32:49.698+00:00
dataset
Tuanmu M N, Huang J C C, Nguyen V T, Hai B T (2020): Bats of southern Vietnam. v1.3. Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit. Dataset/Occurrence. https://cloud.gbif.org/bifa/resource?r=bifa04-24-09&v=1.3
2016-2017
919513a5-3e40-498c-896a-f2df02dc9ceb/v1.3.xml