# Bushy‐Crested Hornbills Successfully Hunting Flying Bats in Gomantong Caves, Malaysia

**Authors:** José L. Tella, Cristina Fuentes‐Sendín, Carlos Gutiérrez‐Expósito, Gema Ruiz‐Jiménez, Raquel Sainz‐Elipe, Cristina B. Sánchez‐Prieto, David Serrano

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.71744 · 2025-07-04

## TL;DR

Bushy-crested hornbills in Malaysia were observed hunting flying bats near a cave, using two distinct techniques, suggesting this behavior is more common than previously thought.

## Contribution

The study reveals a previously underreported and skillful hunting strategy of bushy-crested hornbills targeting flying bats.

## Key findings

- Hornbills used two tactics to catch bats in flight: hawking and snatching.
- The number of hornbills hunting bats exceeded that of bat hawks, a known bat predator.
- This behavior appears to be common, not anecdotal, and has likely gone unnoticed until now.

## Abstract

Hornbills living in tropical forests are predominantly frugivorous, but some species incorporate small animals into their diets, and bats have only been anecdotally recorded among their prey. However, it is not well known how they are captured and how often. We observed bushy‐crested hornbills (
Anorrhinus galeritus
) capturing wrinkle‐lipped free‐tailed bats (Mops plicatus) in flight as thousands of them emerged from a large cave‐roost in Bornean Malaysia. At least eight individuals successfully hunted flying bats by perching on dry branches hanging from the main entrance of the cave, using two tactics: (1) by jumping and making short flights until catching the flying bats (i.e., hawking), and (2) perching, waiting for bats that fly by at short distances, catching them with quick movements of the beak (i.e., snatching). This does not appear to be an anecdotal behavior, but rather one that has gone unnoticed until now. The number of hornbills hunting was greater than that of bat hawks (Machaeramphus alcinus), a diurnal raptor specialized in hunting bats. Further systematic monitoring of these and other diurnal avian predators is necessary to fully understand the pressure they exert on bats.

We observed a group of bushy‐crested hornbills (
Anorrhinus galeritus
) surprisingly hunting bats as they fly out of a large roosting cave in Bornean Malaysia, but not when they are roosting inside the easily accessible cave. The frequency and skill with which they captured bats in flight suggest that this is not just anecdotal evidence, but rather an underreported, commonly used hunting strategy.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Anorrhinus galeritus (taxon 866357), Mops plicatus (taxon 3370289)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Molossidae (free-tailed bats, family) [taxon 9436], Anorrhinus galeritus (Bushy-crested hornbill, species) [taxon 866357], Chiroptera (bats, order) [taxon 9397], Bucerotiformes (hoopoes and others, order) [taxon 57379]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12231221/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12231221