Severe seasonal shifts in tropical insect ephemerality drive bat foraging effort

Jenna Kohles, Rachel A Page, Martin Wikelski, Dina Dechmann
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Abstract

Food distribution and availability fundamentally shape foraging. Yet spatiotemporal distribution of mobile prey and its proximate effects on animals have rarely been assessed. The neotropical bat, Noctilio albiventris, forages on aquatic swarming insects which peak just one to two hours after dusk. We matched seasonal insect distribution at high spatiotemporal resolution to the foraging behavior of adult female bats. Surprisingly, insect abundance was lower in the wet season, and insect patches dispersed more rapidly. Correspondingly, bats emerged 45% earlier, foraged over 40% longer, and flew almost twice as far compared to the dry season. Wet season bats also spent less time at each patch, suggesting that patches, though the same size, were less dense and depleted more rapidly. Our results highlight the tight link between foraging and sharp seasonal shifts in the spatial unpredictability and temporal ephemerality of resources, shedding light on behavioral adaptations and plasticity in response to resource fluctuation.
热带昆虫短暂性的严重季节性变化促使蝙蝠努力觅食
食物分布和可得性从根本上决定了觅食行为。然而,移动猎物的时空分布及其对动物的直接影响很少得到评估。这种新热带蝙蝠(Noctilio albiventris)以成群的水生昆虫为食,这些昆虫在黄昏后一到两个小时达到高峰。我们在高时空分辨率下匹配了季节昆虫分布与成年雌性蝙蝠的觅食行为。令人惊讶的是,昆虫丰度在雨季较低,昆虫斑块分散得更快。相应地,蝙蝠的出现时间提前了45%,觅食时间延长了40%以上,飞行距离几乎是旱季的两倍。湿季蝙蝠在每个斑块上停留的时间也更短,这表明斑块虽然大小相同,但密度更低,消耗更快。我们的研究结果强调了觅食与资源的空间不可预测性和时间短暂性的急剧季节性变化之间的紧密联系,揭示了对资源波动的行为适应和可塑性。
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