Oceanic Island Bats as Flower visitors and pollinators

A. Valido, Jens M Olesen
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Abstract

Oceanic islands are relatively poor in insects compared to mainland areas. Therefore, insect-eating island birds and lizards may include other food sources into their diet, e.g. nectar and pollen. Here, we explore if insect-eating island bats face a similar problem and accordingly join the birds and lizards and incorporate plant resources into their diet. Thus, a priory, we assume flower visitation by bats to be more common on oceanic islands than elsewhere. To test this, we reviewed the literature to obtain information on the geographic distribution and diet of all 1,399 species of bats in the world and found that 49%, 21%, and 31% of species have a mainland, mixed mainland-island, and island distribution, respectively. Diets are known for only 65% (905 species) of the bats in the world, and 70%, 22%, and 8% of these, respectively, rely on insects, fruit, and floral resources as their major diet component. Twenty-seven species are even obligate flower visitors. This study confirms that flower-visiting bats, especially Pteropodidae, are significantly more frequent on oceanic islands, while insect eaters are more frequent on mainland and continental islands. Consequently, we argue that flower visitation and pollination by insect-eating island bats require more attention in future island ecology studies. For a start, we list known examples in the literature and report a case study from the Canary Islands. In the latter, we examined the foreheads of 34 museum specimens of the seven Canarian bat species. Half of them carried pollen from ≥ 9 taxa, but only three bat species had larger amounts. Pollen was not identified, but many Canarian and exotic plant species are candidates. Thus, flower visitation by bats may be an oceanic island phenomenon, but requires more focused research, especially night-time flower observations and examination of bats for pollen.
大洋洲岛屿蝙蝠作为花卉访客和授粉者
与大陆地区相比,海洋岛屿的昆虫资源相对贫乏。因此,以昆虫为食的岛屿鸟类和蜥蜴可能会在食物中添加其他食物来源,如花蜜和花粉。在此,我们探讨食虫岛屿蝙蝠是否也面临类似的问题,并相应地加入鸟类和蜥蜴的行列,将植物资源纳入其食物。因此,我们假定蝙蝠探花在海洋岛屿上比其他地方更为常见。为了验证这一点,我们查阅了文献,获得了世界上所有 1,399 种蝙蝠的地理分布和饮食信息,发现分别有 49%、21% 和 31% 的物种分布在大陆、大陆-岛屿混合分布区和岛屿分布区。世界上只有 65% 的蝙蝠(905 种)的饮食是已知的,其中分别有 70%、22% 和 8% 的蝙蝠以昆虫、水果和花卉资源为主要食物。有 27 种蝙蝠甚至是花卉的必访者。这项研究证实,访花蝙蝠,尤其是翼手目蝙蝠,在海洋岛屿上的出现频率明显更高,而吃昆虫的蝙蝠在大陆和大陆性岛屿上的出现频率更高。因此,我们认为,在未来的岛屿生态学研究中,需要更多关注食虫岛屿蝙蝠的访花和授粉。首先,我们列举了文献中已知的例子,并报告了加那利群岛的一个案例研究。在后一项研究中,我们检查了 34 只加那利蝙蝠物种的博物馆标本的前额。其中半数标本上的花粉来自≥ 9 个类群,但只有三个蝙蝠物种的花粉数量较多。花粉未被鉴定,但许多加那利和外来植物物种都是候选物种。因此,蝙蝠探花可能是一种海洋岛屿现象,但需要更集中的研究,特别是夜间花朵观察和蝙蝠花粉检查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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