一种新热带蝙蝠在群落水平上跨年跨季进行一致的长途觅食飞行

Maria Camila Calderon Capote, Marielle L van Toor, Teague O'Mara, Travis Bayer, Meg Crofoot, Dina Dechmann
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摘要

所有觅食动物都面临着一个权衡问题:它们应该投入多少时间开发已知资源,还是投入多少时间探索发现新资源?对于群居的中心地带觅食动物来说,平衡这些相互竞争的目标尤其具有挑战性。社会信息的可用性可能会阻碍个体投资于高风险、高成本但可能有回报的探索。我们对巴拿马科隆岛三个群落的大矛鼻蝠(Phyllostomus hastatus)群体进行了 GPS 跟踪。在旱季,当这些杂食动物觅食昙花(Ochroma pyramidale)的花蜜时,蝙蝠总是绕过离它们栖息地较近的开花树木,长途跋涉到偏远的、蝙蝠群特有的觅食区域。在雨季,蝙蝠继续在这些地区觅食,觅食的食物种类繁多,估计分布广泛,但蝙蝠也会到其他类似的远处觅食。觅食区在蝙蝠群内部共享,但在蝙蝠群之间并不总是共享。我们的纵向数据集表明,每个蝙蝠群落的蝙蝠都会绕过其他可利用的食物区,长途跋涉前往通过社会学习而共享的觅食区。这些蝙蝠并没有为寻找附近的资源而进行探索,也没有采取 "赢-留-输-换 "的觅食策略,而是遵循蝙蝠群的特定行为,这与蝙蝠对特定觅食地的文化传播偏好是一致的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Consistent long-distance foraging flights across years and seasons at colony level in a Neotropical bat
All foraging animals face a trade-off: how much time should they invest in exploitation of known resources versus exploration to discover new resources? For group-living central place foragers, balancing these competing goals poses particular challenges. The availability of social information may discourage individuals from investing in risky, expensive but possibly rewarding exploration. We GPS-tracked groups of greater spear-nosed bats (Phyllostomus hastatus) from three colonies on Isla Colon in Panama. In the dry season, when these omnivores forage on the nectar of ephemeral balsa flowers (Ochroma pyramidale), bats consistently travelled long distances to remote, colony-specific foraging areas, bypassing flowering trees closer to their roosts. They continued to use these same areas in the wet season, when feeding on a diverse, presumably ubiquitously distributed diet, but also visited other, similarly distant foraging areas. Foraging areas were shared within, but not always between colonies. Our longitudinal dataset suggests that bats from each colony invest in long-distance commutes to socially learned shared foraging areas, bypassing other available food patches. Rather than investing in exploration to find nearby resources or engaging in a win-stay lost-shift foraging strategy, these bats follow colony specific behaviours consistent with the existence of culturally transmitted preferences for specific feeding grounds.
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