Fortuna Miguel A, Popa-Lisseanu Ana G, Ibáñez Carlos, Bascompte Jordi
Integrative Ecology Group, Estación Biológica de Doñana, CSIC, Avenida M. Luisa s/n, 41013 Sevilla, Spain.
Ecology. 2009 Apr;90(4):934-44. doi: 10.1890/08-0174.1.
The use of roosting sites by animal societies is important in conservation biology, animal behavior, and epidemiology. The giant noctule bat (Nyctalus lasiopterus) constitutes fission-fusion societies whose members spread every day in multiple trees for shelter. To assess how the pattern of roosting use determines the potential for information exchange or disease spreading, we applied the framework of complex networks. We found a social and spatial segregation of the population in well-defined modules or compartments, formed by groups of bats sharing the same trees. Inside each module, we revealed an asymmetric use of trees by bats representative of a nested pattern. By applying a simple epidemiological model, we show that there is a strong correlation between network structure and the rate and shape of infection dynamics. This modular structure slows down the spread of diseases and the exchange of information through the entire network. The implication for management is complex, affecting differently the cohesion inside and among colonies and the transmission of parasites and diseases. Network analysis can hence be applied to quantifying the conservation status of individual trees used by species depending on hollows for shelter.
动物群体对栖息场所的利用在保护生物学、动物行为学和流行病学中具有重要意义。大棕蝠(Nyctalus lasiopterus)构成裂变融合群体,其成员每天分散在多棵树上栖息。为了评估栖息利用模式如何决定信息交流或疾病传播的可能性,我们应用了复杂网络框架。我们发现,在由共享同一棵树的蝙蝠群体形成的明确模块或区域中,种群存在社会和空间隔离。在每个模块内部,我们发现蝙蝠对树木的使用呈现不对称性,表现为一种嵌套模式。通过应用一个简单的流行病学模型,我们表明网络结构与感染动态的速率和形式之间存在很强的相关性。这种模块化结构减缓了疾病在整个网络中的传播以及信息的交换。其对管理的影响较为复杂,对群体内部和群体之间的凝聚力以及寄生虫和疾病的传播有着不同的影响。因此,网络分析可用于量化依赖树洞栖息的物种所使用的单棵树木的保护状况。