Guo Dongge, Ding Jianan, Liu Heng, Zhou Lin, Feng Jiang, Luo Bo, Liu Ying
Jilin Provincial Key Laboratory of Animal Resource Conservation and Utilization, Northeast Normal University, 2555 Jingyue Street, Changchun, 130117, China.
College of Life Science, Jilin Agricultural University, 2888 Xincheng Street, Changchun, 130118, China.
Front Zool. 2021 Jan 7;18(1):3. doi: 10.1186/s12983-020-00384-8.
Why a variety of social animals emit foraging-associated calls during group foraging remains an open question. These vocalizations may be used to recruit conspecifics to food patches (i.e. food advertisement hypothesis) or defend food resources against competitors (food defence hypothesis), presumably depending on food availability. Insectivorous bats rely heavily on vocalizations for navigation, foraging, and social interactions. In this study, we used free-ranging big-footed myotis (Myotis macrodactylus Temminck, 1840) to test whether social calls produced in a foraging context serve to advertise food patches or to ward off food competitors. Using a combination of acoustic recordings, playback experiments with adult females and dietary monitoring (light trapping and DNA metabarcoding techniques), we investigated the relationship between insect availability and social vocalizations in foraging bats.
The big-footed myotis uttered low-frequency social calls composed of 7 syllable types during foraging interactions. Although the dietary composition of bats varied across different sampling periods, Diptera, Lepidoptera, and Trichoptera were the most common prey consumed. The number of social vocalizations was primarily predicted by insect abundance, insect species composition, and echolocation vocalizations from conspecifics. The number of conspecific echolocation pulses tended to decrease following the emission of most social calls. Feeding bats consistently decreased foraging attempts and food consumption during playbacks of social calls with distinctive structures compared to control trials. The duration of flight decreased 1.29-1.96 fold in the presence of social calls versus controls.
These results support the food defence hypothesis, suggesting that foraging bats employ social calls to engage in intraspecific food competition. This study provides correlative evidence for the role of insect abundance and diversity in influencing the emission of social calls in insectivorous bats. Our findings add to the current knowledge of the function of social calls in echolocating bats.
为何多种群居动物在集体觅食时会发出与觅食相关的叫声仍是一个悬而未决的问题。这些发声可能用于将同种个体吸引至食物斑块处(即食物广告假说),或者抵御竞争对手以保护食物资源(食物防御假说),推测这可能取决于食物的可获得性。食虫蝙蝠在导航、觅食和社交互动中严重依赖发声。在本研究中,我们利用自由放养的大足鼠耳蝠(Myotis macrodactylus Temminck,1840)来测试在觅食情境中发出的社交叫声是用于宣传食物斑块还是驱赶食物竞争者。通过结合声学记录、对成年雌性进行回放实验以及饮食监测(灯光诱捕和DNA代谢条形码技术),我们研究了昆虫可获得性与觅食蝙蝠社交发声之间的关系。
大足鼠耳蝠在觅食互动中发出由7种音节类型组成的低频社交叫声。尽管蝙蝠的饮食组成在不同采样期有所不同,但双翅目、鳞翅目和毛翅目是其最常捕食的猎物。社交发声的数量主要由昆虫丰度、昆虫物种组成以及同种个体的回声定位发声所预测。在发出大多数社交叫声后,同种回声定位脉冲的数量往往会减少。与对照试验相比,在播放具有独特结构的社交叫声时,正在进食的蝙蝠持续减少觅食尝试和食物摄入量。与对照相比,在有社交叫声的情况下飞行持续时间减少了1.29 - 1.96倍。
这些结果支持食物防御假说,表明觅食蝙蝠利用社交叫声进行种内食物竞争。本研究为昆虫丰度和多样性在影响食虫蝙蝠社交叫声发出方面的作用提供了相关证据。我们的发现增加了目前对回声定位蝙蝠社交叫声功能的认识。