Suppr超能文献

人类改造的景观为濒危飞行动物——灰头狐蝠提供了重要的觅食区。

Human-modified landscapes provide key foraging areas for a threatened flying mammal: The grey-headed flying-fox.

机构信息

Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University, Penrith, NSW, Australia.

Institute of Science and Learning, Taronga Conservation Society Australia, Mosman, NSW, Australia.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2021 Nov 1;16(11):e0259395. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0259395. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Urban expansion is a major threat to natural ecosystems but also creates novel opportunities that adaptable species can exploit. The grey-headed flying-fox (Pteropus poliocephalus) is a threatened, highly mobile species of bat that is increasingly found in human-dominated landscapes, leading to many management and conservation challenges. Flying-fox urbanisation is thought to be a result of diminishing natural foraging habitat or increasing urban food resources, or both. However, little is known about landscape utilisation of flying-foxes in human-modified areas, and how this may differ in natural areas. Here we examine positional data from 98 satellite-tracked P. poliocephalus for up to 5 years in urban and non-urban environments, in relation to vegetation data and published indices of foraging habitat quality. Our findings indicate that human-modified foraging landscapes sustain a large proportion of the P. poliocephalus population year-round. When individuals roosted in non-urban and minor-urban areas, they relied primarily on wet and dry sclerophyll forest, forested wetlands, and rainforest for foraging, and preferentially visited foraging habitat designated as high-quality. However, our results highlight the importance of human-modified foraging habitats throughout the species' range, and particularly for individuals that roosted in major-urban environments. The exact plant species that exist in human-modified habitats are largely undocumented; however, where this information was available, foraging by P. poliocephalus was associated with different dominant plant species depending on whether individuals roosted in 'urban' or 'non-urban' areas. Overall, our results demonstrate clear differences in urban- and non-urban landscape utilisation by foraging P. poliocephalus. However, further research is needed to understand the exact foraging resources used, particularly in human-modified habitats, and hence what attracts flying-foxes to urban areas. Such information could be used to modify the urban foraging landscape, to assist long-term habitat management programs aimed at minimising human-wildlife conflict and maximising resource availability within and outside of urban environments.

摘要

城市扩张是对自然生态系统的主要威胁,但也创造了适应性物种可以利用的新机会。灰头狐蝠(Pteropus poliocephalus)是一种受到威胁的、高度移动的蝙蝠物种,越来越多地出现在人类主导的景观中,这给管理和保护带来了许多挑战。狐蝠的城市化被认为是自然觅食栖息地减少或城市食物资源增加的结果,或者两者兼而有之。然而,人们对狐蝠在人类改造区域的景观利用知之甚少,也不知道这种利用在自然区域中会有何不同。在这里,我们研究了 98 只经过卫星追踪的 P. poliocephalus 长达 5 年的位置数据,这些数据涉及城市和非城市环境中的植被数据和已发表的觅食栖息地质量指数。我们的研究结果表明,人类改造的觅食景观全年维持着狐蝠种群的很大一部分。当个体在非城市和小城镇居民区栖息时,它们主要依赖湿硬叶林、森林湿地和雨林觅食,并优先访问被指定为高质量的觅食栖息地。然而,我们的研究结果强调了人类改造的觅食栖息地在该物种整个分布范围内的重要性,特别是对于栖息在主要城市环境中的个体而言。人类改造的栖息地中存在的确切植物物种在很大程度上没有记录;然而,在有这些信息的地方,P. poliocephalus 的觅食与不同的优势植物物种有关,具体取决于个体是栖息在“城市”还是“非城市”地区。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,觅食的 P. poliocephalus 在城市和非城市景观中的利用存在明显差异。然而,需要进一步的研究来了解具体的觅食资源的使用情况,特别是在人类改造的栖息地中,以及是什么吸引了狐蝠进入城市地区。这些信息可以用于修改城市觅食景观,以协助长期的栖息地管理计划,旨在最大限度地减少人类与野生动物的冲突,并最大限度地提高城市内外的资源可用性。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/4224/8559981/f4a49b8fb92c/pone.0259395.g001.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验