Seheult Shane D I, Panchal Raj, Borisenko Alex V, Bennett Patrick J, Faure Paul A
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON L8S 4K1, Canada.
Department of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
J Mammal. 2024 Apr 6;105(3):679-690. doi: 10.1093/jmammal/gyae030. eCollection 2024 Jun.
Individual marking techniques are critical for studying animals, especially in the wild. Current marking methods for bats (Order Chiroptera) have practical limitations and some can cause morbidity. We tested the p-Chip (p-Chip Corp.)-a miniaturized, laser light-activated microtransponder-as a prospective marking technique in a captive research colony of Big Brown Bats (). We assessed long-term readability and postimplantation effects of p-Chips injected subcutaneously above the second metacarpal (wing; = 30) and the tibia (leg; = 13 in both locations). Following implantation (Day 0), p-Chips were scanned with a hand-held ID reader (wand) on postimplantation days (PIDs) 1, 8, 15, 22, 32, 60, 74, 81, 88, 95, and over 1 year later (PID 464). For each trial, we recorded: (1) animal handling time; (2) scan time; (3) number of wand flashes; (4) p-Chip visibility; and (5) overall condition of the bat. Average scan times for p-Chips implanted in both the wing and leg increased over the duration of the study; however, the number of wand flashes decreased, suggesting that efficacy of p-Chip recording increased with user experience. Importantly, over 464 days both the visibility and readability of p-Chips in the wing remained high and superior to tags in the leg, establishing the second metacarpal as the preferred implantation site. Observed morbidity and mortality in captive bats with p-Chips was similar to baseline values for bats without these tags. Because scan efficiency on PID 464 was comparable with earlier days, this indicates that p-Chips implanted in the wing may be suitable as a long-term marking method. Our provisional results suggest that p-Chips are viable for extended field testing to see if they are suitable as an effective alternative to traditional methods to mark bats.
个体标记技术对于研究动物至关重要,尤其是在野外研究中。当前用于蝙蝠(翼手目)的标记方法存在实际局限性,有些方法还会导致发病。我们测试了p-Chip(p-Chip公司)——一种小型化的、激光激活的微型应答器——作为在大棕蝠圈养研究群体中的一种潜在标记技术。我们评估了皮下注射在第二掌骨上方(翅膀;n = 30)和胫骨(腿部;两个部位均为n = 13)的p-Chip的长期可读性和植入后的影响。植入后(第0天),在植入后天数(PID)1、8、15、22、32、60、74、81、88、95以及1年多后(PID 464),用手持式身份识别阅读器(扫描棒)对p-Chip进行扫描。对于每次试验,我们记录:(1)动物处理时间;(2)扫描时间;(3)扫描棒闪烁次数;(4)p-Chip可见度;以及(5)蝙蝠的整体状况。在研究期间,植入翅膀和腿部的p-Chip的平均扫描时间均增加;然而,扫描棒闪烁次数减少,这表明p-Chip记录的效率随着用户经验的增加而提高。重要的是,在464天内,翅膀中p-Chip的可见度和可读性都很高,且优于腿部的标签,这确定了第二掌骨为首选植入部位。观察到带有p-Chip的圈养蝙蝠的发病率和死亡率与没有这些标签的蝙蝠的基线值相似。由于PID 464时的扫描效率与早期相当,这表明植入翅膀的p-Chip可能适合作为一种长期标记方法。我们的初步结果表明,p-Chip对于扩展的现场测试是可行的,以确定它们是否适合作为标记蝙蝠的传统方法的有效替代方法。