Dorrestein Annabel, Westcott David, Martin John M, Phalen David, Rose Karrie, Welbergen Justin A
The Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Western Sydney University Richmond New South Wales Australia.
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Land and Water Atherton Queensland Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Aug 15;14(8):e70149. doi: 10.1002/ece3.70149. eCollection 2024 Aug.
Mating systems, influenced by the social and ecological environment and individual attributes, are fundamental components of animal social organisation, impacting behaviour, animal distribution, ecosystem processes, individual reproductive success, and population dynamics. Bats are of particular interest for studies of mating systems as they are thought to exhibit a greater diversity in mating systems than any other mammalian order, and thus make great models for improving our fundamental understanding of causes and consequences of social organisation. Here, we review the current knowledge of bat mating systems. Our analyses show that research on bat mating systems has not kept pace with research on bats in general and that traditional typologies do not accommodate the mating system of several species. Therefore, we propose an alternative, functional framework to categorise mating systems of bats and by extension of other taxa. We argue that mating systems can be classified according to a male reproductive skew continuum, with an increasing skew from monogamy to true lekking. We include an additional category of lek-like mating system along the continuum to account for previous trans-categorical cases that have the appearance of resource defence but are functionally akin to a lek. The new framework has a total of seven categories: promiscuity, monogamy, female defence polygyny, resource defence polygyny, a lek-like mating system, exploded classical lek, and clustered classical lek. Applying this framework to bats reveals that lek mating systems are more prevalent in bats than previously recognised. It is our aim that this review and the proposed framework provide a greater understanding of bat mating systems particularly and provoke research into the factors that shape mating systems across animal taxa more generally.
交配系统受社会、生态环境及个体属性影响,是动物社会组织的基本组成部分,影响着行为、动物分布、生态系统过程、个体繁殖成功率及种群动态。蝙蝠对于交配系统研究尤为重要,因为它们被认为在交配系统方面比其他任何哺乳纲动物展现出更大的多样性,因此是增进我们对社会组织的成因及后果的基本理解的优秀模型。在此,我们综述了关于蝙蝠交配系统的现有知识。我们的分析表明,对蝙蝠交配系统的研究并未跟上对蝙蝠整体研究的步伐,且传统类型学无法涵盖若干物种的交配系统。因此,我们提出一个替代性的功能框架,用于对蝙蝠以及其他分类单元的交配系统进行分类。我们认为,交配系统可根据雄性繁殖偏斜连续统进行分类,从一夫一妻制到真正的求偶场,偏斜程度逐渐增加。我们在连续统中增设了一类类似求偶场的交配系统,以解释先前那些看似资源防御但功能上类似于求偶场的跨类别案例。新框架共有七类:滥交、一夫一妻制、雌性保卫型多配偶制、资源保卫型多配偶制、类似求偶场的交配系统、爆发式经典求偶场、聚集式经典求偶场。将此框架应用于蝙蝠研究发现,求偶场交配系统在蝙蝠中比先前认为的更为普遍。我们的目的是,通过本综述及所提出的框架,尤其能增进对蝙蝠交配系统的理解,并更广泛地激发对塑造动物各分类单元交配系统的因素的研究。