Fjelldal Mari Aas, van der Kooij Jeroen
Finnish Museum of Natural History University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland.
Nature Education, Research and Consultancy van der Kooij Slattum Norway.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Oct 23;14(10):e70324. doi: 10.1002/ece3.70324. eCollection 2024 Oct.
Bats inhabiting northern latitudes are faced with short reproductive seasons during which they must produce and rear pups before fattening up in time to survive the winter hibernation. Therefore, the timing of parturition has considerable impacts on future fitness prospects for the mother and pup. However, little is known about individual variation in breeding phenology and its consequences for postnatal development within bat populations. Here, we studied the phenology of breeding in across 7 years using data collected by day-to-day monitoring of a breeding colony in Norway (60.1° ) for which the identity and age of each mother ( = 8) and pup ( = 28) were known. Using mixed-effect models, we found that arrival at the colony was influenced by temperature conditions from mid-April to mid-May across all females, but that there were strong and consistent individual differences in arrival- and parturition time across years. Females generally arrived ~32.1 days before giving birth, but the gestation duration was reduced if females arrived late and prolonged if females left the colony when faced with cold weather conditions. Pups born later in the season were born smaller but had higher growth rates during the most rapid growth period (<10 days old). The within-individual effects suggest that the higher growth rates could be due to mothers compensating (e.g. through increased food intake) for late parturition rather than by improved food availability. Date of parturition did not influence adult body size in pups. Pups became volant at the earliest only 13.1 days after birth and approached adult flight patterns during their first flight week. Our results suggest that is highly adapted to a short breeding season by producing large, fast developing and early volant pups, despite the environmental pressures bats face at northern latitudes.
生活在北纬地区的蝙蝠面临着短暂的繁殖季节,在此期间它们必须生育并抚养幼崽,然后及时增肥以度过冬季冬眠。因此,分娩时间对母蝠和幼崽未来的健康前景有相当大的影响。然而,对于蝙蝠种群中繁殖物候的个体差异及其对产后发育的影响却知之甚少。在这里,我们利用对挪威一个繁殖群体(60.1°)进行每日监测收集的数据,研究了7年期间的繁殖物候,该群体中每只母蝠(n = 8)和幼崽(n = 28)的身份和年龄都是已知的。使用混合效应模型,我们发现所有雌性蝙蝠到达群体的时间受4月中旬至5月中旬温度条件的影响,但不同年份到达和分娩时间存在强烈且一致的个体差异。雌性通常在分娩前约32.1天到达,但如果雌性到达较晚,妊娠期会缩短;如果雌性在寒冷天气条件下面临离开群体的情况,妊娠期会延长。在季节后期出生的幼崽出生时体型较小,但在生长最快的时期(<10日龄)生长速度较快。个体内部效应表明,较高的生长速度可能是由于母亲为晚产进行补偿(例如通过增加食物摄入量),而不是因为食物供应改善。分娩日期对幼崽成年后的体型没有影响。幼崽最早在出生后仅13.1天就能飞行,并在第一个飞行周接近成年飞行模式。我们的研究结果表明,尽管蝙蝠在北纬地区面临环境压力,但通过生育体型大、发育快且飞行早的幼崽,[蝙蝠物种名称未给出]高度适应了短暂的繁殖季节。