Title
Sources of assimilated protein in five species of new world frugivorous bats
Date Issued
01 December 2002
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Herrera L.G.
Gutierrez E.
Hobson K.A.
Altube B.
Díaz W.G.
Sánchez-Cordero V.
Abstract
Fruits are N-poor items and their availability in the tropics varies throughout the year. Field and experimental studies debate whether frugivorous bats have to switch to N-rich sources of food during part of the year or if they are able to subsist on a fruit-only diet. Different strategies to meet their N requirements may influence the way in which frugivorous bats partition food resources allowing the coexistence of numerous species in tropical communities. We examined the extent to which five species of frugivorous bats relied on plant and insect sources of assimilated protein using stable-N isotope analysis. We assumed that bats only had access to fruits and insects in our analysis bur we also collected fecal samples to examine the presence of other food items. We conducted the study during at least 1 full year depending on the species of bat in a tropical rain forest in southern Mexico. In the five species of bats examined, plant sources (i.e. fruits) provided most of the protein assimilated during the year, although there was a general trend for all species to show a decrease in relative plant contribution at the end of the rainy season and beginning of the dry season. In Artibeus jamaicensis, Uroderma bilobatum and Dermanura phaeotis, plants were still a major source of protein during this period, bur in some individuals of Sturnira lilium and Carollia brevicauda insects represented an important contribution to their diet. Fecal samples of most bats presented fruit remains, and insects and pollen were found in small proportions. Bat reproductive activity was detected at the end of the dry season and in the middle of the rainy season, and plants were the major source of protein during this period with the exception of pregnant S. lilum and one pregnant D. phaeotis during the dry season. Our findings showed that frugivorous bats might differ in their strategies to satisfy their N demands with some species relying almost completely on fruits during most of the year and some species switching to insects when fruits were less abundant.
Start page
280
End page
287
Volume
133
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento Ecología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0036943935
Source
Oecologia
ISSN of the container
00298549
DOI of the container
10.1007/s00442-002-1036-z
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgement This work was supported by grants from Dirección General de Asuntos del Personal Académico at the Uni-versidad Nacional Autónoma de México to L. G. H. and V. S. C., from Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología to L. G. H., and from the Canadian Wildlife Service to K. A. H. Martha Olvera and Alvaro Campos kindly identified seeds and fruits. Stable isotope analyses were conducted at the Department of Soil Science, University of Saskatchewan. Patricia Healy assisted with the preparation of stable isotope samples.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus