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Female Bechstein's Bats Share Foraging Sites with Maternal Kin but do not Forage Together with them - Results from a Long-Term Study

机译:雌性贝希斯坦蝙蝠与母系亲属共享觅食部位,但不与它们一起觅食-一项长期研究的结果

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In many social animals, group members exchange information about where to feed. Thereby, they may gain direct benefits, for example, if social hunting enhances individual foraging success. Alternatively, individuals may receive indirect fitness benefits by preferentially sharing information about suitable feeding sites with kin. Indeed, in some species, a positive correlation between the degree of relatedness among individuals and the overlap among their foraging areas was found. However, sharing foraging sites with kin can also have costs if it increases food competition, which is not compensated by direct benefits. The goal of this study was to investigate whether sharing of individual foraging areas in female Bechstein's bats is best explained by kin selection or by direct benefits through social foraging. To assess their individual foraging behaviour, we analysed radio-tracking data of 22 members of one maternity colony, including nine mother-daughter pairs, seven pairs of less closely related individuals and six pairs of unrelated bats. We examined the bats' fidelity to specific foraging areas during several years and quantified the influence of kinship on the overlap among individual foraging areas. By measuring how close to each other the bats foraged, we assessed whether individuals with overlapping areas are likely to forage together. Our study confirms previous findings that Bechstein's bats show high fidelity to foraging areas across years. Moreover, we found that relatives share foraging areas significantly more often compared with unrelated colony members. Finally, our data reveal for the first time that most colony members that share foraging areas are unlikely to forage together. This suggests that female Bechstein's bats gain no direct benefits from sharing foraging areas with members of the same maternal lineage. Our findings also have implications for conservation as habitat loss within a colony's home range might expose entire matrilines to high risks.
机译:在许多社交动物中,小组成员交换有关觅食地点的信息。因此,例如,如果社会狩猎增加个人觅食的成功,他们可能会获得直接的好处。可替代地,个体可以通过与亲戚优先共享有关合适的进食地点的信息来获得间接的健身益处。实际上,在某些物种中,人们发现个体之间的亲密程度与其觅食区域之间的重叠程度之间存在正相关。但是,与亲戚共享觅食地也会增加成本竞争,但是这并没有直接收益的补偿。这项研究的目的是调查是否最好通过亲属选择或通过社会觅食获得直接收益来最好地解释在雌性贝希斯坦蝙蝠中共享单个觅食区。为了评估他们的个体觅食行为,我们分析了一个产地的22个成员的无线电跟踪数据,其中包括9对母女,7对关系不太密切的个体和6对无关的蝙蝠。我们研究了蝙蝠几年来对特定觅食区的忠诚度,并量化了亲缘关系对各个觅食区重叠的影响。通过测量蝙蝠觅食的距离,我们评估了重叠区域的个体是否可能一起觅食。我们的研究证实了先前的发现,即贝希斯坦的蝙蝠多年来对觅食地区表现出很高的忠诚度。此外,我们发现亲戚比不相关的殖民地成员更经常共享觅食区域。最后,我们的数据首次揭示大多数共享觅食区域的殖民地成员不太可能一起觅食。这表明,与同一个母系血统的成员共享觅食区,雌性贝希斯坦蝙蝠没有直接收益。我们的发现对保护也有影响,因为殖民地家园范围内的栖息地丧失可能使整个母系面临高风险。

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