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Ambient temperature drives sex ratio and presence of pregnant females of Anoura geoffroyi (Phyllostomidae) bats living in temperate forests

Ambient temperature drives sex ratio and presence of pregnant females of Anoura geoffroyi (Phyllostomidae) bats living in temperate forests
Ambient temperature drives sex ratio and presence of pregnant females of Anoura geoffroyi (Phyllostomidae) bats living in temperate forests

Phenology in animals is strongly influenced by seasonality that promotes changes in abundance of food resources and temperature. These changes may impose energetic constraints to organisms in certain seasons during the year, especially on those animals facing high energetic demands, such as nectarivorous bats. Seasonality in temperate forests could, therefore, promote migration of female nectarivorous bat to find warmer sites, thus enhancing breeding success. To test this hypothesis, we compared the proportion of females and the proportion of pregnant females of the nectarivorous bat Anoura geoffroyi, between months, in six different populations across temperate forests of Mexico. Bats were captured over a complete season cycle either with sweep or mist nets at the entrance or near their roosting caves, and their age, sex, and reproductive condition were recorded. We found that over 50% of bats present in the cave roosts across different populations in temperate forests of the Trans-Mexican Neovolcanic Belt of Mexico during the warmer and wetter months (April-September) were females, both pregnant and nonpregnant. In contrast, fewer than 30% of bats present in the roosting caves sampled in the colder and drier months (October-March) were females. In addition, we found that the temperature that favors the proportion of females at the studied sites was greater than 8°C. We concluded that seasonality affects sex ratio and phenology of A. geoffroyi in Mexican temperate forests. Our findings suggest females' migrations to lowland warmer sites to improve prenatal development.

climate change, cloud forest, nectar-feeding bats, Neotropics, pine-oak forest
0022-2372
234-240
Saldaña-Vázquez, Romeo A.
616f3f30-0e64-4073-8718-31500980bb59
Ortega, Jorge
857ad22c-586b-4bd1-bde1-3d5e31e862d7
Guerrero, José Antonio
8d9fc91d-6cc0-44b8-9122-031d5fa660e3
Aiza-Reynoso, M. Isabel
744840c3-f192-4f2e-adfb-fe7b747396d3
MacSwiney, G. M.Cristina
cb843f78-3421-4d42-bac2-1bc7388ea970
Aguilar-Rodríguez, Pedro A.
9846d72a-6a53-4444-b5b8-946fc3ea2aa4
Ayala-Berdon, Jorge
fdf5d23d-d12e-45bb-ad50-9111d5467ebf
Zamora-Gutierrez, Veronica
17a6b9d9-3346-4df6-9438-026b7342e28a
Carraway, Leslie
6476e3b5-a57b-4710-af36-1ca2aa32f333
Saldaña-Vázquez, Romeo A.
616f3f30-0e64-4073-8718-31500980bb59
Ortega, Jorge
857ad22c-586b-4bd1-bde1-3d5e31e862d7
Guerrero, José Antonio
8d9fc91d-6cc0-44b8-9122-031d5fa660e3
Aiza-Reynoso, M. Isabel
744840c3-f192-4f2e-adfb-fe7b747396d3
MacSwiney, G. M.Cristina
cb843f78-3421-4d42-bac2-1bc7388ea970
Aguilar-Rodríguez, Pedro A.
9846d72a-6a53-4444-b5b8-946fc3ea2aa4
Ayala-Berdon, Jorge
fdf5d23d-d12e-45bb-ad50-9111d5467ebf
Zamora-Gutierrez, Veronica
17a6b9d9-3346-4df6-9438-026b7342e28a
Carraway, Leslie
6476e3b5-a57b-4710-af36-1ca2aa32f333

Saldaña-Vázquez, Romeo A., Ortega, Jorge, Guerrero, José Antonio, Aiza-Reynoso, M. Isabel, MacSwiney, G. M.Cristina, Aguilar-Rodríguez, Pedro A., Ayala-Berdon, Jorge, Zamora-Gutierrez, Veronica and Carraway, Leslie (2020) Ambient temperature drives sex ratio and presence of pregnant females of Anoura geoffroyi (Phyllostomidae) bats living in temperate forests. Journal of Mammalogy, 101 (1), 234-240. (doi:10.1093/jmammal/gyz186).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Phenology in animals is strongly influenced by seasonality that promotes changes in abundance of food resources and temperature. These changes may impose energetic constraints to organisms in certain seasons during the year, especially on those animals facing high energetic demands, such as nectarivorous bats. Seasonality in temperate forests could, therefore, promote migration of female nectarivorous bat to find warmer sites, thus enhancing breeding success. To test this hypothesis, we compared the proportion of females and the proportion of pregnant females of the nectarivorous bat Anoura geoffroyi, between months, in six different populations across temperate forests of Mexico. Bats were captured over a complete season cycle either with sweep or mist nets at the entrance or near their roosting caves, and their age, sex, and reproductive condition were recorded. We found that over 50% of bats present in the cave roosts across different populations in temperate forests of the Trans-Mexican Neovolcanic Belt of Mexico during the warmer and wetter months (April-September) were females, both pregnant and nonpregnant. In contrast, fewer than 30% of bats present in the roosting caves sampled in the colder and drier months (October-March) were females. In addition, we found that the temperature that favors the proportion of females at the studied sites was greater than 8°C. We concluded that seasonality affects sex ratio and phenology of A. geoffroyi in Mexican temperate forests. Our findings suggest females' migrations to lowland warmer sites to improve prenatal development.

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More information

Published date: 21 February 2020
Additional Information: Funding Information: RAS-V carried out this research with the support from the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología of Mexico (CONACyT) grant C-856/2018, and Maestría en Ciencias Biológicas de la Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas de la Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla. This work was supported by additional funding from Bat Conservation International to VZ-G. Thanks to Angel Neftali Osorio Rodríguez for his help with the climatological data management, to Constance Tremlett, and to all the field assistants and volunteers. Publisher Copyright: © 2019 American Society of Mammalogists, www.mammalogy.org.
Keywords: climate change, cloud forest, nectar-feeding bats, Neotropics, pine-oak forest

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 486700
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486700
ISSN: 0022-2372
PURE UUID: 13c7d98c-ce4e-42c5-bb96-e4e62ea04475
ORCID for Veronica Zamora-Gutierrez: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0661-5180

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Feb 2024 17:52
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Romeo A. Saldaña-Vázquez
Author: Jorge Ortega
Author: José Antonio Guerrero
Author: M. Isabel Aiza-Reynoso
Author: G. M.Cristina MacSwiney
Author: Pedro A. Aguilar-Rodríguez
Author: Jorge Ayala-Berdon
Author: Veronica Zamora-Gutierrez ORCID iD
Author: Leslie Carraway

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