Researchers have discovered that male
noctule bats adjust their energy consumption with the seasons, using up to 42%
more energy in summer than in spring. Credit: Kamran Safi
Researchers
from Konstanz have measured the heart rate of bats over several days in the
wild, including complete flights—the first time this has been done for a bat
species. To record the heart rate of male common noctule bats during flight,
the scientists attached heart rate transmitters weighing less than one gram to
the animals, which they then accompanied in an airplane while the bats flew,
sometimes for more than an hour, in search of food.
Their results, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, show how
much energy bats consume over the course of a day and what energy-saving
strategies they use to survive.
Researchers from the Max Planck
Institute of Animal Behavior (MPI-AB) and the University of Konstanz used a
special method to study male common noctule bats, which are found throughout
Europe. Their aim was to understand exactly how much energy bats consume during
the day and how this changes over the course of the year.
"Bats are fascinating animals that
often share their habitat with us humans," says Lara Keicher, the lead
author of the study. "But bats are still shrouded in mystery. We don't yet
have a clear answer to simple questions such as: How much food do they need and
can they find enough of it in different seasons to survive?"
To predict how bats will fare in a changing climate, Keicher says it is crucial to know their energy requirements.
Night
flight at 300m altitude to follow bats. Credit: Max Planck Institute of Animal
Behavior
Bats with heart rate transmitters
To find out, the scientists fitted
bats with small heart rate transmitters weighing just 0.8 grams. As with
humans, heart rate can be used to determine energy consumption. The
transmitters, which the bats only wore for a few days, send out an audio signal
of the bats' heartbeat, which is then recorded using a radio receiver. However,
this only works if the receiver is within a few hundred meters from the bats.
"During the day, it was no
problem to record the heart beats without major interruptions because bats were
resting in tree caves or bat boxes," says Keicher, who carried out the
study as part of her doctoral thesis at the University of Konstanz and the
MPI-AB.
At night, however, bats fly out to
hunt insects and can cover several kilometers in a short time. In order to
accompany the bats around the clock, including during their nocturnal flight,
the researchers flew in a small airplane to follow individuals for entire
flights lasting more than an hour.
"I know that we surprised Konstanz locals when our small plane flew in circles over the island of Mainau late at night," recalls Keicher.
Cessna used to fly with bats. Credit:
Christian Ziegler / Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior
Awake during the day
The team, which also included
members of the Swiss Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research and the
University of Freiburg, found that the heart rate of bats reaches around 900
beats per minute during flight. According to Keicher, who analyzed the signal,
"it sounded like a single high-pitched tone to our ears."
Using the unique recordings of
heart beats, the scientists discovered fascinating strategies that bats use to
budget their energy consumption in different seasons. They found that male
common noctule bats consume up to 42% more energy in summer compared to spring.
This is mainly due to the fact that the bats in spring go into a kind of short
daytime hibernation known as "torpor"—an energy-saving state in which
heart rate can be reduced to six beats per minute.
"We saw that bats in spring could ramp up their heart rates when they wake up, reaching the top speed of 900 beats per minute within only a few minutes," says Keicher.
Credit:
Max Planck Society
The
team was surprised that male bats did not use torpor in summer at all. Keicher
explains, "In the warmer months, when food is plentiful, males stay awake
during the day to invest energy in sperm production in order to be ready for
mating in the autumn."
To replenish the energy used up, the
males hunt twice as long in summer as in spring and eat up to 33 June beetles
or over 2500 mosquitoes in one night.
The results have provided insights into
the energetic challenges of bats and their fascinating survival strategies.
This understanding will allow better predictions of how increasingly extreme
temperature fluctuations or changes in food availability will affect the
animals' lives and potentially threaten them.
The senior author of the study, MPI-AB scientist Dina Dechmann, says, "All bat species are protected in Germany and some are threatened with extinction. Basic research that investigates the behavior of the animals and their adaptations to the environment can help us develop protective measures so that, for example, common noctule bats can continue to be seen in the night sky over Konstanz."
Source: Researchers listen to
the hearts of bats in flight (phys.org)
No comments:
Post a Comment