When bats are boxing: aggressive behaviour and communication in male Seba's short-tailed fruit bat
نویسندگان
چکیده
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2014.10.011 0003-3472/© 2014 The Association for the Study of A Aggressive behaviours have an important impact on the social organization of animals and on the social status of individuals, especially in gregarious species. Agonistic interactions between territory holders are essential to set and reinforce territorial borders. Additionally, agonistic displays are used to demonstrate ownership of a territorial site and may indicate social status of the signaller. Between neighbouring territory owners, dynamic borders require frequent interactions. In daily repeated aggressive encounters, ritualization can help to avoid the need for serious fights and their costly consequences. In the bat Carollia perspicillata, a gregarious frugivore with resource defence polygyny, males defend territories at valuable roosting sites for females. Working with a captive bat colony of about 400 individuals, housed under seminatural conditions in a tropical zoo, we found that males defended territories aggressively by the use of a succession of displays forming a ritualized structure. Simultaneously, males used three different vocalization types during aggressive displays, namely down-sweeps, warbles and aggressive trills. A statistical analysis of 58 aggressive trills from five adult males showed that they contained sufficient variation to encode an individual signature. Using a habituationedishabituation paradigm playback experiment, we found that males could discriminate between vocalizing males based on aggressive calls alone. Such discrimination is probably useful for distinguishing between neighbouring territory owners and more unfamiliar intruders, and thus allows for an economical response. © 2014 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
منابع مشابه
Development and characterization of fourteen novel microsatellite markers for the chestnut short-tailed fruit bat (Carollia castanea), and cross-amplification to related species
Rapid anthropogenic land use change threatens the primary habitat of the Chestnut short-tailed bat (Carollia castanea) throughout much of its range. Information on population genetic structure can inform management strategies for this widespread frugivorous bat, and effective protection of C. castanea will also benefit the more than 20 mutualistic plant species of which this bat is the primary ...
متن کاملFlight metabolism in relation to speed in Chiroptera: testing the U-shape paradigm in the short-tailed fruit bat Carollia perspicillata.
Aerodynamic theory predicts that flight for fixed-wing aircraft requires more energy at low and high speeds compared with intermediate speeds, and this theory has often been extended to predict speed-dependent metabolic rates and optimal flight speeds for flying animals. However, the theoretical U-shaped flight power curve has not been robustly tested for Chiroptera, the only mammals capable of...
متن کاملBat Airway Epithelial Cells: A Novel Tool for the Study of Zoonotic Viruses
Bats have been increasingly recognized as reservoir of important zoonotic viruses. However, until now many attempts to isolate bat-borne viruses in cell culture have been unsuccessful. Further, experimental studies on reservoir host species have been limited by the difficulty of rearing these species. The epithelium of the respiratory tract plays a central role during airborne transmission, as ...
متن کاملCommunication and Social Influences on Foraging in Bats
Title of Document: COMMUNICATION AND SOCIAL INFLUENCES ON FORAGING IN BATS Genevieve Spanjer Wright, Doctor of Philosophy, 2012 Directed By: Professor Gerald S. Wilkinson Department of Biology Professor Cynthia F. Moss Department of Psychology Using social information can be an efficient way to respond to changing situations or to learn skills. Other benefits of foraging in a group, such as soc...
متن کاملSHORT COMMUNICATION Non-native pollen found in short-tailed bat (Mystacina tuberculata) guano from the central North Island
We analysed pollen in short-tailed bat guano samples from Rangataua Forest and from guano and pollen found in bat holding bags used in the Kaimanawa Range, central North Island. Fifty seven percent of the pollen from Rangataua was from a previously unrecorded source and was tentatively identified as Trachycarpus fortunei (Chinese windmill palm). The significant remaining pollen was identified a...
متن کامل