29 research outputs found

    The Strongest Thing in the World

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    Pages 91-10

    Nutrition or Detoxification: Why Bats Visit Mineral Licks of the Amazonian Rainforest

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    Many animals in the tropics of Africa, Asia and South America regularly visit so-called salt or mineral licks to consume clay or drink clay-saturated water. Whether this behavior is used to supplement diets with locally limited nutrients or to buffer the effects of toxic secondary plant compounds remains unclear. In the Amazonian rainforest, pregnant and lactating bats are frequently observed and captured at mineral licks. We measured the nitrogen isotope ratio in wing tissue of omnivorous short-tailed fruit bats, Carollia perspicillata, and in an obligate fruit-eating bat, Artibeus obscurus, captured at mineral licks and at control sites in the rainforest. Carollia perspicillata with a plant-dominated diet were more often captured at mineral licks than individuals with an insect-dominated diet, although insects were more mineral depleted than fruits. In contrast, nitrogen isotope ratios of A. obscurus did not differ between individuals captured at mineral lick versus control sites. We conclude that pregnant and lactating fruit-eating bats do not visit mineral licks principally for minerals, but instead to buffer the effects of secondary plant compounds that they ingest in large quantities during periods of high energy demand. These findings have potential implications for the role of mineral licks for mammals in general, including humans

    Mineral Licks Attract Neotropical Seed-Dispersing Bats

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    Unlike most terrestrial mammals, female bats must supply their offspring with all required nutrients until pups achieve virtually adult size, at which time they are able to fly and become independent. Access to nutrients may be especially challenging for reproductively active females in mineral-poor landscapes such as tropical rainforests. We hypothesized that pregnant and lactating females from tropical landscapes acquire essential nutrients from locally-available mineral licks. We captured ten times as many bats at mineral licks than at control sites in a lowland rainforest in eastern Ecuador. Among bats captured at mineral licks, the sex ratio was heavily biased toward females, and a significantly higher portion of females captured at these sites, compared to control sites, were reproductively active (pregnant and lactating). Enrichment of N15 in relation to N14 in wing tissue indicated that bats captured at mineral licks were mostly fruit-eating species. Given the high visitation rates of reproductive active females at mineral licks, it is likely that mineral licks are important for fruit-eating female bats as a mineral source during late pregnancy and lactation. By sustaining high population densities of fruit-eating bats that disperse seeds, mineral licks may have an indirect influence on local plant species richness

    Of carrots and sticks

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    Research Letter Mineral Licks Attract Neotropical Seed-Dispersing Bats

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    Recommended by B. A. Hawkins Unlike most terrestrial mammals, female bats must supply their offspring with all required nutrients until pups achieve virtually adult size, at which time they are able to fly and become independent. Access to nutrients may be especially challenging for reproductively active females in mineral-poor landscapes such as tropical rainforests. We hypothesized that pregnant and lactating females from tropical landscapes acquire essential nutrients from locally-available mineral licks. We captured ten times as many bats at mineral licks than at control sites in a lowland rainforest in eastern Ecuador. Among bats captured at mineral licks, the sex ratio was heavily biased toward females, and a significantly higher portion of females captured at these sites, compared to control sites, were reproductively active (pregnant and lactating). Enrichment of 15 N in relation to 14 N in wing tissue indicated that bats captured at mineral licks were mostly fruit-eating species. Given the high visitation rates of reproductive active females at mineral licks, it is likely that mineral licks are important for fruit-eating female bats as a mineral source during late pregnancy and lactation. By sustaining high population densities of fruit-eating bats that disperse seeds, mineral licks may have an indirect influence on local plant species richness

    Salt lick clay contains higher concentrations of essential nutrients than insects or fruit.

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    <p>Content of iron, calcium, magnesium, sodium, and potassium (ppm dry mass+1 standard deviation) in clay collected from two mineral licks at the Tiputini Biodiversity Station compared to insects <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0002011#pone.0002011-Studier3" target="_blank">[23]</a> and fruit <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0002011#pone.0002011-Wendeln1" target="_blank">[30]</a> (note log scaling of y-axis). Minimum mineral requirements for growth and reproduction of small mammals are indicated by a solid horizontal line (data from National Research Council 1978 cited in <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0002011#pone.0002011-Studier3" target="_blank">[23]</a>).</p
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