Artículos de revistas
Individual specialization in the use of space by frugivorous bats
Fecha
2020-11-01Registro en:
Journal of Animal Ecology, v. 89, n. 11, p. 2584-2595, 2020.
1365-2656
0021-8790
10.1111/1365-2656.13339
2-s2.0-85092038219
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade (ICMBio)
Instituto Pró-Carnívoros
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Massey University
Universidade de São Paulo (USP)
Institución
Resumen
Natural populations are not homogenous systems but sets of individuals that occupy subsets of the species’ niche. This phenomenon is known as individual specialization. Recently, several studies found evidence of individual specialization in animal diets. Diet is a critical dimension of a species’ niche that affects several other dimensions, including space use, which has been poorly studied under the light of individual specialization. In this study, which harnesses the framework of the movement ecology paradigm and uses yellow–shouldered bats Sturnira lilium as a model, we ask how food preferences lead individual bats of the same population to forage mainly in different locations and habitats. Ten individual bats were radiotracked in a heterogeneous Brazilian savanna. First, we modelled intraspecific variation in space use as a network of individual bats and the landscape elements visited by them. Second, we developed two novel metrics, the spatial individual specialization index (SpatIS) and the spatial individual complementary specialization index (SpatICS). Additionally, we tested food-plant availability as a driver of interindividual differences in space use. There was large interindividual variation in space use not explained by sex or weight. Our results point to individual specialization in space use in the studied population of S. lilium, most probably linked to food–plant distribution. Individual specialization affects not only which plant species frugivores consume, but also the way they move in space, ultimately with consequences for seed dispersal and landscape connectivity.