The effect of group size on sleep in a neotropical bat, Artibeus jamaicensis.

Alexis M Heckley, Christian D Harding, Rachel A Page, Barrett A Klein, Yossi Yovel, Clarice A Diebold, Hannah B Tilley
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Abstract

Sleep is associated with many costs, but is also important to survival, with a lack of sleep impairing cognitive function and increasing mortality. Sleeping in groups could alleviate sleep-associated costs, or could introduce new costs if social sleeping disrupts sleep. Working with the Jamaican fruit bat (Artibeus jamaicensis), we aimed to: (1) describe sleep architecture, (2) assess how sleeping in groups affects sleep, and (3) quantify total sleep time and identify rapid eye movement (REM) sleep using behavioral indicators that complement physiological evidence of sleep. Twenty-five adult bats were captured in Panama and recorded sleeping in an artificial roost enclosure. Three bats were fitted with an electromyograph and accelerometer and video recorded sleeping alone in controlled laboratory settings. The remaining 22 bats were assigned to differing social configurations (alone, dyad, triad, and tetrad) and video recorded sleeping in an outdoor flight cage. We found that sleep was highly variable among individuals (ranging from 2 h 53 min to 9 h 39 min over a 12-h period). Although we did not detect statistically significant effects and our sample size was limited, preliminary trends suggest that male bats may sleep longer than females, and individuals sleeping in groups may sleep longer than individuals sleeping alone. We also found a high correspondence between total sleep time quantified visually and quantified using actigraphy (with a 2-min immobility threshold) and identified physiological correlates of behaviorally-defined REM. These results serve as a starting point for future work on the ecology and evolution of sleep in bats and other wild mammals.

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新热带蝙蝠 Artibeus jamaicensis 的群体大小对睡眠的影响。
睡眠与许多成本相关,但对生存也很重要,缺乏睡眠会损害认知功能并增加死亡率。群睡可以减轻与睡眠相关的成本,如果群睡扰乱睡眠,则可能带来新的成本。我们以牙买加果蝠(Artibeus jamaicensis)为研究对象,旨在(1) 描述睡眠结构;(2) 评估群体睡眠对睡眠的影响;(3) 利用行为指标量化总睡眠时间并识别快速眼动(REM)睡眠,以补充睡眠的生理证据。在巴拿马捕获了 25 只成年蝙蝠,并记录了它们在人工巢穴围栏中的睡眠情况。三只蝙蝠安装了肌电图仪和加速度计,并在受控实验室环境中录制了单独睡眠的视频。其余 22 只蝙蝠被分配到不同的社会配置中(单独、二人、三人和四人),并在室外飞行笼中录制睡眠视频。我们发现,不同个体的睡眠时间差异很大(在12小时内从2小时53分钟到9小时39分钟不等)。虽然我们没有检测到有统计学意义的影响,而且样本数量有限,但初步趋势表明,雄性蝙蝠的睡眠时间可能比雌性蝙蝠长,群居个体的睡眠时间可能比独居个体长。我们还发现,视觉量化的总睡眠时间与使用动觉计(2 分钟不动阈值)量化的总睡眠时间之间的对应性很高,而且还发现了行为定义的快速动眼期的生理相关性。这些结果为今后研究蝙蝠和其他野生哺乳动物的睡眠生态学和进化提供了一个起点。
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来源期刊
Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological and integrative physiology
Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological and integrative physiology Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Molecular Biology
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
3.60%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Journal of Experimental Zoology – A publishes articles at the interface between Development, Physiology, Ecology and Evolution. Contributions that help to reveal how molecular, functional and ecological variation relate to one another are particularly welcome. The Journal publishes original research in the form of rapid communications or regular research articles, as well as perspectives and reviews on topics pertaining to the scope of the Journal. Acceptable articles are limited to studies on animals.
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