飞行中的果蝠:坦桑尼亚具有重要生态意义的 Eidolon helvum 的活动情况。

One Health Outlook Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-08-05 DOI:10.1186/s42522-020-00020-9
Nistara Randhawa, Brian H Bird, Elizabeth VanWormer, Zikankuba Sijali, Christopher Kilonzo, Alphonce Msigwa, Abel B Ekiri, Aziza Samson, Jonathan H Epstein, David J Wolking, Woutrina A Smith, Beatriz Martínez-López, Rudovick Kazwala, Jonna A K Mazet
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摘要

背景:许多具有重要生态意义的植物都由果蝠授粉或传播种子,包括广泛分布的非洲稻草色果蝠(Eidolon helvum)。果蝠的远距离飞行能力使它们成为连接破碎景观中植物种群的关键。虽然蝙蝠被认为是传染病的传播者,但人们对它们在人类疾病传播中的作用还不甚了解。在这项试验性研究中,我们对 E. helvum 进行了追踪,以了解它们在坦桑尼亚的活动模式以及可能与其他物种的接触情况:方法:在坦桑尼亚乌宗瓦山脉附近的莫罗戈罗市和基隆贝罗区捕获的 25 只蝙蝠身上安装了追踪装置。根据蝙蝠的运动数据确定了夜间飞行模式、觅食阵和觅食栖息地的相应区域以及新的日间栖息地,并根据其与城市建筑区和保护区的距离确定了其特征。通过追踪数据确定了使用相机陷阱进行额外环境监测的地点,以确定与蝙蝠丢弃的水果接触的物种:结果:追踪数据显示,蝙蝠个体的活动具有多变性,而且对觅食区域非常忠诚。根据高分辨率 GPS 标签的数据,对蝙蝠进行了一至六晚的追踪,平均每晚的累计飞行距离为 26.14 千米(最小:0.33,最大:97.57)。虽然蝙蝠的大部分觅食地点都在城区或城区附近,但它们也在保护区觅食,其中乌宗瓜山国家公园是蝙蝠最常去的地方。在追踪到的蝙蝠经常光顾的果园中的相机陷阱显示了多种野生动物的存在,观察到绒猴(Chlorocebus pygerythrus)直接处理和食用蝙蝠丢弃的水果:结论:由于我们观察到动物与蝙蝠丢弃的水果,特别是与绒猴的多次互动,因此存在通过这种间接途径传播疾病的可能性。然而,由于E. helvum的飞行距离长达97千米,它在坦桑尼亚受保护地区和城市建筑区的植物种子传播中的作用可能更加重要,尤其是在人类纪元中帮助连接日益破碎的景观。
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Fruit bats in flight: a look into the movements of the ecologically important Eidolon helvum in Tanzania.

Background: Many ecologically important plants are pollinated or have their seeds dispersed by fruit bats, including the widely distributed African straw-colored fruit bats (Eidolon helvum). Their ability to fly long distances makes them essential for connecting plant populations across fragmented landscapes. While bats have been implicated as a reservoir of infectious diseases, their role in disease transmission to humans is not well understood. In this pilot study, we tracked E. helvum to shed light on their movement patterns in Tanzania and possible contact with other species.

Methods: Tracking devices were deployed on 25 bats captured in the Morogoro Municipal and Kilombero District area near the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania. Nightly flight patterns, areas corresponding to foraging bouts and feeding roosts, and new day roosts were determined from bat movement data and characterized according to their proximity to urban built-up and protected areas. Sites for additional environmental surveillance using camera traps were identified via tracking data to determine species coming in contact with fruits discarded by bats.

Results: Tracking data revealed variability between individual bat movements and a fidelity to foraging areas. Bats were tracked from one to six nights, with a mean cumulative nightly flight distance of 26.14 km (min: 0.33, max: 97.57) based on data from high-resolution GPS tags. While the majority of their foraging locations were in or near urban areas, bats also foraged in protected areas, of which the Udzungwa Mountains National Park was the most frequented. Camera traps in fruit orchards frequented by tracked bats showed the presence of multiple species of wildlife, with vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus pygerythrus) observed as directly handling and eating fruit discarded by bats.

Conclusions: Because we observed multiple interactions of animals with fruits discarded by bats, specifically with vervet monkeys, the possibility of disease spillover risk exists via this indirect pathway. With flight distances of up to 97 km, however, the role of E. helvum in the seed dispersal of plants across both protected and urban built-up areas in Tanzania may be even more important, especially by helping connect increasingly fragmented landscapes during this Anthropocene epoch.

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