Data from: Greater spear nosed bats commute long distances alone, rest together, but forage apart

Citation
O'Mara MT, Dechmann DKN. 2023. Data from: Greater spear nosed bats commute long distances alone, rest together, but forage apart. Movebank Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.5441/001/1.282
Abstract
Animals frequently forage in groups on ephemeral resources to profit from social information and increased efficiency. Greater spear-nosed bats, Phyllostomus hastatus, develop group-specific social calls, which are hypothesized to coordinate social foraging to feed on patchily distributed balsa flowers. To test this, we tagged all members of three social groups of P. hastatus on Isla Colo n, Panama , using high-frequency GPS during a season when balsa had begun to flower. We found that bats commuted 20-30 km to foraging sites, more than double the distance reported previously. In contrast to our expectations, we found that tagged individuals did not commute together, but did join group members in small foraging patches with high densities of flowering balsas on the mainland. We hypothesized that close proximity to group members would increase foraging efficiency if social foraging were used to find flower clusters, but distance between tagged individuals did not predict foraging efficiency or energy expenditure. However, decreased distance among tagged bats positively influenced the time spent outside roosting caves and increased the duration and synchrony of resting. These results suggest that social proximity appears to be more important during resting and that factors other than increased feeding efficiency may structure social relationships of group members while foraging. It appears that, depending on the local resource landscape, these bats have an excellent map even of distant resources and may use social information only for current patch discovery. They then may no longer rely on social information during daily foraging.
Keywords
Phyllostomus hastatus,animal movement,animal tracking,GPS logger,greater spear-nosed bat
Taxa
Taxon
Phyllostomus hastatus
greater spear-nosed bat
Sensors
Sensor
GPS
Related Workflows
BibTex
@misc{001/1_282,
  title = {Data from: Greater spear nosed bats commute long distances alone, rest together, but forage apart},
  author = {O'Mara, MT and Dechmann, DKN},
  year = {2023},
  URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.282},
  doi = {doi:10.5441/001/1.282},
  publisher = {Movebank data repository}
}
RIS
TY  - DATA
ID  - doi:10.5441/001/1.282
T1  - Data from: Greater spear nosed bats commute long distances alone, rest together, but forage apart
AU  - O'Mara, M. Teague
AU  - Dechmann, Dina K.N.
Y1  - 2023/08/22
KW  - Phyllostomus hastatus
KW  - animal movement
KW  - animal tracking
KW  - GPS logger
KW  - greater spear-nosed bat
KW  - Phyllostomus hastatus
PB  - Movebank data repository
UR  - http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.282
DO  - doi:10.5441/001/1.282
ER  -
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