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Morphology and stable isotope analysis demonstrate different structuring of bat communities in rainforest and savannah habitats. | LitMetric

Morphology and stable isotope analysis demonstrate different structuring of bat communities in rainforest and savannah habitats.

R Soc Open Sci

Department of Zoology and Entomology, Mammal Research Institute, University of Pretoria, Private Bag 20, Hatfield 0028, Pretoria, South Africa.

Published: December 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study investigates how African bat communities are structured, focusing on morphological traits and dietary habits in rainforest (Liberia) versus savannah (South Africa) environments.
  • - Findings indicate that rainforest bats occupy a larger morphospace and have a greater niche breadth compared to savannah bats, suggesting higher species diversity without direct competition.
  • - Stable isotope analysis shows that rainforest bats utilize a wider range of resource bases (e.g., carbon) while maintaining similar trophic levels (nitrogen) as those in the savannah, highlighting significant ecological differences between these habitats.

Article Abstract

Bats play important ecological roles in tropical systems, yet how these communities are structured is still poorly understood. Our study explores the structure of African bat communities using morphological characters to define the morphospace occupied by these bats and stable isotope analysis to define their dietary niche breadth. We compared two communities, one in rainforest (Liberia) and one in savannah (South Africa), and asked whether the greater richness in the rainforest was due to more species 'packing' into the same morphospace and trophic space than bats from the savannah, or some other arrangement. In the rainforest, bats occupied a larger area in morphospace and species packing was higher than in the savannah; although this difference disappeared when comparing insectivorous bats only. There were also differences in morphospace occupied by different foraging groups (aerial, edge, clutter and fruitbat). Stable isotope analysis revealed that the range of C values was almost double in rainforest than in savannah indicating a greater range of utilization of basal C and C resources in the former site, covering primary productivity from both these sources. The ranges in N, however, were similar between the two habitats suggesting a similar number of trophic levels. Niche breadth, as defined by either standard ellipse area or convex hull, was greater for the bat community in rainforest than in savannah, with all four foraging groups having larger niche breadths in the former than the latter. The higher inter-species morphospace and niche breadth in forest bats suggest that species packing is not necessarily competitive. By employing morphometrics and stable isotope analysis, we have shown that the rainforest bat community packs more species in morphospace and uses a larger niche breadth than the one in savannah.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6304110PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.180849DOI Listing

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