Torpor use in the wild by one of the world's largest bats.

Proc Biol Sci

Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University, Penrith, New South Wales, Australia.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Torpor is a way bats save energy, especially smaller ones, by slowing down their bodies when it's cold.
  • Researchers found that large bats called grey-headed flying-foxes, which weigh up to 799 grams, also use torpor during winter to stay warm and save energy.
  • This discovery shows that even big bats can benefit from torpor, helping scientists learn more about bat behavior and how they adapt to their environment.

Article Abstract

Torpor is widespread among bats presumably because most species are small, and torpor greatly reduces their high mass-specific resting energy expenditure, especially in the cold. Torpor has not been recorded in any bat species larger than 50 g, yet in theory could be beneficial even in the world's largest bats (flying-foxes; spp.) that are exposed to adverse environmental conditions causing energy bottlenecks. We used temperature telemetry to measure body temperature in wild-living adult male grey-headed flying-foxes (; 799 g) during winter in southern Australia. We found that all individuals used torpor while day-roosting, with minimum body temperature reaching 27°C. Torpor was recorded following a period of cool, wet and windy weather, and on a day with the coldest maximum air temperature, suggesting it is an adaptation to reduce energy expenditure during periods of increased thermoregulatory costs and depleted body energy stores. A capacity for torpor among flying-foxes has implications for understanding their distribution, behavioural ecology and life history. Furthermore, our discovery increases the body mass of bats known to use torpor by more than tenfold and extends the documented use of this energy-saving strategy under wild conditions to all bat superfamilies, with implications for the evolutionary maintenance of torpor among bats and other mammals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11335021PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2024.1137DOI Listing

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