Abstract

Bats and their associated guano microbiota provide important terrestrial and subterranean ecosystem services and serve as a reservoir for a wide range of epizootic and zoonotic diseases. Unfortunately, large‐scale studies of bats and their guano microbiotas are limited by the time and cost of sample collection, which requires specially trained individuals to work at night to capture bats when they are most active. Indirectly surveying bat gut microbiota through guano deposits could be a more cost‐effective alternative, but it must first be established whether the postdefecation exposure to an aerobic environment has a large impact on the guano microbial community. A number of recent studies on mammalian feces have shown that the impact of aerobic exposure is highly species specific; therefore, it is difficult to predict how exposure will affect the bat guano microbiota without empirical data. In our study, we collected fresh guano samples from 24 individuals of 10 bat species that are common throughout the arid environments of the American southwest and subjected the samples to 0, 1, and 12 hr of exposure. The biodiversity decreased rapidly after the shift from an anaerobic to an aerobic environment—much faster than previously reported in mammalian species. However, the relative composition of the core guano microbiota remained stable and, using highly sensitive targeted PCR methods, we found that pathogens present in the original, non‐exposed samples could still be recovered after 12 hr of exposure. These results suggest that with careful sample analysis protocols, a more efficient passive collection strategy is feasible; for example, guano could be collected on tarps placed near the roost entrance. Such passive collection methods would greatly reduce the cost of sample collection by allowing more sites or roosts to be surveyed with a fraction of trained personnel, time, and effort investments needed.

Highlights

  • Chiroptera is a large and widespread mammalian order with more than 1,300 species of bats distributed worldwide, absent only in the Arctic, Antarctic, and some island chains

  • Bats provide important ecosystem services as pollinators, seed dispersers, and pest control agents (Kunz, de Torrez, Bauer, Lobova, & Fleming, 2011), and they serve as the foundation species in subterranean habitats where their regular deposition of nutrient-­rich guano supports a diverse food web (Emerson & Roarki, 2007; Ferreira & Martins, 1998; Salgado, Motta, De Souza Aguiar, & Nardoto, 2014)

  • Bats are increasingly recognized as an important reservoir for a number of human-­ and livestock-­affecting viral (Krebs, Mandel, Swerdlow, & Rupprecht, 2004), bacterial (Brouqui & Raoult, 2006; Mogollon-­Pasapera, Otvos, Giordano, & Cassone, 2009; Veikkolainen, Vesterinen, Lilley, & Pulliainen, 2014), and fungal pathogens (Daszak, 2000; Wood et al, 2012)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Chiroptera is a large and widespread mammalian order with more than 1,300 species of bats distributed worldwide, absent only in the Arctic, Antarctic, and some island chains. For many communal species with stable home ranges or roosting behaviors (including some bat species), feces are typically abundant, easy to spot, and, depending on location (not deep inside abandoned mines or caves), require no significant training to collect Such collection techniques have already been employed for monitoring endangered (e.g., gorillas (Gorilla gorilla) (Etienne et al, 2012; Liu et al, 2010)) or elusive wildlife (e.g., chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) (Harvala et al, 2011; Makuwa et al, 2005) and bats (Walker et al, 2016)), largely alleviating technical and logistic challenges in obtaining samples from free-­ranging populations (Stallknecht, 2007). Our goal in this study was to establish whether samples from guano deposits are an appropriate alternative to freshly collected samples by analyzing changes in composition and biodiversity of bat guano due to short-­ and medium-­length exposure

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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