Abstract

Fruit bats provide valuable pollination services to humans through a unique coevolutionary relationship with chiropterophilous plants. However, chiropterophily in the Old World and the pollination roles of large bats, such as flying foxes (Pteropus spp., Acerodon spp., Desmalopex spp.), are still poorly understood and require further elucidation. Efforts to protect these bats have been hampered by a lack of basic quantitative information on their role as ecosystem service providers. Here, we investigate the role of the locally endangered island flying fox Pteropus hypomelanus in the pollination ecology of durian (Durio zibethinus), an economically important crop in Southeast Asia. On Tioman Island, Peninsular Malaysia, we deployed 19 stations of paired infrared camera and video traps across varying heights at four individual flowering trees in a durian orchard. We detected at least nine species of animal visitors, but only bats had mutualistic interactions with durian flowers. There was a clear vertical stratification in the feeding niches of flying foxes and nectar bats, with flying foxes feeding at greater heights in the trees. Flying foxes had a positive effect on mature fruit set and therefore serve as important pollinators for durian trees. As such, semi‐wild durian trees—particularly tall ones—may be dependent on flying foxes for enhancing reproductive success. Our study is the first to quantify the role of flying foxes in durian pollination, demonstrating that these giant fruit bats may have far more important ecological, evolutionary, and economic roles than previously thought. This has important implications and can aid efforts to promote flying fox conservation, especially in Southeast Asian countries.

Highlights

  • Plant-­visiting bats of the family Pteropodidae are found throughout the tropics and subtropics of the Old World (Marshall, 1983; Mickleburgh, Hutson, & Racey, 1992)

  • We investigated the effects of flying fox [FF] and nectar bat [NB] interactions with flowers on fruit set by constructing generalized linear mixed-­effect models (GLMMs) that included all possible subsets using a multimodel inference framework (Burnham & Anderson, 2003)

  • We show that P. hypomelanus has a positive effect on durian reproductive success, suggesting a mutualistic relationship that developed through coevolution

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Summary

Introduction

Plant-­visiting bats of the family Pteropodidae are found throughout the tropics and subtropics of the Old World (Marshall, 1983; Mickleburgh, Hutson, & Racey, 1992). In Southeast Asia, investigations into bat pollination have typically focused on the smaller, nectarivorous (Stewart, Makowsky, & Dudash, 2014) pteropodids, showing how the maintenance of economically important fruit crops in the region rests upon the coevolutionary nature of bat–plant relationships (e.g., Acharya, Racey, Sotthibandhu, & Bumrungsri, 2015; Bumrungsri, Sripaoraya, Chongsiri, Sridith, & Racey, 2009; Bumrungsri et al, 2008; Srithongchuay, Bumrungsri, & Sripao-­raya, 2008) Such studies have yet to examine specific roles of the frugi-­nectarivorous (Stewart et al, 2014) flying foxes in chiropterophily—an aspect which remains poorly understood

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