Abstract

Given their small size and high metabolism, nectar bats need to be able to quickly locate flowers during foraging bouts. Chiropterophilous plants depend on these bats for their reproduction, thus they also benefit if their flowers can be easily located, and we would expect that floral traits such as odor and shape have evolved to maximize detection by bats. However, relatively little is known about the importance of different floral cues during foraging bouts. In the present study, we undertook a set of flight cage experiments with two species of nectar bats (Anoura caudifer and A. geoffroyi) and artificial flowers to compare the importance of shape and scent cues in locating flowers. In a training phase, a bat was presented an artificial flower with a given shape and scent, whose position was constantly shifted to prevent reliance on spatial memory. In the experimental phase, two flowers were presented, one with the training-flower scent and one with the training-flower shape. For each experimental repetition, we recorded which flower was located first, and then shifted flower positions. Additionally, experiments were repeated in a simple environment, without background clutter, or a complex environment, with a background of leaves and branches. Results demonstrate that bats visit either flower indiscriminately with simple backgrounds, with no significant difference in terms of whether they visit the training-flower odor or training-flower shape first. However, in a complex background olfaction was the most important cue; scented flowers were consistently located first. This suggests that for well-exposed flowers, without obstruction from clutter, vision and/or echolocation are sufficient in locating them. In more complex backgrounds, nectar bats depend more heavily on olfaction during foraging bouts.

Highlights

  • Finding appropriate food sources in forests with high biodiversity poses an important challenge to foraging animals. This is especially difficult for small animals with high metabolic rates like hummingbirds and glossophagine nectar-feeding bats, which require

  • We have learned much about foraging behaviour for other pollinators (e.g., [2,3,4,5]), yet relatively little is known about nectar bat foraging

  • We explore the importance of different senses during nectar bat foraging

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Summary

Introduction

Finding appropriate food sources in forests with high biodiversity poses an important challenge to foraging animals. Clutter Affects Nectar Bat Use of Flower Odor and Shape Cues constant energy intake to meet their daily energy expenditures [1]. Selection on these animals will favor the ability to quickly locate floral resources. Foraging microchiropteran bats typically rely heavily on echolocation, and nectar bats may be able to discriminate potential floral resources based on echoreflectance patterns [16, 17]. We presented nectar bats in flight cages with artificial flowers of different odors and shapes, and eliminated the use of spatial memory during foraging by randomly shifting the flower positions after each flower visit. We tested the importance of background clutter on foraging behaviour by performing experiments either with a simple background or with an array of foliage behind the flowers

Materials and Methods
Results
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