Abstract

Several recent papers evaluate the relationship between ecological characteristics and extinction risk in bats. These studies report that extinction risk is negatively related to geographic range size and positively related to habitat specialization. Here, we evaluate the hypothesis that extinction risk is also related to dietary specialization in insectivorous vespertilionid bats using both traditional and phylogenetically-controlled analysis of variance. We collected dietary data and The World Conservation Union (IUCN) rankings for 44 Australian, European, and North American bat species. Our results indicate that species of conservation concern (IUCN ranking near threatened or above) are more likely to have a specialized diet than are species of least concern. Additional analyses show that dietary breadth is not correlated to geographic range size or wing morphology, characteristics previously found to correlate with extinction risk. Therefore, there is likely a direct relationship between dietary specialization and extinction risk; however, the large variation in dietary breadth within species of least concern suggests that diet alone cannot explain extinction risk. Our results may have important implications for the development of predictive models of extinction risk and for the assignment of extinction risk to insectivorous bat species. Similar analyses should be conducted on additional bat families to assess the generality of this relationship between niche breadth and extinction risk.

Highlights

  • A common goal of conservation biology is to determine the ecological characteristics that relate to a species’ risk of extinction

  • We found no bias in the dietary diversity index (DDI) based on the number of samples collected for each species (n = 44; F1,43 = 0.06, p = 0.81)

  • When evaluated with four separate IUCN ranks, there was a significant difference in DDI between ranks (F3,40 = 6.81, p,0.001), this result should be viewed with caution because of the small sample size for the near threatened and endangered rankings

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Summary

Introduction

A common goal of conservation biology is to determine the ecological characteristics that relate to a species’ risk of extinction. Previous studies have shown that a species’ risk of extinction may be related to characteristics such as geographic range size [1], community structure [2], dispersal ability [3], predation [4], and parasitism [5]. These studies have implications for the construction of predictive extinction models [6] and the assignment of extinction risk classifications [7], as well as in making knowledgeable conservation decisions. Differences in diet between species, the level of dietary specialization, may relate to extinction risk because dietary specialists should be more sensitive than generalists to the loss of prey [16] or the destruction of prey habitat [13]

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