Oceanic island bats as flower visitors and pollinators

Oceanic islands are relatively poor in insects compared to mainland areas. Therefore, insect-eating island birds and lizards may include other food sources into their diet, e.g. nectar and pollen. Here, we explore if insect-eating island bats face a similar problem and accordingly join the birds and lizards and incorporate plant resources into their diet. Thus, a priory, we assume flower visitation by bats to be more common on oceanic islands than elsewhere. To test this, we reviewed the literature to obtain information on the geographic distribution and diet of all 1,399 species of bats in the world and found that 49%, 21%, and 31% of species have a mainland, mixed mainland-island, and island distribution, respectively. Diets are known for only 65% (905 species) of the bats in the world, and 70%, 22%, and 8% of these, respectively, rely on insects, fruit, and floral resources as their major diet component. Twenty-seven species are even obligate flower visitors. This study confirms that flower-visiting bats, especially Pteropodidae, are significantly more frequent on oceanic islands, while insect eaters are more frequent on mainland and continental islands. Consequently, we argue that flower visitation and pollination by insect-eating island bats require more attention in future island ecology studies. For a start, we list known examples in the literature and report a case study from the Canary Islands. In the latter, we examined the foreheads of 34 museum specimens of the seven Canarian bat species. Half of them carried pollen from ≥ 9 taxa, but only three bat species had larger amounts. Pollen was not identified, but many Canarian and exotic plant species are candidates. Thus, flower visitation by bats may be an oceanic island phenomenon, but requires more focused research, especially night-time flower observations and examination of bats for pollen.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Valido, Alfredo, Olesen, Jens M.
Other Authors: European Commission
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Enviroquest 2023-11-21
Subjects:Canary Islands, Chiroptera, diet, nectar, Phyllostomidae, Pteropodidae, Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/340479
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spelling dig-ipna-es-10261-3404792023-12-12T09:39:02Z Oceanic island bats as flower visitors and pollinators Valido, Alfredo Olesen, Jens M. European Commission Canary Islands Chiroptera diet nectar Phyllostomidae Pteropodidae Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss Oceanic islands are relatively poor in insects compared to mainland areas. Therefore, insect-eating island birds and lizards may include other food sources into their diet, e.g. nectar and pollen. Here, we explore if insect-eating island bats face a similar problem and accordingly join the birds and lizards and incorporate plant resources into their diet. Thus, a priory, we assume flower visitation by bats to be more common on oceanic islands than elsewhere. To test this, we reviewed the literature to obtain information on the geographic distribution and diet of all 1,399 species of bats in the world and found that 49%, 21%, and 31% of species have a mainland, mixed mainland-island, and island distribution, respectively. Diets are known for only 65% (905 species) of the bats in the world, and 70%, 22%, and 8% of these, respectively, rely on insects, fruit, and floral resources as their major diet component. Twenty-seven species are even obligate flower visitors. This study confirms that flower-visiting bats, especially Pteropodidae, are significantly more frequent on oceanic islands, while insect eaters are more frequent on mainland and continental islands. Consequently, we argue that flower visitation and pollination by insect-eating island bats require more attention in future island ecology studies. For a start, we list known examples in the literature and report a case study from the Canary Islands. In the latter, we examined the foreheads of 34 museum specimens of the seven Canarian bat species. Half of them carried pollen from ≥ 9 taxa, but only three bat species had larger amounts. Pollen was not identified, but many Canarian and exotic plant species are candidates. Thus, flower visitation by bats may be an oceanic island phenomenon, but requires more focused research, especially night-time flower observations and examination of bats for pollen. We are grateful to Juan Carlos Rando (ULL), Esther Martín and Alejandro de Vera (MUNA) for providing us access to collections (DZUL, TFMC-VM), and to Birgit Lichtenberg-Kraag (Institute for Bee Research Hohen Neuendorf, Germany), assisting us in identification of pollen samples. We thank the reviewers Alyssa B. Stewart and Arthur Domingos-Melo for many high-quality comments and questions. Their thorough work changed and improved the manuscript considerably. This research was supported by the program ‘Investigo’ (PRTR-NextGenerationEU). Finally, we acknowledge the authors and editors of Wilson & Mittermeyer (2019) for their immensely important work. Peer reviewed 2023-12-12T09:39:02Z 2023-12-12T09:39:02Z 2023-11-21 artículo Journal of Pollination Ecology, 35(14): 239-251 (2023) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/340479 10.26786/1920-7603(2023)764 1920-7603 en Publisher's version https://doi.org/10.26786/1920-7603(2023)764 Sí open Enviroquest
institution IPNA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-ipna-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IPNA España
language English
topic Canary Islands
Chiroptera
diet
nectar
Phyllostomidae
Pteropodidae
Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss
Canary Islands
Chiroptera
diet
nectar
Phyllostomidae
Pteropodidae
Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss
spellingShingle Canary Islands
Chiroptera
diet
nectar
Phyllostomidae
Pteropodidae
Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss
Canary Islands
Chiroptera
diet
nectar
Phyllostomidae
Pteropodidae
Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss
Valido, Alfredo
Olesen, Jens M.
Oceanic island bats as flower visitors and pollinators
description Oceanic islands are relatively poor in insects compared to mainland areas. Therefore, insect-eating island birds and lizards may include other food sources into their diet, e.g. nectar and pollen. Here, we explore if insect-eating island bats face a similar problem and accordingly join the birds and lizards and incorporate plant resources into their diet. Thus, a priory, we assume flower visitation by bats to be more common on oceanic islands than elsewhere. To test this, we reviewed the literature to obtain information on the geographic distribution and diet of all 1,399 species of bats in the world and found that 49%, 21%, and 31% of species have a mainland, mixed mainland-island, and island distribution, respectively. Diets are known for only 65% (905 species) of the bats in the world, and 70%, 22%, and 8% of these, respectively, rely on insects, fruit, and floral resources as their major diet component. Twenty-seven species are even obligate flower visitors. This study confirms that flower-visiting bats, especially Pteropodidae, are significantly more frequent on oceanic islands, while insect eaters are more frequent on mainland and continental islands. Consequently, we argue that flower visitation and pollination by insect-eating island bats require more attention in future island ecology studies. For a start, we list known examples in the literature and report a case study from the Canary Islands. In the latter, we examined the foreheads of 34 museum specimens of the seven Canarian bat species. Half of them carried pollen from ≥ 9 taxa, but only three bat species had larger amounts. Pollen was not identified, but many Canarian and exotic plant species are candidates. Thus, flower visitation by bats may be an oceanic island phenomenon, but requires more focused research, especially night-time flower observations and examination of bats for pollen.
author2 European Commission
author_facet European Commission
Valido, Alfredo
Olesen, Jens M.
format artículo
topic_facet Canary Islands
Chiroptera
diet
nectar
Phyllostomidae
Pteropodidae
Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss
author Valido, Alfredo
Olesen, Jens M.
author_sort Valido, Alfredo
title Oceanic island bats as flower visitors and pollinators
title_short Oceanic island bats as flower visitors and pollinators
title_full Oceanic island bats as flower visitors and pollinators
title_fullStr Oceanic island bats as flower visitors and pollinators
title_full_unstemmed Oceanic island bats as flower visitors and pollinators
title_sort oceanic island bats as flower visitors and pollinators
publisher Enviroquest
publishDate 2023-11-21
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/340479
work_keys_str_mv AT validoalfredo oceanicislandbatsasflowervisitorsandpollinators
AT olesenjensm oceanicislandbatsasflowervisitorsandpollinators
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