In BriefUsing miniature tags, Egert-Berg et al. record bats' movement and social interactions. Whereas species foraging on ephemeral resources search in groups, switching foraging sites, species foraging on predictable resources search alone, returning to the same sites. The results suggest a connection between resource predictability and group foraging. SUMMARYObservations of animals feeding in aggregations are often interpreted as events of social foraging, but it can be difficult to determine whether the animals arrived at the foraging sites after collective search [1][2][3][4] or whether they found the sites by following a leader [5, 6] or even independently, aggregating as an artifact of food availability [7, 8]. Distinguishing between these explanations is important, because functionally, they might have very different consequences. In the first case, the animals could benefit from the presence of conspecifics, whereas in the second and third, they often suffer from increased competition [3,[9][10][11][12][13]. Using novel miniature sensors, we recorded GPS tracks and audio of five species of bats, monitoring their movement and interactions with conspecifics, which could be inferred from the audio recordings. We examined the hypothesis that food distribution plays a key role in determining social foraging patterns [14][15][16]. Specifically, this hypothesis predicts that searching for an ephemeral resource (whose distribution in time or space is hard to predict) is more likely to favor social foraging [10,[13][14][15] than searching for a predictable resource. The movement and social interactions differed between bats foraging on ephemeral versus predictable resources. Ephemeral species changed foraging sites and showed large temporal variation nightly. They aggregated with conspecifics as was supported by playback experiments and computer simulations. In contrast, predictable species were never observed near conspecifics and showed high spatial fidelity to the same foraging sites over multiple nights. Our results suggest that resource (un)predictability influences the costs and benefits of social foraging. RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONWe compared the movement and social foraging behavior of five bat species (representing four families), which cover a wide range of foraging styles and exploit different resources (see Table 1). Two species rely on ephemeral resources (henceforth the ''ephemeral foragers''): (1) the greater mouse-tailed bat (Rhinopoma microphyllum, Rhinopomatidae), an open-space insectivorous bat that preys on ephemeral insect swarms [17], and (2) the Mexican fish-eating bat (Myotis vivesi, Vespertilionidae), which forages primarily over marine waters [18, 19], where it feeds on local upwellings of fish and crustaceans [18, 19] whose exact location is difficult to predict on any given night. Indeed, our analysis of the spatial distribution of marine chlorophyll (a proxy of marine food availability [20, 21]) indicates low predictability of food spatial distribution over consecutive nights ( Figure...
Bats exhibit persistent social foraging (producer-scrounger) ties.
Along with its many advantages, social roosting imposes a major risk of pathogen transmission. How social animals reduce this risk is poorly documented. We used lipopolysaccharide challenge to imitate bacterial infection in both a captive and a free-living colony of an extremely social, long-lived mammal-the Egyptian fruit bat. We monitored behavioral and physiological responses using an arsenal of methods, including onboard GPS to track foraging, acceleration sensors to monitor movement, infrared video to record social behavior, and blood samples to measure immune markers. Sick-like (immune-challenged) bats exhibited an increased immune response, as well as classic illness symptoms, including fever, weight loss, anorexia, and lethargy. Notably, the bats also exhibited behaviors that would reduce pathogen transfer. They perched alone and appeared to voluntarily isolate themselves from the group by leaving the social cluster, which is extremely atypical for this species. The sick-like individuals in the open colony ceased foraging outdoors for at least two nights, thus reducing transmission to neighboring colonies. Together, these sickness behaviors demonstrate a strong, integrative immune response that promotes recovery of infected individuals while reducing pathogen transmission inside and outside the roost, including spillover events to other species, such as humans.
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