| Literature DB >> 20880862 |
Liam P McGuire1, John M Ratcliffe.
Abstract
Migratory bird species have smaller brains than non-migratory species. The behavioural flexibility/migratory precursor hypothesis suggests that sedentary birds have larger brains to allow the behavioural flexibility required in a seasonally variable habitat. The energy trade-off hypothesis proposes that brains are heavy, energetically expensive and therefore, incompatible with migration. Here, we compared relative brain, neocortex and hippocampus volume between migratory and sedentary bats at the species-level and using phylogenetically independent contrasts. We found that migratory bats had relatively smaller brains and neocortices than sedentary species. Our results support the energy trade-off hypothesis because bats do not exhibit the same degree of flexibility in diet selection as sedentary birds. Our results also suggest that bat brain size differences are subtler than those found in birds, perhaps owing to bats' shorter migration distances. Conversely, we found no difference in relative hippocampus volume between migratory and sedentary species, underscoring our limited understanding of the role of the hippocampus in bats.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20880862 PMCID: PMC3061165 DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2010.0744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Lett ISSN: 1744-9561 Impact factor: 3.703
Figure 1.Composite phylogeny used to generate phylogenetically independent contrasts (PICs). Migratory species are indicated in red, sedentary species in black. Species marked with an asterisk had only whole brain, not brain region. Data are available in the electronic supplementary material S1. For details of phylogeny construction see electronic supplementary material S2.
Figure 2.(a) At the SL, five two-sample t-tests comparing relative brain and brain region volumes (transformed as described in §2) in migratory bats to those of sedentary bats. (b) Based on PICs (generated as described in §2), five one-sample t-tests comparing mean relative brain and region volumes in migratory bats to those for all species pooled (combined mean set to 0 for all). Data are presented as mean ± s.e. (asterisk indicates p < 0.05). Dark grey boxes, migratory; light grey boxes, sedentary.