| Literature DB >> 32835170 |
Brian H Bird1, Elizabeth VanWormer2, Nistara Randhawa1, Zikankuba Sijali3, Christopher Kilonzo1, Alphonce Msigwa4, Abel B Ekiri5, Aziza Samson3, Jonathan H Epstein6, David J Wolking1, Woutrina A Smith1, Beatriz Martínez-López7, Rudovick Kazwala3, Jonna A K Mazet1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many ecologically important plants are pollinated or have their seeds dispersed by fruit bats, including the widely distributed African straw-colored fruit bats (Eidolon helvum). Their ability to fly long distances makes them essential for connecting plant populations across fragmented landscapes. While bats have been implicated as a reservoir of infectious diseases, their role in disease transmission to humans is not well understood. In this pilot study, we tracked E. helvum to shed light on their movement patterns in Tanzania and possible contact with other species.Entities:
Keywords: Bats; Eidolon helvum; Movements; Protected areas; Tracking; Urban areas
Year: 2020 PMID: 32835170 PMCID: PMC7402849 DOI: 10.1186/s42522-020-00020-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: One Health Outlook ISSN: 2524-4655
Fig. 1Left: Classification of GPS fixes based on temporally associated acceleration bursts along Y- (backward-forward) and Z- (up-down) axes. Right: The GPS fixes corresponding to a bat’s third foraging night, classified as ‘Flying’ and ‘Not Flying’, and further subsetted into foraging areas/feeding roost locations
Fig. 6a. Site for setting up camera-traps, identified by tracking data. b. Worker harvesting mangoes at this site. c. Half-eaten mango discarded by foraging bats. d. Discarded mangoes on the ground under mango trees
Deployment summary, nights tracked, cumulative flight distances, and kernel density estimates of habitat utilization of tracked bats
| Bat | Location | Tag | Sex | Body weight (g) | Date deployed (in 2016) | Nights with fixes | No. of GPS fixes | Mean (min, max) nightly cumulative distance (km) | KDE 50% (ha) | KDE 95% (ha) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| K5309 | Kilombero | e-obs | M | 284 | 14-Nov | 5 | 9212 | 44.04 (37.65, 50.48) | 3326.90 | 11,743.12 |
| K5310 | Kilombero | e-obs | M | 310 | 14-Nov | 5 | 10,806 | 55.83 (2.07, 97.57) | 33,513.36 | 124,413.78 |
| K5311 | Kilombero | e-obs | M | 272 | 14-Nov | 2 | 1670 | 22.68 (22.31, 23.06) | 1514.94 | 4861.94 |
| K5312 | Kilombero | e-obs | M | 293 | 15-Nov | 3 | 1957 | 12.48 (0.73, 28.82) | 1527.30 | 6497.41 |
| K5313 | Kilombero | e-obs | M | 271 | 14-Nov | 6 | 3804 | 12.24 (7.93, 22.91) | 142.25 | 1437.45 |
| K5314 | Kilombero | e-obs | M | 276 | 15-Nov | – | – | – | – | – |
| K5315 | Kilombero | e-obs | M | 293 | 15-Nov | 1 | 340 | 2.92 (2.92, 2.92) | 23.62 | 96.88 |
| K5316 | Kilombero | e-obs | M | 281 | 15-Nov | – | – | – | – | – |
| K5317 | Kilombero | e-obs | F | 271 | 15-Nov | 4 | 2846 | 14.3 (0.33, 52.14) | 4193.79 | 18,985.86 |
| K5319 | Kilombero | e-obs | M | 300 | 15-Nov | 2 | 1027 | 8.09 (5.58, 10.60) | 118.16 | 469.22 |
| K166357 | Kilombero | Argos | M | 310 | 16-Nov | – | – | – | – | |
| K166359 | Kilombero | Argos | M | 276 | 16-Nov | 1 | 11 | 5.13 (5.13, 5.13) | 195.64 | 1193.77 |
| K166361 | Kilombero | Argos | F | 261 | 16-Nov | 2 | 8 | 0.1 (0, 0.20) | 196.62 | 1257.64 |
| K166363 | Kilombero | Argos | M | 273 | 16-Nov | 1 | 3 | 0.06 (0.06, 0.06) | – | – |
| K166366 | Kilombero | Argos | M | 263 | 16-Nov | 1 | 12 | 0.77 (0.77, 0.77) | 8.79 | 51.49 |
| M166364 | Morogoro | Argos | M | 288 | 03-Nov | 3 | 6 | 0.35 (0, 1.06) | 2832.96 | 16,753.90 |
| M166367 | Morogoro | Argos | M | 276 | 03-Nov | 6 | 10 | 1.12 (0, 4.45) | 7909.28 | 51,330.65 |
| M166358 | Morogoro | Argos | M | 294 | 18-Nov | 2 | 30 | 9.99 (9.84, 10.15) | 868.67 | 4277.60 |
| M166360 | Morogoro | Argos | M | 280 | 18-Nov | – | – | – | – | – |
| M166362 | Morogoro | Argos | M | 200 | 18-Nov | 1 | 4 | 0.66 (0.66, 0.66) | – | – |
| M166372 | Morogoro | Argos | F | 236 | 18-Nov | 3 | 22 | 6.19 (0.01, 18.36) | 2212.86 | 14,106.77 |
| M166365 | Morogoro | Argos | M | 300 | 18-Nov | 1 | 6 | 1.69 (1.69, 1.69) | 22.34 | 109.96 |
| M166369 | Morogoro | Argos | F | 193 | 18-Nov | 1 | 18 | 2.62 (2.62, 2.62) | 26.06 | 115.78 |
| M166370 | Morogoro | Argos | M | 251 | 18-Nov | 2 | 15 | 3.25 (1.99, 4.50) | 565.31 | 2387.27 |
| M166371 | Morogoro | Argos | M | 230 | 18-Nov | 1 | 11 | 4.95 (4.95, 4.95) | 36.61 | 242.45 |
Number and characteristics of foraging areas/feeding roost locations and new day roosts for e-obs tagged bats
| Bat | Forage/feed roost GPS fixes | Maximum straight-line distance to forage/feed roost sites (km) | New day roosts (corresponding no. of GPS fixes) | Maximum straight-line distance between day roosts (km) | Forage/feed roost fixes within 100 m of built-up areas | Forage/feed roost fixes within 100 m of protected areas | Protected areas where bat had forage/feed roost GPS fixes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| K5309 | 150 | 19.83 | 1 (30) | 10.50 | 26.67% (40/150) | 54% (81/150) | Udzungwa Mountains National Park |
| K5310 | 84 | 62.63 | 1 (30) | 62.86 | 11.90% (10/84) | 69.05% (58/84) | Udzungwa Mountains National Park |
| K5311 | 25 | 11.03 | 1 (55) | 2.50 | 84.00% (21/25) | 0% (0/25) | – |
| K5312 | 45 | 11.17 | 0 | – | 77.78% (35/45) | 17.78% (8/45) | Udzungwa Mountains National Park |
| K5313 | 108 | 6.37 | 0 | – | 91.67% (99/108) | 4.63% (5/108) | Udzungwa Mountains National Park |
| K5315 | 12 | 0.97 | 0 | – | 0% (0/12) | 0% (0/12) | – |
| K5317 | 48 | 16.68 | 0 | – | 0% (0/48) | 25% (12/48) | Mikumi National Park |
| K5319 | 33 | 2.84 | 0 | – | 81.82% (27/33) | 0% (0/33) | – |
Fig. 2Map of the tracking data obtained from eight out of ten e-obs tags attached on Eidolon helvum bats in the Kilombero District area
Fig. 3Map of the tracking data obtained from nine of the ten bats tagged with Argos satellite tags in Morogoro
Fig. 4The flight path of bat K5310, who frequented both protected and urban areas, flying a cumulative distance of up to 97.57 km during a single foraging night (yellow circles depict foraging areas/feeding roost locations)
Fig. 5Heatmap of the mean hourly distances (km) flown by individual bats on foraging nights
Characteristics of nine sites frequented by Eidolon helvum
| No. | Site (Lat, Long) | Human dwellings/buildings | Wild animals or signs of animals | Domestic animals or their signs | Trees observed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ifakara† (−8.136, 36.987) | Yes | None observed | Chickens, dogs, cats | |
| 2 | Mang’ula, Udzungwa Mountains National Park (−7.799, 36.878) | No | Non-human primates | None observed | Sorindea madagascarensis, |
| 3 | Msolwa ujamaa, Udzungwa (−7.744, 36.929) | Yes | Non-human primates | Chickens, ducks, goats, dogs, cats | |
| 4, 5 | Udzungwa† | Yes | Non-human primates | None observed | |
| (−7.731, 36.929) | |||||
| (−7.731, 36.922) | |||||
| 6 | Kidatu (−7.683, 36.966) | Yes | None observed | Chickens, dogs, cats, goats, pigs | Syzygium guineese, |
| Mishoki* | |||||
| 7, 8 | Kilombero, Illovo† | No | None observed | None observed | |
| (−7.673, 36.987) | |||||
| (−7.673, 36.988) | |||||
| 9 | Horticulture garden, Morogoro (−6.845, 37.663) | Yes | Via camera traps: Non-human primates, mongoose, rat, cat | None observed |
*Local name for tree not identified by common English names
†These locations were also newly identified day roost sites
Fig. 7Pictures of species detected at the camera-trap site. a Common dwarf mongoose (Helogale parvula). b Domestic cat (Felis catus). c Vervet monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus). d Black rat (Rattus rattus)