Bats partition activity in space and time in a large, heterogeneous landscape
Diverse species assemblages theoretically partition along multiple resource axes to maintain niche separation between all species. Temporal partitioning has received less attention than spatial or dietary partitioning but may facilitate niche separation when species overlap along other resource axes...
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Zusammenfassung: | Diverse species assemblages theoretically partition along multiple
resource axes to maintain niche separation between all species. Temporal
partitioning has received less attention than spatial or dietary
partitioning but may facilitate niche separation when species overlap
along other resource axes. We conducted a broad-scale acoustic study of
the diverse and heterogeneous Great Smoky Mountains National Park in the
Appalachian Mountains. Between 2015 and 2016, we deployed acoustic bat
detectors at 50 sites (for a total of 322 survey nights). We examined
spatiotemporal patterns of bat activity (by phonic group: Low, Mid, and
Myotis) to test the hypothesis that bats partition both space and time.
Myotis and Low bats were the most spatially and temporally dissimilar,
while Mid bats were more general in their resource use. Low bats were
active in early successional openings or low-elevation forests, near
water, and early in the evening. Mid bats were similarly active in all
land cover classes, regardless of distance from water, throughout the
night. Myotis avoided early successional openings and were active in
forested land cover classes, near water, and throughout the night. Myotis
and Mid bats did not alter their spatial activity patterns from 2015 to
2016, while Low bats did. We observed disparate temporal activity peaks
between phonic groups that varied between years and by land cover class.
The temporal separation between phonic groups relaxed from 2015 to 2016,
possibly related to changes in the relative abundance of bats or changes
in insect abundance or diversity. Temporal separation was more pronounced
in the land cover classes that saw greater overall bat activity. These
findings support the hypothesis that niche separation in diverse
assemblages may occur along multiple resource axes and adds to the growing
body of evidence that bats partition their temporal activity. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.66t1g1k1t |