Data from: Minimally invasive collection of adipose tissue facilitates the study of eco-physiology in small-bodied mammals
Adipose tissue is the primary fuel storage for vertebrates and is an important component of energy budgets during periods of peak energetic demands. Investigating the composition of adipose tissue can provide information about energetics, migration, reproduction and other life-history traits. Until...
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Zusammenfassung: | Adipose tissue is the primary fuel storage for vertebrates and is an
important component of energy budgets during periods of peak energetic
demands. Investigating the composition of adipose tissue can provide
information about energetics, migration, reproduction and other
life-history traits. Until now, most field methods for sampling adipose
tissue of small-bodied vertebrates have been destructive. Therefore,
investigations of adipose tissue in small-bodied vertebrates have been
limited in their broadscale application. We developed a field-ready
micro-adipose biopsy method for sampling adipose tissue of small-bodied
vertebrates, by adopting fine-needle adipose aspiration. We applied the
method to silver-haired bats (Lasionycteris noctivagans) and then
quantified the resulting fatty acid signatures of a summer group and an
autumn group to demonstrate one possible application of the method. We
successfully obtained interpretable fatty acid signatures from 74·5% of
micro-adipose biopsy attempts, with success positively correlated with
body mass index. Summer and autumn groups of bats had different fatty acid
signatures likely representing varied available dietary compositions at
resident sites (the habitat where adipose deposits are accumulated prior
to migration). The fatty acid profile of autumn silver-haired bats was
largely characterized by 16:0, 18:1 and 14:0, and the summer group was
characterized by 16:0, 16:1 and 18:0. Our results suggest that fatty acid
signatures have the potential to characterize the origins of migrating
individuals, or the number of unique subpopulations being supported by a
migration route. This field-ready fine-needle adipose aspiration method
can be used on small-bodied mammals and modified for application to other
small-bodied vertebrates. This non-destructive approach to sampling
adipose tissue has great value because it allows for robust sample sizes,
longitudinal studies of the same individuals across space and time, and
sampling of rare, threatened and endangered species. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.b859k |