scholarly journals Lord of the Diptera (and Moths and a Spider): Molecular Diet Analyses and Foraging Ecology of Indiana Bats in Illinois

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Devon R. O'Rourke ◽  
Matthew T. Mangan ◽  
Karen E. Mangan ◽  
Nicholas A. Bokulich ◽  
Matthew D. MacManes ◽  
...  

Effective management of endangered or threatened wildlife requires an understanding of how foraging habitats are used by those populations. Molecular diet analysis of fecal samples offers a cost-effective and non-invasive method to investigate how diets of wild populations vary with respect to spatial and temporal factors. For the federally endangered Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis), documenting its preferred food sources can provide critical information to promote effective conservation of this federally endangered species. Using cytochrome oxidase I amplicon sequence data from Indiana bat guano samples collected at two roosting areas in Cypress Creek National Wildlife Refuge, we found that dipteran taxa (i.e., flies) associated with riparian habitats were the most frequently detected taxon and represented the majority of the sequence diversity among the arthropods sampled. A select few arthropods from other taxa—especially spiders—are also likely important to Indiana bat diets in this refuge. A supervised learning analysis of diet components suggest only a small fraction of the frequently detected taxa are important contributors to spatial and temporal variation. Overall, these data depict the Indiana bat as a generalist consumer whose diet includes some prey items associated with particular seasonal or spatial components, along with other taxa repeatedly consumed throughout the entire foraging season. These molecular diet analyses suggest that protecting foraging resources specifically associated with the riparian habitat of Cypress Creek National Wildlife Refuge is essential to promote effective Indiana bat conservation.

Author(s):  
David N Breault ◽  
Chris J. Johnson ◽  
Melissa Todd ◽  
Sergei S Verenitch ◽  
Michael P Gillingham

Knowledge of the diet ecology of apex predators in insular island ecosystems has direct applications to the conservation of endemic species at risk of extinction. We used stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen to infer resource-use strategies of a native predator, the Pacific marten (Martes caurina Merriam, 1890), in a highly modified ecosystem on Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada. We used Bayesian isotopic mixing models to estimate the relative contributions of different food sources to marten diet across seasons and during overall lifetime, and to determine how diet varied with different levels of access to marine resources. Isotopes of carbon and nitrogen measured in hair and muscle tissue suggested that marten consumed salmon (3–17%) and berries (25–37%) seasonally; these diet groups were relatively minor components of the lifetime diet. Analysis of bone collagen suggested that terrestrial fauna – including birds, deer, small mammals, and invertebrates – contributed the most to diet (41–55%), and marine invertebrates (38–48%), not salmon (0–3%), were the main allochthonous marine nutrient subsidy to lifetime diet. Plasticity in foraging ecology, combined with a broad dietary niche, introduced prey, notably the invasive Sitka black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus sitkensis Merriam, 1898), as well as abundant marine resources, may allow marten to outcompete other native and endemic carnivores on Haida Gwaii.


Data Series ◽  
10.3133/ds754 ◽  
2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alia M. Dietsch ◽  
Natalie R. Sexton ◽  
Lynne M. Koontz ◽  
Shannon J. Conk

Data Series ◽  
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nancy T. DeWitt ◽  
Jake J. Fredericks ◽  
James G. Flocks ◽  
Jennifer L. Miselis ◽  
Stanley D. Locker ◽  
...  

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