Abstract
AbstractIn Mexico, few studies have explored how environmental conditions in tropical dry forests (TDF) influence bat fly load even though, according to climate change scenarios, this ecosystem will experience a drier and warmer climate. Such an extension of the dry season in these ecosystems could have dramatic consequences for biodiversity, particularly in regions with plains where animals do not have elevational climate shifts. The present study therefore evaluates the effect of prevailing environmental conditions during 2015–2019, as well as host body conditions, on the infestation and abundance of bat-specific ectoparasites and the composition and bat fly load in the dry season of a TDF in Yucatan. Since Yucatan has an essentially flat and low-lying topography, organisms cannot escape from the predicted extreme conditions with elevational shifts. This region is therefore an excellent location for assessment of the potential effects of warming. We collected 270 bat flies from 12 species. Three streblid species (Nycterophilia parnelli Wenzel, Trichobius johnsonae Wenzel, and Trichobius sparsus Kessel) are new records for Yucatan. Our overview of the dry season bat ectoparasite loads reveals low values of richness and prevalence, but high aggregation. Our models detected significant differences in ectoparasite infestation and abundance over the years, but the environmental and body host condition variables were unrelated to these. We report that pregnant females are parasitized to a greater extent by bat flies during the dry season, which generally represents the season of most significant nutritional stress.
Funder
Secretaría de Educación Pública
Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference95 articles.
1. Altizer S, Dobson A, Hosseini P, Hudson P, Pascual M, Rohani P (2006) Seasonality and the dynamics of infectious diseases. Ecol 9(4):467–484. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1461-0248.2005.00879.x
2. Álvarez-Castañeda ST, Álvarez T, González-Ruiz N (2017) Guía para la identificación de los mamíferos de México. JHU Press, Baltimore, Maryland
3. Andrade-Velázquez M, Medrano-Pérez OR, Montero-Martínez MJ, Alcudia-Aguilar A (2021) Regional climate change in Southeast Mexico-Yucatan Peninsula, Central America and the Caribbean. Appl Sci 11(18):8284
4. Arita HT (1993) Conservation biology of the cave bats of Mexico. Journal of Mammalogy 74(3):693–702
5. Arita HT, Vargas JA (1995) Natural history, interspecific association, and incidence of the cave bats of Yucatan, Mexico. Southwest Nat 40:29–37