An association between ear and tail morphologies of bats and their foraging style

Author:

Gardiner James D.1,Codd Jonathan R.1,Nudds Robert L.1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, M13 9PT, UK.

Abstract

Most studies relating bat morphology to flight ecology have concentrated on the wing membrane. Here, canonical variance analysis showed that the ear and tail morphologies of bats also strongly relate to foraging strategy, which in turn is correlated with flight style. Variations in tail membrane morphology are likely to be a trade-off between increases in the mechanical cost of flight and improvements in foraging and flight performance. Flying with large ears is also potentially energetically expensive, particularly at high flight speeds. Large ears, therefore, are only likely to be affordable for slow foraging gleaning bat species. Bats with faster foraging flight styles tend to have smaller ears, possibly to cut the overall drag produced and reduce the power required for flight. Variations in the size of ears and tail membranes appear to be driven primarily by foraging strategy and not by body size, because the scaling relationships found are either weak or not significant. Ear size in bats may be a result of a trade-off between acoustic and aerodynamic performance.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference40 articles.

1. Altringham, J.D. 1996. Bats: biology and behaviour. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

2. Baagøe, H.J. 1987. The Scandinavian bat fauna.InRecent advances in the study of bats.Edited byM.B. Fenton, P.A. Racey, and J.M.V. Rayner. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. pp. 57–74.

3. Bat airframe design: flight performance, stability and control in relation to foraging ecology

4. The Geometry of Canonical Variate Analysis

5. Frequency sensitivity and directional hearing in the gleaning bat,Plecotus auritus (Linnaeus 1758)

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