Sex and segregation in temperate bats

Author:

Senior Paula1,Butlin Roger K1,Altringham John D1

Affiliation:

1. School of Biology, University of LeedsLeeds LS2 9JT, UK

Abstract

Many temperate insectivorous bats show marked sexual segregation during the summer, but in spectacular, pre-hibernation swarming, gather at caves to mate. In many species, sexual segregation is probably due to a gradient in aerial insect availability that confines females to lower elevations, where high reproductive costs are met by an abundant and reliable food supply. In the hawking and trawling Myotis daubentonii , we show that alongside inter-sexual segregation, there is intra-male segregation and suggest that this results from the exclusion of most males from high-quality habitat. These apparently excluded males suffer reduced foraging efficiency and mating success relative to males that roost with the females in summer. Changes in resources and behaviour at the end of the summer lead to a change in strategy that gives all males a chance to mate during swarming, but this does not overcome the paternity advantage to males that spend the summer with the females.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference31 articles.

1. Altringham J.D. 2003 London:Harper Collins.

2. Population Structure of Temperate Zone Insectivorous Bats in Relation to Foraging Behaviour and Energy Demand

3. Multiple causes of sexual segregation in European red deer: enlightenments from varying breeding phenology at high and low latitude

4. Isolation and characterization of microsatellite loci in the brown long-eared bat, Plecotus auritus, and cross-species amplification within the family Vespertilionidae;Burland T.M;Mol. Ecol,1998

5. Mating patterns, relatedness and the basis of natal philopatry in the brown long-eared bat, Plecotus auritus

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