Monday, December 18, 2023

[Ethology • 2023] Bat Droppings Collection by Ants in Epigean Environments


Interactions observed between ant species and bat droppings in the different habitats of the Doñana Biological Reserve of the Doñana National Park, Huelva, SW Spain.

(b) Linepithema humile workers extracting Nyctalus lasiopterus droppings fragments,  (d) Crematogaster scutellaris worker transporting N. lasiopterus droppings,
(e) Pheidole pallidula workers extracting N. lasiopterus droppings fragments, (c) Aphaenogaster senilis worker transporting Pipistrellus pygmaeus droppings. 

 in Vidal-Cordero, Nogueras & Tena, 2023.

Abstract
1. Ants can be found in insect communities associated with droppings, but most studies about this interaction have been carried out in subterranean environments, specifically in the study of the interaction between ants and bat guano. 
2. In this report, we describe the first case of interaction between seven different ant species and the droppings of two bat species in epigean environments. The study was performed in bat roosts monitored from March to October 2022 in the Doñana Biological Reserve of the Doñana National Park (Huelva, SW Spain). It was carried out via direct observations of droppings deposited on the ground surface or in tree-mounted dropping collectors below bat boxes. 
3. We report a total of 37 interactions by seven different species of ants with droppings of two species of bat, the soprano pipistrelle (Pipistrellus pygmaeus) and the greater noctule (Nyctalus lasiopterus), in four different habitats (Eucalyptus camaldulensisPinus pineaPopulus alba and ground surface). 4. The generalist characters and the omnivorous diets of the ant species observed, in addition to the abundant availability of droppings during a period of food scarcity, suggest that droppings are transported as a food resource, with the consequent implications that this interaction may have on faecal degradation and nutrient cycling, as one of the supporting services provided by ants.

Keywords: ant ecology, Chiroptera, ecological service, Formicidae, guano, invasive species


Interactions observed between ant species and bat droppings in the different habitats of our study area and information about the general distribution and diet of the different ant species (Lebas et al., 2017). The percentages calculated for the bat species and the different habitats are based on a total of 37 observations of bat-droppings interactions. The observation of Pheidole pallidula corresponds to the one found at the Zoobotanical Park of Jerez de la Frontera (Cádiz, Spain).



The study area located in southwestern Spain and photographs of a bat box with a dropping collector and four examples of different ant species observed interacting with bat droppings on the ground surface.
(a) Bat box in Populus alba with droppings collector below,
(b) Linepithema humile workers extracting Nyctalus lasiopterus droppings fragments, (c) Aphaenogaster senilis worker transporting Pipistrellus pygmaeus droppings, (d) Crematogaster scutellaris worker transporting Nyctalus lasiopterus droppings, (e) Pheidole pallidula workers extracting Nyctalus lasiopterus droppings fragments.


J. Manuel Vidal-Cordero, Jesús Nogueras and Elena Tena. 2023. Bat Droppings Collection by Ants in Epigean Environments. Ecological Entomology. DOI: 10.1111/een.13305