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DNA metabarcoding and spatial modelling link diet diversification with distribution homogeneity in European bats

Authors :
Geodinámica
Zoología y biología celular animal
Geodinamika
Zoologia eta animalia zelulen biologia
Alberdi, Antton
Razgour, Orly
Aizpurua Arrieta, Ostaizka
Novella Fernández, Roberto
Aiartza Azurtza, José Ramón
Budinski, Ivana
Garín Atorrasagasti, Ignacio
Ibáñez, Carlos
Izagirre Estibaritz, Eñaut
Rebelo, Hugo
Russo, Danilo
Vlaschenko, Anton
Zhelyazkova, Violeta
Zrnčić, Vida
Gilbert, M. Thomas P.
Geodinámica
Zoología y biología celular animal
Geodinamika
Zoologia eta animalia zelulen biologia
Alberdi, Antton
Razgour, Orly
Aizpurua Arrieta, Ostaizka
Novella Fernández, Roberto
Aiartza Azurtza, José Ramón
Budinski, Ivana
Garín Atorrasagasti, Ignacio
Ibáñez, Carlos
Izagirre Estibaritz, Eñaut
Rebelo, Hugo
Russo, Danilo
Vlaschenko, Anton
Zhelyazkova, Violeta
Zrnčić, Vida
Gilbert, M. Thomas P.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Inferences of the interactions between species' ecological niches and spatial distribution have been historically based on simple metrics such as low-resolution dietary breadth and range size, which might have impeded the identification of meaningful links between niche features and spatial patterns. We analysed the relationship between dietary niche breadth and spatial distribution features of European bats, by combining continent-wide DNA metabarcoding of faecal samples with species distribution modelling. Our results show that while range size is not correlated with dietary features of bats, the homogeneity of the spatial distribution of species exhibits a strong correlation with dietary breadth. We also found that dietary breadth is correlated with bats' hunting flexibility. However, these two patterns only stand when the phylogenetic relations between prey are accounted for when measuring dietary breadth. Our results suggest that the capacity to exploit different prey types enables species to thrive in more distinct environments and therefore exhibit more homogeneous distributions within their ranges. Ecological niche breadth may help explain spatial distribution patterns in animals. In this study on European bats, Alberdi et al. combine DNA metabarcoding and species distribution modelling to show that dietary niche breadth is related to hunting flexibility and broad-scale spatial patterns in species distribution.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
A.A. was supported by Lundbeckfonden (R250-2017-1351) and the Danish Council for Independent Research (DFF 5051-00033). O.R. was supported by an NERC Independent Research Fellowship (NE/M018660/1), and O.A. was supported by the Carlsberg Foundation's Postdoctoral Fellowship (CF15-0619). M.T.P.G. acknowledges ERC Consolidator Grant (681396-Extinction Genomics). JA and IG were supported by the Spanish and Basque Government grants (CGL2012-38610, CGL2015-69069-P, IT754-13, IT1163-19). We are grateful to Fiona Mathews, Daniel Whitby, Roger Ransome, Matt Cook, Carles Flaquer and Martina Spada for providing samples; and Aitor Arrizabalaga, Lide Jimenez, Vilalii Hukov, Olena Holovchenko, Vanessa Mata and Branka Pejic for assistance in the field work. This article is based upon work from COST Action "CLIMBATS-Climate change and bats: from science to conservation", supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology)., English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1364714958
Document Type :
Electronic Resource