A 4,300-year History of Dietary Changes in a Bat Roost Determined From a Tropical Guano Deposit

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Publication Date

3-23-2021

Publication Title

Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences

Volume Number

126

Issue Number

4

Abstract

Bats provide numerous ecosystem services as they pollinate, disperse seeds, and reduce insect populations. It is thus vital to monitor and understand their foraging habits. We analyzed sterols and stanols in a rare discovery of a ∼4,300‐year‐old bat guano deposit from a Jamaican cave to infer relative changes in bat feeding guilds over four millennia. In this deposit, zoosterols and phytosterols, in conjunction with δ 13 C and C/N data, revealed two periods of increased frugivory relative to insectivory from ca. 1000‐500 BCE and ca. 700–1900 CE. We propose two possible explanations for these intervals of increased frugivory relative to insectivory. (1) Previous paleoclimate data suggested these intervals were warmer and drier in the region, which we hypothesize resulted in reduced insect availability. We supported these inferences by comparing the same analytes in fresh guano from frugivorous, insectivorous, and sanguinivorous (blood‐drinking) bats, which showed that bats with animal‐based diets produced guano with lower C/N ratios and higher cholesterol/(cholesterol + sitosterol) ratios than those with fruit‐based diets. (2) The change in the chemical composition of the bat guano during these two periods may also be the result of a shift in the relative species composition of the bat roost that is a greater proportion of frugivorous relative to insectivorous bats during these two periods. This novel, non‐invasive method, based on the chemical composition of bat guano, tracked changes in tropical bat foraging habits extending back in time over four millennia.

Keywords

Bats, Guano, Stable isotopes, Diet, Paleoecology

Document Type

Article

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JG006026

Language

English

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