Local-scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the Philippines

High-flying insectivorous bats, as wide-ranging generalist insectivores, are valuable consumers of high-altitude migrating pests of rice in Southeast Asia. Here, we documented the behavior of relatively low-flying bats over irrigated rice to elucidate their potential role as predators of rice-associ...

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Autores principales: Sedlock, Jodi L., Stuart, Alexander M., Horgan, Finbarr G., Hadi, Buyung, Como Jacobson, Angela, Alviola, Phillip A., Alvarez, James D. V.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/164635
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author Sedlock, Jodi L.
Stuart, Alexander M.
Horgan, Finbarr G.
Hadi, Buyung
Como Jacobson, Angela
Alviola, Phillip A.
Alvarez, James D. V.
author_browse Alvarez, James D. V.
Alviola, Phillip A.
Como Jacobson, Angela
Hadi, Buyung
Horgan, Finbarr G.
Sedlock, Jodi L.
Stuart, Alexander M.
author_facet Sedlock, Jodi L.
Stuart, Alexander M.
Horgan, Finbarr G.
Hadi, Buyung
Como Jacobson, Angela
Alviola, Phillip A.
Alvarez, James D. V.
author_sort Sedlock, Jodi L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description High-flying insectivorous bats, as wide-ranging generalist insectivores, are valuable consumers of high-altitude migrating pests of rice in Southeast Asia. Here, we documented the behavior of relatively low-flying bats over irrigated rice to elucidate their potential role as predators of rice-associated pest insects in the Philippines. Specifically, we tested the local-scale effects of rice stage, particularly seedling and late vegetative stages, and time of night on acoustic activity of bats foraging near ground level within three functional guilds (based on foraging distance from background clutter). We also monitored bat activity from two 50 m-high towers to assess the vertical extent of relatively low-flying guilds, as well as document high-flying bat guild presence and temporal behavior. At ground level, the most active guild biased their activity and feeding over early growth stage fields, but also foraged at tower level. Activity of the bat guild adept at foraging closest to vegetation did not vary with time of night or rice stage and was absent from tower recordings. High-flying bats were predictably rare at rice level, but exhibited high foraging intensity at 50 m. Given the well-documented, sequential arrival of insect guilds with growth stage, these data suggest that at ground level edge-space bats may be important consumers of detritivores (e.g., mosquitoes). Moreover, our data suggest that just as habitat heterogeneity enhances the services of arthropod predators, these management practices also enhance bat activity and, presumably, their contribution to pest suppression.
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spelling CGSpace1646352025-02-19T14:26:22Z Local-scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the Philippines Sedlock, Jodi L. Stuart, Alexander M. Horgan, Finbarr G. Hadi, Buyung Como Jacobson, Angela Alviola, Phillip A. Alvarez, James D. V. High-flying insectivorous bats, as wide-ranging generalist insectivores, are valuable consumers of high-altitude migrating pests of rice in Southeast Asia. Here, we documented the behavior of relatively low-flying bats over irrigated rice to elucidate their potential role as predators of rice-associated pest insects in the Philippines. Specifically, we tested the local-scale effects of rice stage, particularly seedling and late vegetative stages, and time of night on acoustic activity of bats foraging near ground level within three functional guilds (based on foraging distance from background clutter). We also monitored bat activity from two 50 m-high towers to assess the vertical extent of relatively low-flying guilds, as well as document high-flying bat guild presence and temporal behavior. At ground level, the most active guild biased their activity and feeding over early growth stage fields, but also foraged at tower level. Activity of the bat guild adept at foraging closest to vegetation did not vary with time of night or rice stage and was absent from tower recordings. High-flying bats were predictably rare at rice level, but exhibited high foraging intensity at 50 m. Given the well-documented, sequential arrival of insect guilds with growth stage, these data suggest that at ground level edge-space bats may be important consumers of detritivores (e.g., mosquitoes). Moreover, our data suggest that just as habitat heterogeneity enhances the services of arthropod predators, these management practices also enhance bat activity and, presumably, their contribution to pest suppression. 2019-08-27 2024-12-19T12:54:08Z 2024-12-19T12:54:08Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/164635 en Open Access MDPI Sedlock, Jodi L.; Stuart, Alexander M.; Horgan, Finbarr G.; Hadi, Buyung; Como Jacobson, Angela; Alviola, Phillip A. and Alvarez, James D. V. 2019. Local-scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the Philippines. Diversity, Volume 11 no. 9 p. 148
spellingShingle Sedlock, Jodi L.
Stuart, Alexander M.
Horgan, Finbarr G.
Hadi, Buyung
Como Jacobson, Angela
Alviola, Phillip A.
Alvarez, James D. V.
Local-scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the Philippines
title Local-scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the Philippines
title_full Local-scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the Philippines
title_fullStr Local-scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Local-scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the Philippines
title_short Local-scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the Philippines
title_sort local scale bat guild activity differs with rice growth stage at ground level in the philippines
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/164635
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