While most long-fingered bats eat only insects, they may all be instinctively able to also catch fish, according to Science daily. Ostaizka Aizpurua and colleagues.
Many animals adapt their diets when their environment changes and new food sources become available. Long-fingered bats (Myotis capaccinii) are generally thought to consume only insects, but previous studies found some individuals that ate fish.
To investigate the origins of fishing behavior in long-fingered bats, Aizpurua and colleagues conducted a field study, comparing a community of long-fingered bats known to eat fish, with a community of strictly insectivorous bats at a stream pool. The researchers compared the bats’ reactions to insect-like (stationary) and fish-like (moving) prey targets between the two communities.
Both fish-eating and insectivorous long-fingered bat communities could attack moving fish-like targets, and made deeper, longer dips when targets were submerged underwater compared to stationary fish-like targets. However, the difference in the two modes of attack was exaggerated in the bats used to eating fish, suggesting that these bats had previously honed their technique to improve their chances of catching a fish.
The researchers’ results suggest that the fishing technique developed when fish prey became available came from a primary hunting reaction shared by all long-fingered bats. All individuals seem adapted to be capable of detecting and capturing fish, although under appropriate environmental conditions, they may be able to improve their technique by experience and/or social learning. Further research could explore how long it takes for long-fingered bats to improve their fishing techniques, which may provide new insight into mammalian learning processes.
N.H.Kh