Data for: Dietary analysis reveals differences in the prey use of two sympatric bat species
Data files
Jun 02, 2023 version files 1.47 GB
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16S_readmap.csv
60.63 KB
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COI_readmap.csv
162.41 KB
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fastq_sequences.zip
1.47 GB
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Ins16S-1F_Ins16S-1Rshort_zotus.fa
101.42 KB
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README_for_16S_and_COI_readmap_3.txt
8.96 KB
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README_for_fastq_sequences_2.txt
1.73 KB
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ZBJ-ArtF1c_ZBJ-ArtR2c_zotus.fa
185.32 KB
Abstract
One mechanism for morphologically similar and sympatric species to avoid competition and facilitate coexistence is to feed on different prey items within different microhabitats. In the current study, we investigated and compared the diet of the two most common and similar-sized bat species in Japan – Murina ussuriensis (Ognev, 1913) and Myotis ikonnikovi (Ognev, 1912) – to gain more knowledge about the degree of overlap in their diet and their foraging behavior. We found that both bat species consumed prey from the orders of Lepidoptera and Diptera most frequently, while the proportion of Dipterans was higher in the diet of M. ikonnikovi. Furthermore, we found a higher prey diversity in the diet of M. ikonnikovi compared to that of M. ussuriensis which might indicate that the former is a more generalist predator than the latter. In contrast, the diet of M. ussuriensis contained many Lepidopteran families. The higher probability of prey items likely captured via gleaning to occur in the diet of M. ussuriensis in contrast to M. ikonnikovi indicates that M. ussuriensis might switch between aerial-hawking and gleaning modes of foraging behavior. We encourage further studies across various types of habitats and seasons to investigate the flexibility of the diet composition and foraging habitat use of these two bat species.
FASTQ files: The raw FASTQ files produced in the study. The files are compressed using gzip and collected to a tar-ball.
ZOTU files: Amplicon sequence variants as ZOTUs (Zero-radius OTUs).
Readmaps:
- Table with the number of reads assigned to each prey species per each sample for the 16S gene region: 16S_readmap.csv
- Table with the number of reads assigned to each prey species per each sample for the COI gene region: COI_readmap.csv