Insectivorous bats in Indian rice fields respond to moonlight, temperature, and insect activity

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  • Iqbal Singh Bhalla
  • Orly Razgour
  • François Rigal
  • Robert J. Whittaker
Context
Rice, India’s most widely grown crop, suffers substantial and increasing yield loss to insect pests. Insectivorous bats are known suppressors of insect pests, providing significant economic value to agricultural systems worldwide, yet their ecology in Indian agricultural landscapes is poorly understood.

Objectives
We assess the influence of key biotic and abiotic factors on the activity of insectivorous bats over the growing season and within a night in a rice cultivation landscape.

Methods
Passive acoustic recorders were used to track bat activity in a rice field in the Sonitpur district of Assam, India. We used generalised linear mixed models to analyse the effect of temperature, insect activity, and moonlight intensity on the activity of six bat sonotypes. We also used a multimodal analysis to describe the within-night activity patterns of these sonotypes.

Results
Minimum nightly temperature and moonlight intensity had a positive and negative influence, respectively, on the activity of six bat sonotypes, while the activity of four bat sonotypes increased with insect activity. Within-night activity showed one of two patterns: three sonotypes displayed a dusk peak in activity, while the three other sonotypes were active through the night.

Conclusion
The potential to maximise natural pest control in agricultural landscapes can only be realised through understanding the ecology of natural enemies in these landscapes. Our findings suggest that bats in rice fields are tracking insects over a season and within a night, pointing to a valuable ecosystem service in Indian agriculture that is yet to be quantified.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftLandscape Ecology
Vol/bind38
Udgave nummer11
Sider (fra-til)2947-2963
Antal sider17
ISSN0921-2973
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2023

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
Iqbal Singh Bhalla was funded by the Rhodes Trust, Jesus College, University of Oxford, and the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford.

Funding Information:
Orly Razgour was funded through a Natural Environment Research Council Independent Research Fellowship (NE/M018660/3).

Funding Information:
We thank Raju Sharma, Nirmala Devi, Seemanta Jyoti Baishya and Manas Jyoti Talukdar for unwavering support in the field, the Bhagabati family for logistical and emotional succour, Uma Ramakrishnan and Pilot Dovih for bat advice and training, and Rita Banerjee for local coordination. We thank Adrià López-Baucells, Thomas Cherico Wanger, Rohit Chakravarty, and Danielle Linton for advice early in the project. IB thanks his funders, the Rufford Trust (27620-1) and the Rhodes Trust for supporting and funding this project, as well as Jesus College Oxford and the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, for providing financial support. OR was funded through a Natural Environment Research Council Independent Research Fellowship (NE/M018660/3).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).

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