Optimally warm roost temperatures during lactation do not improve body condition in a long-lived bat

哺乳期适宜的栖息温度并不能改善长寿蝙蝠的身体状况。

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Abstract

Lactation is the most energetically demanding time in the life of female mammals. To maximize lifetime reproductive success, females of long-lived species, such as bats, face a trade-off between investing in current and future reproduction. However, it is unclear whether global warming could influence this trade-off through shifts in the energy budget: warmer temperatures may reduce thermoregulatory costs, leaving mothers with more energy available for maternal care or for improving their own body condition (BC), which may increase survival and ensure future reproduction. Here, we investigated whether lactating Bechstein's bats (Myotis bechsteinii) allocate the energy saved in optimally warm roosts into their own BC. We analysed a 14-year dataset on the individual BC of 237 females marked with radio-frequency identification tags from four wild maternity colonies. In two of the colonies, the temperature in the roosts, in which the females raised their offspring, was artificially kept in the bats' thermoneutral zone to reduce their thermoregulation costs. We found that BC shortly after the lactation period did not differ between mothers from heated and non-heated colonies. Our results suggest that mothers do not invest the energy saved in warmer roosts in their own BC, consistent with an increased investment in maternal care.

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