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Urban environments prompt fruit bats to diversify diet, study says
by Sommer Brokaw
Washington DC (UPI) Jul 19, 2021

Urbanization leads fruit bats to adjust foraging strategies and diversify diets, a new study found.

Tel Aviv University researchers found fruit bats explored more when foraging in urban environments, which have a higher diversity of fruit trees than rural ones, and ate more types of fruits, according to the study published Monday in BMC Biology.

Furthermore, researchers found that even bats that roost in the countryside and commute nightly to forage in urban environments exhibited the same diversified pattern.

Researchers used GPS devices to track 39 fruit bats foraging in urban and rural populations, including 19 from two rural colonies and 20 from two urban colonies for more than a week.

A key goal of the experiment was to understand how animals adapt to urbanization.

"How animals cope with urbanization is one of the most central and important questions in ecological research today," study author Yossi Yovel in a press release.

"Understanding the ways in which animals adapt to urban areas can help us in our conservation efforts. The urban environment is characterized by fragmentation, and we currently have little understanding of how animals, especially small animals, like the bats, move and fly in such areas," said Yovel, a professor at Tel Aviv University.


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FLORA AND FAUNA
Social ties among spotted hyenas passed down from generation to generation
Washington DC (UPI) Jul 15, 2021
A new study of social relations among spotted hyenas could offer insights into the evolution of social relations among humans. The study - published Thursday in the journal Science - began with a theoretical model based on the idea that offspring inherit social ties from their parents, whether passively or through mimicry. While working as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Pennsylvania, Amiyaal Ilany worked with Erol Akçay, a theoretical biologist at Penn, to develop the ... read more

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