2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.agee.2018.09.027
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Bats as potential suppressors of multiple agricultural pests: A case study from Madagascar

Abstract: The conversion of natural habitats to agriculture is one of the main drivers of biotic change. Madagascar is no exception and land-use change, mostly driven by slash-and-burn agriculture, is impacting the island's exceptional biodiversity. Although most species are negatively affected by agricultural expansion, some, such as synanthropic bats, are capable of exploring newly available resources and benefit from man-made agricultural ecosystems. As bats are known predators of agricultural pests it seems possible… Show more

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Cited by 91 publications
(63 citation statements)
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References 81 publications
(80 reference statements)
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“…This parameter was set for the COI fragment used here after comparing the number of MOTUs obtained at different values and checking that this number remained constant for values of d in the range of 9-13. The value of d = 13 has been previously used in other studies involving the same COI fragment (Mac ıas-Hern andez et al 2018, Kemp et al 2019, Siegenthaler et al 2019). The taxonomic assignment of the MOTU was performed using ecotag (Boyer et al 2016), which uses a local reference database and a phylogenetic tree-based approach (using the NCBI taxonomy) for assigning sequences without a perfect match.…”
Section: Data Setmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This parameter was set for the COI fragment used here after comparing the number of MOTUs obtained at different values and checking that this number remained constant for values of d in the range of 9-13. The value of d = 13 has been previously used in other studies involving the same COI fragment (Mac ıas-Hern andez et al 2018, Kemp et al 2019, Siegenthaler et al 2019). The taxonomic assignment of the MOTU was performed using ecotag (Boyer et al 2016), which uses a local reference database and a phylogenetic tree-based approach (using the NCBI taxonomy) for assigning sequences without a perfect match.…”
Section: Data Setmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Powered flight allows bats to explore resources across the multilayered space of tropical rainforests and an increasing number of studies have documented changes in species abundance from ground to subcanopy and canopy levels in both the Neo-and Paleotropics (e.g., [15][16][17][18]). Bats provide vital ecosystem services as seed dispersers, pollinators and arthropod predators [19] and, given the strong preference of several frugivorous species for pioneer plants, promote the regeneration of disturbed areas [20,21]. They are acutely sensitive to human-induced forest disturbances [22] and have extensively been used as an indicator group for evaluating the effects of habitat fragmentation on tropical biota [23,24].The responses of tropical bat assemblages to forest fragmentation are to a large extent species-, ensemble-and habitat-specific (reviewed in [23]).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, after an initial description of the dietary habits of the little brown bat Myotis lucifugus based on metabarcoding approaches (Clare et al, ; Clare et al, ), this species was used in comparative dietary studies assessing human influence on feeding habits of bats (Cravens et al, ) and to improve the identification of arthropods in DNA‐based diet studies (Jusino et al, ). Favoring their place as good biological models in the assessment of vertebrates' diets, bat species have distinct feeding and foraging habits, and different ecologic requirements and are widely distributed across a variety of terrestrial ecosystems, even in human‐altered habitats (Kemp et al, ; Long, Kurta, & Clemans, ). Moreover, the possibility to concomitantly explore both the diet of a species and its population structure was recently explored using the common vampire bat Desmodus rotundus as focal species (Bohmann et al, ).…”
Section: Taxonomic and Geographical Bias In Terrestrial And Aquatic Mmentioning
confidence: 99%