Evidence for repeated independent evolution of migration in the largest family of bats.

How migration evolved represents one of the most poignant questions in evolutionary biology. While studies on the evolution of migration in birds are well represented in the literature, migration in bats has received relatively little attention. Yet, more than 30 species of bats are known to migrate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Isabelle-Anne Bisson, Kamran Safi, Richard A Holland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-10-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2759287?pdf=render
id doaj-fc8bad9b153a40d89ece40e02e43f54e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fc8bad9b153a40d89ece40e02e43f54e2020-11-25T01:22:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-10-01410e750410.1371/journal.pone.0007504Evidence for repeated independent evolution of migration in the largest family of bats.Isabelle-Anne BissonKamran SafiRichard A HollandHow migration evolved represents one of the most poignant questions in evolutionary biology. While studies on the evolution of migration in birds are well represented in the literature, migration in bats has received relatively little attention. Yet, more than 30 species of bats are known to migrate annually from breeding to non-breeding locations. Our study is the first to test hypotheses on the evolutionary history of migration in bats using a phylogenetic framework.In addition to providing a review of bat migration in relation to existing hypotheses on the evolution of migration in birds, we use a previously published supertree to formulate and test hypotheses on the evolutionary history of migration in bats. Our results suggest that migration in bats has evolved independently in several lineages potentially as the need arises to track resources (food, roosting site) but not through a series of steps from short- to long-distance migrants, as has been suggested for birds. Moreover, our analyses do not indicate that migration is an ancestral state but has relatively recently evolved in bats. Our results also show that migration is significantly less likely to evolve in cave roosting bats than in tree roosting species.This is the first study to provide evidence that migration has evolved independently in bat lineages that are not closely related. If migration evolved as a need to track seasonal resources or seek adequate roosting sites, climate change may have a pivotal impact on bat migratory habits. Our study provides a strong framework for future research on the evolution of migration in chiropterans.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2759287?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isabelle-Anne Bisson
Kamran Safi
Richard A Holland
spellingShingle Isabelle-Anne Bisson
Kamran Safi
Richard A Holland
Evidence for repeated independent evolution of migration in the largest family of bats.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Isabelle-Anne Bisson
Kamran Safi
Richard A Holland
author_sort Isabelle-Anne Bisson
title Evidence for repeated independent evolution of migration in the largest family of bats.
title_short Evidence for repeated independent evolution of migration in the largest family of bats.
title_full Evidence for repeated independent evolution of migration in the largest family of bats.
title_fullStr Evidence for repeated independent evolution of migration in the largest family of bats.
title_full_unstemmed Evidence for repeated independent evolution of migration in the largest family of bats.
title_sort evidence for repeated independent evolution of migration in the largest family of bats.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2009-10-01
description How migration evolved represents one of the most poignant questions in evolutionary biology. While studies on the evolution of migration in birds are well represented in the literature, migration in bats has received relatively little attention. Yet, more than 30 species of bats are known to migrate annually from breeding to non-breeding locations. Our study is the first to test hypotheses on the evolutionary history of migration in bats using a phylogenetic framework.In addition to providing a review of bat migration in relation to existing hypotheses on the evolution of migration in birds, we use a previously published supertree to formulate and test hypotheses on the evolutionary history of migration in bats. Our results suggest that migration in bats has evolved independently in several lineages potentially as the need arises to track resources (food, roosting site) but not through a series of steps from short- to long-distance migrants, as has been suggested for birds. Moreover, our analyses do not indicate that migration is an ancestral state but has relatively recently evolved in bats. Our results also show that migration is significantly less likely to evolve in cave roosting bats than in tree roosting species.This is the first study to provide evidence that migration has evolved independently in bat lineages that are not closely related. If migration evolved as a need to track seasonal resources or seek adequate roosting sites, climate change may have a pivotal impact on bat migratory habits. Our study provides a strong framework for future research on the evolution of migration in chiropterans.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2759287?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT isabelleannebisson evidenceforrepeatedindependentevolutionofmigrationinthelargestfamilyofbats
AT kamransafi evidenceforrepeatedindependentevolutionofmigrationinthelargestfamilyofbats
AT richardaholland evidenceforrepeatedindependentevolutionofmigrationinthelargestfamilyofbats
_version_ 1725127515996946432