@article{c9c6911031634579bb8140ae8fdd4a7a,
title = "Environmental drivers of body size in North American bats",
abstract = "Bergmann's rule—which posits that larger animals live in colder areas—is thought to influence variation in body size within species across space and time, but evidence for this claim is mixed. We used Bayesian hierarchical models to test four competing hypotheses for spatiotemporal variation in body size within 20 bat species across North America: (1) the heat conservation hypothesis, which posits that increased body size facilitates body heat conservation (and which is the traditional explanation for the mechanism underlying Bergmann's rule); (2) the heat mortality hypothesis, which posits that increased body size increases susceptibility to acute heat stress; (3) the resource availability hypothesis, which posits that increased body size is enabled in areas with more abundant food; and (4) the starvation resistance hypothesis, which posits that increased body size reduces susceptibility to starvation during acute food shortages. Spatial variation in body mass was most consistently (and negatively) correlated with mean annual temperature, supporting the heat conservation hypothesis. Across time, variation in body mass was most consistently (and positively) correlated with net primary productivity, supporting the resource availability hypothesis. Climate change could influence body size in animals through both changes in mean annual temperature and resource availability. Rapid reductions in body size associated with increasing temperatures have occurred in short-lived, fecund species, but such reductions will be obscured by changes in resource availability in longer-lived, less fecund species. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.",
keywords = "Bayesian hierarchical modelling, Bergmann's rule, Chiroptera, body size clines, climate change, geographic information systems, primary productivity",
author = "Alston, {Jesse M.} and Keinath, {Douglas A.} and Willis, {Craig K.R.} and Lausen, {Cori L.} and O'Keefe, {Joy M.} and Tyburec, {Janet D.} and Broders, {Hugh G.} and Moosman, {Paul R.} and Carter, {Timothy C.} and Chambers, {Carol L.} and Gillam, {Erin H.} and Keith Geluso and Weller, {Theodore J.} and Burles, {Douglas W.} and Fletcher, {Quinn E.} and Norquay, {Kaleigh J.O.} and Goheen, {Jacob R.}",
note = "Many thanks to J.A. Rick for her help with analytical code and helpful comments on early versions of this manuscript. We thank D. Bachen, D. Blouin, S. Bradley, M.-A. Collis, K. Cross, N. Dorville, H. Gates, K.N. Geluso, J. Huebschman, K. Jonasson, D. Nagorsen, T. Snow, D. Sparks, H. Thomas, J. Veilleux, B. Walters, J. Whitaker, Wildlife Conservation Society Canada's Western Canada Bat Conservation Program (wcsbats.ca), many Utah Division of Wildlife\u00A0Resources biologists and technicians and many others for their work to collect and compile data used for this project. For funding the data collection that enabled this study, we also thank the Alberta Conservation Association, Arizona Biomedical Research Commission, Arizona Game and Fish Department Heritage Fund, Arizona Game and Fish Department State Wildlife Grant, Bat Conservation International, British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority, British Columbia Ministry of Environment, British Columbia Fish and Wildlife Compensation Program, Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation, Columbia Basin Trust, Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Montana Natural Heritage Program Core Fund, National Science Foundation, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, North Dakota Department of Agriculture, North Dakota Game and Fish Department, Northern Arizona University, Parks Canada, State of Arizona Technology and Research Initiative Fund, University of Calgary Bat Lab, University of Wyoming College of Arts and Sciences, University of Wyoming Department of Zoology and Physiology, US Bureau of Land Management, US Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services, US Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service, US Department of Defense Legacy Resource Management Program, US Fish and Wildlife Service, US Forest Service, US Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, US Forest Service Southern Research Station, US Geological Survey, US National Park Service, Utah Division of Wildlife\u00A0Resources, Utah Endangered Species Mitigation Fund, Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources and others. This paper includes data from the Hardwood Ecosystem Experiment, a partnership of the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Purdue University, Ball State University, Indiana State University, Drake University and The Nature Conservancy.\u00A0This\u00A0work\u00A0was\u00A0partly\u00A0funded\u00A0by\u00A0the\u00A0Center\u00A0for\u00A0Advanced\u00A0Systems\u00A0Understanding\u00A0(CASUS)\u00A0which\u00A0is\u00A0financed\u00A0by\u00A0Germany's\u00A0Federal\u00A0Ministry\u00A0of\u00A0Education\u00A0and\u00A0Research\u00A0(BMBF)\u00A0and\u00A0by\u00A0the\u00A0Saxon\u00A0Ministry\u00A0for\u00A0Science,\u00A0Culture,\u00A0and\u00A0Tourism\u00A0(SMWK)\u00A0with\u00A0tax\u00A0funds\u00A0on\u00A0the\u00A0basis\u00A0of\u00A0the\u00A0budget\u00A0approved\u00A0by\u00A0the\u00A0Saxon\u00A0State\u00A0Parliament. Many thanks to J.A. Rick for her help with analytical code and helpful comments on early versions of this manuscript. We thank D. Bachen, D. Blouin, S. Bradley, M.\u2010A. Collis, K. Cross, N. Dorville, H. Gates, K.N. Geluso, J. Huebschman, K. Jonasson, D. Nagorsen, T. Snow, D. Sparks, H. Thomas, J. Veilleux, B. Walters, J. Whitaker, Wildlife Conservation Society Canada's Western Canada Bat Conservation Program (wcsbats.ca), many Utah Division of Wildlife Resources biologists and technicians and many others for their work to collect and compile data used for this project. For funding the data collection that enabled this study, we also thank the Alberta Conservation Association, Arizona Biomedical Research Commission, Arizona Game and Fish Department Heritage Fund, Arizona Game and Fish Department State Wildlife Grant, Bat Conservation International, British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority, British Columbia Ministry of Environment, British Columbia Fish and Wildlife Compensation Program, Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation, Columbia Basin Trust, Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Montana Natural Heritage Program Core Fund, National Science Foundation, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, North Dakota Department of Agriculture, North Dakota Game and Fish Department, Northern Arizona University, Parks Canada, State of Arizona Technology and Research Initiative Fund, University of Calgary Bat Lab, University of Wyoming College of Arts and Sciences, University of Wyoming Department of Zoology and Physiology, US Bureau of Land Management, US Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services, US Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service, US Department of Defense Legacy Resource Management Program, US Fish and Wildlife Service, US Forest Service, US Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, US Forest Service Southern Research Station, US Geological Survey, US National Park Service, Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, Utah Endangered Species Mitigation Fund, Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources and others. This paper includes data from the Hardwood Ecosystem Experiment, a partnership of the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Purdue University, Ball State University, Indiana State University, Drake University and The Nature Conservancy. This work was partly funded by the Center for Advanced Systems Understanding (CASUS) which is financed by Germany's Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and by the Saxon Ministry for Science, Culture, and Tourism (SMWK) with tax funds on the basis of the budget approved by the Saxon State Parliament.",
year = "2023",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1111/1365-2435.14287",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "37",
pages = "1020--1032",
journal = "Functional Ecology",
issn = "0269-8463",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",
}