Tracks for Egyptian fruit bats included in the field manipulation for testing the use of the communal roost as an information center hypothesis
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According to the Information Centre Hypothesis (ICH), colonial species use social information in roosts to locate ephemeral resources. Validating the ICH necessitates showing that uninformed individuals follow informed ones to the new resource. However, this following behavior may not be essential when individuals memorize the resourcesâ locations. For instance, Egyptian fruit bats forage on spatially predictable trees, but some bear fruit at unpredictable times. These circumstances suggest an alternative ICH pathway in which bats learn when fruits emerge from social cues in the roost but then use spatial memory to locate them without following conspecifics. Here, using a unique field manipulation and high-frequency tracking data, we test for this alternative pathway: We introduced bats smeared with the fruit odor of the unpredictably fruiting Ficus sycomorus trees to the roost, when they bore no fruits, and then tracked the movement of conspecifics exposed to the manipulated social cue..., Movement tracks of Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus) that were exposed to a manipulation introducing an odor cue of a newly emerging fruit (Ficus sycomorus), by releasing bats smeared with fruit pulp into the cave-roost. The tracks were collected using the ATLAS reverse-GPS system (see Nathan et al. 2022, Toledo et al. 2020), in the Hula Valley, Israel. The provided tracks underwent basic filtering for localization errors (see Gupte et al. 2022, Lourie et al. 2021) but were not segmented to separate commutes., , # Tracks for Egyptian fruit bats included in the field manipulation for testing the use of the communal roost as an information center hypothesis
Movement tracks derived from the ATLAS reverse-GPS system for Egyptian fruit bats (*Rousettus aegyptiacus*) in the Hula Valley, Israel.
## Description of the data
The tracks are of bats exposed to a manipulation in which some (n=14) were introduced to the communal cave-roost smeared with the fruit pulp of a *Ficus sycomorus* tree during the time the only two trees in the landscape bore no fruits. The reminder bats (n=57) were tracked but not manipulated with the fruit odors. Importantly, *F. sycomorus* is characterized by having unpredictable fruiting regimens in this region, which supports the hypothesis that the bats will use social information (the odor cue, shared publicly) to know when the fruits ripen but then navigate to the trees' locations owing to their advanced spatial memory capabilities, without following conspecifics (see Tole...
创建时间:
2025-07-31



