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First published online January 18, 2008
Journal of Experimental Biology 211, 310-316 (2008)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2008
doi: 10.1242/jeb.012252
Dietary sugar as a direct fuel for flight in the nectarivorous bat Glossophaga soricina
1 Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology, University of California,
Santa Barbara, CA 93106-9610, USA
2 Estación de Biología de Chamela, Instituto de Biología,
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Apartado Postal 21,
48980, San Patricio, Jalisco, México
* Author for correspondence at present address: Department of Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA (e-mail: kenwelch{at}ucr.edu)
Accepted 6 November 2007
It is thought that the capacity of mammals to directly supply the energetic
needs of exercising muscles using recently ingested fuels is limited. Humans,
for example, can only fuel about 30%, at most, of exercise metabolism with
dietary sugar. Using indirect calorimetry, i.e. measurement of rates of
O2 consumption and CO2 production, in combination with
carbon stable isotope techniques, we found that nectarivorous bats
Glossophaga soricina use recently ingested sugars to provide
78%
of the fuel required for oxidative metabolism during their energetically
expensive hovering flight. Among vertebrate animals, only hummingbirds exceed
the capacity of these nectarivorous bats to fuel exercise with dietary
sucrose. Similar experiments performed on Anna's (Calypte anna) and
rufous (Selasphorus rufus) hummingbirds show that they use recently
ingested sugars to support
95% of hovering metabolism. These results
support the suggestion that convergent evolution of physiological and
biochemical traits has occurred among hovering nectarivorous animals,
rendering them capable of a process analogous to aerial refueling in
aircraft.
Key words: bat, carbohydrate, energetics, fatty acid, stable isotope
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