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Home | Features | Vampire Bats Social Distance When They Get Sick Study

Vampire bats social distance when they get sick: Study

According to the study, published in 'Behavioural Ecology', as a pathogen spreads across a population, changes in social behaviour can alter how the disease spreads

By IANS
Published Date - 27 October 2020, 09:56 PM
Vampire bats social distance when they get sick: Study
Representational Image. (Source: Internet)
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London: Researchers have found that vampire bats that are sick spend less time near others in their community, which slows how quickly a disease will spread.

According to the study, published in ‘Behavioural Ecology’, as a pathogen spreads across a population, changes in social behaviour can alter how the disease spreads.


“Transmission rates can increase when parasites change host behaviour or decrease when healthy individuals avoid sick ones. In certain social insects, sick ones might self-isolate voluntarily or be excluded by their colony mates,” said study authors from Oxford University Press in the UK.

“A simpler mechanism causing reduced transmission is that infected animals often show sickness behaviour, which includes increased lethargy and sleep, and reduced movement and sociality,” they wrote.

This sickness-induced social distancing does not require cooperation from others and is probably common across species. Researchers here conducted a field experiment to investigate how sickness behaviour affects relationships over time using a dynamic social network created from high-resolution proximity data.

After capturing 31 adult female vampire bats from a roost inside a hollow tree, researchers simulated “sick” bats by injecting a random half of bats with the immune-challenging substance, lipopolysaccharide, while the control group received saline injections.

Over the next three days, the researchers glued proximity sensors to the bats, released them back into their hollow tree, and tracked changes over time in the associations among all 16 “sick” bats and 15 control bats under natural conditions.

Compared to the control bats, “sick” bats associated with fewer groupmates, spent less time with others and were less socially connected to healthy groupmates when considering both direct and indirect connections.

During the six hours of the treatment period, a ‘sick’ bat associated on average with four fewer associates than a control bat. A control bat had, on average, a 49 per cent chance of associating with each control bat, but only a 35 per cent chance of associating with each “sick” bat.

During the treatment period, “sick” bats spent 25 fewer minutes associating per partner. These differences declined after the treatment period and when the bats were sleeping or foraging outside the roost.

“The sensors gave us an amazing new window into how the social behaviour of these bats changed from hour to hour and even minute to minute during the course of the day and night, even while they are hidden in the darkness of a hollow tree,” the authors wrote.

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