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The possible roles of ethanol in the relationship between plants and frugivores: first experiments with egyptian fruit bats
Authors:Sánchez Francisco  Korine Carmi  Pinshow Berry  Dudley Robert
Institution:1 Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology, Jacob Blaustein Institute for Desert Research, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, 84990 Midreshet Ben-Gurion, Israel
2 Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
Abstract:In this paper we discuss how yeast, fungi ubiquitously presentin sugar-rich fruit, can influence the interaction between frugivoresand fleshy-fruited plants via ethanol. We suggest that plants,the seeds of which are mostly dispersed by vertebrates, exploitthe ethanol from alcoholic fermentation by yeast in their seeddispersal strategy. Moderate consumption of ethanol, i.e., atconcentrations close to those in naturally ripening fruit, byfrugivores may have beneficial short- and long-term effectsfor these potential dispersers, whereas consumption of largerquantities may have negative short- and long-term effects. Ethanolvapor emanating from palatable fruit may act as an odor cue,guiding bats and other frugivores to the fruit, and aiding themto assess its quality. In addition, we suggest that ingestedethanol may be an appetitive stimulant. We also evaluate thepossibility that ethanol within fruit may be used as a sourceof energy by frugivorous vertebrates. Our preliminary data indicatethat Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus) can use theodor of ethanol to assess food suitability, but also that itmay not serve as an attractant over short distances (i.e., <1m). Instead, ethanol is avoided at concentrations greater than1%, a value which might typically characterize overripe andotherwise unpalatable fruit. Our initial results further indicatethat Egyptian fruit bats significantly decrease their food consumptionif it contains 1 or 2% ethanol. Overall, ethanol may play diverseroles in the nutritional ecology and behavior of fruit-eatingbats, and in the interaction between frugivores and plants,in general.
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