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N. hemsleyana feeding on bat droppings

http://www.batcon.org/index.php/media-and-info/e-newsletter.html?task=_viewArticle&ArticleID=1264

Professor Ulmar Grafe at the University of Würzburg in Germany discovered that Hardwicke's woolly bats were regularly roosting in pitcher plants in Brunei (on the tropical island of Borneo). Grafe wanted to investigate that peculiar relationship and invited students Caroline and Michael Schöner to join his team.

The researchers traveled to Brunei and quickly found Hardwicke's woolly bats roosting in pitchers. They attached miniature radio-tracking transmitters to the backs of all captured bats and followed each bat for up to 12 days through the dense, swampy jungle. The Schöners said they were astonished to find that all the woolly bats in the study area roosted only in pitchers of Nepenthes hemsleyana plants. Each bat was settled in, head first, above the digestive fluid in a well-defined region – a girdle-like structure below which the pitcher tapers significantly. The bats fit so perfectly that they don't even use their feet to hold on the pitchers' walls.

Unlike other Nepenthes species, the digestive fluid inside the Nepenthes hemsleyana pitchers is limited to the lowest part of the cone, so the bats never contact it. Normally these bats roost alone, but some pitchers provide enough space for a mother with its pup.

While roosting in the pitchers, bats can hardly be seen from the outside, the students report. Thus, the pitchers provide a secure roost that helps bats avoid detection by predators. All things considered, pitcher plants seem well adapted for the bats. But what's in it for the plant?

Previous studies had found that Nepenthes hemsleyana captures seven times less prey than other, closely related species. Perhaps bat feces serves as a kind of fertilizer that compensates for the lack of nutrients. To test this hypothesis, the team collected tissue samples of plants that had been occupied by bats and compared their nitrogen content to pitcher plants that did not host bats. They found that plants used by bats gained more than 33 percent of their nitrogen from bat droppings. "We now have strong evidence that the relationship between pitcher plants and woolly bats demonstrates a mutualism that benefits both partner species," the Schöners said.
 
Interesting article, but unfortunately they used a horribly outdated name. The species, depending on who you wish to listen to, is actually N. rafflesiana var. elongata, or N. baramensis.
 
Interesting article! Thanks for sharing. However, I believe that this article uses incorrect nomenclature. Nepenthes hemsleyana was changed to N. rafflesiana ssp. elongata but was recently changed (in my opinion erroniously) to N. baramensis. There were a few reasons for elevating the plant to a species level rather than a subspecies, but the main reasoning based off of what I have read is the symbiotic relationship between the bats and the plant, but also that the pitchers are primarily two toned rather than multi-colored. An interesting article nonetheless. Thanks for sharing :)
 
Interesting article, but unfortunately they used a horribly outdated name. The species, depending on who you wish to listen to, is actually N. rafflesiana var. elongata, or N. baramensis.

I was wondering what the heck N. helmsleyana was - I didn't know they named a Nep after George Jefferson! :awesome:
 
This is an especially interesting relationship just based on how caustic and foul bat guano is. A good amount of bat guano would be absolutely toxic to any of the nepenthes I grow. It would be interesting to do a detailed analysis of the pitcher's fluid and enzymes and see if there has been any changes made to the chemistry of the plant that would allow it to stomach such a raunchy food source. Nepenthes get more interesting every day...
 
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