"weight for weight, bat guano contains more protein and nutrients than 
a Big Mac"


http://www.nature.com/news/2005/051114/full/051114-9.html


News
Published online: 16 November 2005; | doi:10.1038/news051114-9


Bat guano beats burgers for blind salamanders
For cave-dwelling salamanders, bat droppings are part of a balanced 
diet.

by:  Tom Simonite

A species of blind, cave-dwelling salamander in the US mid-west has 
switched from a normal carnivorous diet to eating nutritious bat guano, 
say subterranean researchers.

Because bats don't digest their food properly, weight for weight their 
droppings contain more protein and nutrients than a Big Mac. This makes 
them a perfect snack in a pitch-black environment where food can be 
scarce.

Fungi, bacteria and crustaceans are all known to feed on guano. These 
creatures in turn were thought to provide the food for carnivores such 
as salamanders.
    
But when Danté Fenolio, a salamander expert from the University of 
Oklahoma in Norman, led researchers into January-Stansbury Cave in 
northeastern Oklahoma to study its population of grotto salamanders 
(Eurycea spelaeus) they got a surprise. It seems these salamanders 
decided to cut out the middle man, heading straight for the guano 
itself. Some fish have been found to do this before, but never 
amphibians.

They made the discovery after some unpleasant experiences with young 
salamanders spitting up bat guano on them. "It's not uncommon for 
salamanders to regurgitate on capture," explains Fenolio. But it is 
unusual for what they produce to be full of black droppings. The team 
also saw adult salamanders feeding on the guano, which piles up to two 
metres deep on the banks of the cave's underground river.

Around 15,000 grey bats (Myotis grisescens) breed in the cave during 
the summer, and it seems that the blind, colourless salamander has 
turned to the plentiful food source they excrete. The researchers 
tested the muscles of the salamanders and found that their carbon and 
nitrogen isotopes matched that of guano, indicating that guano was a 
significant part of their diet.

Bat burgers

The researchers also analysed the guano for nutritional content and 
found it to be surprisingly good: it is very similar to the crustaceans 
that salamanders otherwise eat, with a protein and mineral content that 
beats a burger. They report their findings in Proceedings of the Royal 
Society B1.

"If you could somehow sterilize bat guano, it would probably make a 
good human food source," says Fenolio.

William Elliott, a cave biologist with the Missouri Department of 
Conservation, says it's not surprising that the cramped, guano-filled 
caves of the region still hold secrets. "They are kind of unpleasant to 
crawl into," he says, "so we haven't really observed much of what 
happens in there."

But Elliot says it's important that we do, to find out how endangered 
species like the grey bat support delicate cave animal communities. 
"Finding the links in these ecosystems will help us to conserve them," 
he says.

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