Title of article
Conservation of bats in suburban landscapes: roost selection by Myotis yumanensis in a residential area in California Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Michelle J. Evelyn، نويسنده , , David A. Stiles، نويسنده , , Rebecca A. Young، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
11
From page
463
To page
473
Abstract
Protection of roosting habitat is essential to the conservation of bats in human-dominated landscapes. To help define bat roosting needs in suburban settings, we used radio telemetry to locate day roosts of a common North American species (Myotis yumanensis) within a residential area in California. Between June and August 2000, we tracked 16 bats to 20 roosts in two buildings and 18 trees. We used multiple logistic regression to assess roost selectivity at multiple spatial scales. Of 15 tree, plot, and site characteristics considered, only three helped distinguish roosts from random comparisons: tree diameter, distance to water, and forest cover. Myotis yumanensis preferred large trees (mean diameter 115 cm), and roosted only in the five species of largest mean diameter (Sequoia sempervirens, Pseudotsuga menziesii, Quercus agrifolia, Quercus lobata, and Acer macrophyllum). At the site level, these bats selected roosts that were close to water and had substantial forest cover in the surrounding 100-m radius. Unlike other North American bats, they often roosted in live trees (89% live). Relatively high roost fidelity (mean 4.8 days) and large travel distances between consecutive roosts (mean 1130 m) and between capture sites and roosts (mean 2007 m) may indicate a greater degree of roost limitation at this site versus other research sites. We recommend the preservation of large trees and forested parkland, particularly along stream corridors, to help maintain bat populations in urbanizing landscapes.
Keywords
Streams , Urbanization , bats , Roost trees , Myotis yumanensis , Radiotelemetry , California , Landscape , Habitat selection , Forest cover
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
836713
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