PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
2015 | 17 | 2 |

Tytuł artykułu

Selection of Building Roosts by Mexican Free-Tailed Bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) in an Urban Area

Autorzy

Warianty tytułu

Języki publikacji

EN

Abstrakty

EN
The Mexican free-tailed bat (Tadarida brasiliensis) is one of the most widely distributed bat species in the Western Hemisphere. Despite their prevalence in urban environments, limited research has been conducted to determine the features of buildings or of the surroundings that might affect the likelihood of a building being selected by Mexican free-tailed bats as a roost. Our study objectives were to improve the current understanding of Mexican free-tailed bat's urban roosting preferences with regard to both microhabitat and macrohabitat. Between August 2010 and August 2012, we conducted acoustic surveys and emergence observations and examined 218 buildings in Waco, TX, USA. A total of 54 day-roosts for Mexican free-tailed bats was identified. At the microhabitat scale, modeling of building characteristics and opening characteristics showed that bats preferred to roost in tall and abandoned buildings. Roost exits were more likely the results of structural damage to buildings and less likely to have vegetation blocking the adjacent air space. Roost accessibility seemed to be more important than thermal condition in roost selection. At the broader macrohabitat scale, bats were more likely to roost in areas with lower income and were near tall buildings and water sources.

Słowa kluczowe

Wydawca

-

Rocznik

Tom

17

Numer

2

Opis fizyczny

p.321-330,fig.,ref.

Twórcy

autor
  • Department of Biology, Baylor University, One Bear Place 97388, Waco, TX 76798, USA
autor
  • Department of Biology, Baylor University, One Bear Place 97388, Waco, TX 76798, USA

Bibliografia

  • 1. C. E. Adams , and K. J. Lindsey . 2010. Urban wildlife management. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 432 pp. Google Scholar
  • 2. S. J. Agosta 2002. Habitat use, diet and roost selection by the big brown bat (Eptesicus fuscus) in North America: a case for conserving an abundant species. Mammal Review, 32: 179–198. Google Scholar
  • 3. L. C. Allen , A. S. Turmelle , E. P. Widmaier , N. I. Hristov , G. F. McCracken , and T. H. Kunz . 2011. Variation in physiological stress between bridge- and cave-roosting Brazilian free-tailed bats. Conservation Biology, 25: 374–381. Google Scholar
  • 4. L. K. Ammerman , C. L. Hice , and D. J. Schmidly . 2012. Bats of Texas. Texas A&M University Press, College Station, TX, 306 pp. Google Scholar
  • 5. K. J. Bagstad , and R. Wiederholt . 2013. Tourism values for Mexican free-tailed bat viewing. Human Dimensions of Wildlife, 18: 307–311. Google Scholar
  • 6. R. M. R. Barclay , M. C. Kalcounis , L. H. Crampton , C. Stefan , M. J. Vonhof , L. Wilkinson , and R. M. Brigham . 1996. Can external radiotransmitters be used to assess body temperature and torpor in bats? Journal of Mammalogy, 77: 1102–1106. Google Scholar
  • 7. R. Basham , B. Law , and P. Banks . 2011. Microbats in a ‘leafy’ urban landscape: are they persisting, and what factors influence their presence? Austral Ecology, 36: 663–678. Google Scholar
  • 8. M. C. Brittingham , and L. M. Williams . 2000. Bat boxes as alternative roosts for displaced bat maternity colonies. Wild life Society Bulletin, 28: 197–207. Google Scholar
  • 9. K. P. Burnham , and D. R. Anderson . 2002. Model selection and multimodel inference: a practical information-theoretic approach, 2nd edition. Springer-Verlag, New York, NY, 488 pp. Google Scholar
  • 10. C. H. Calisher , J. E. Childs , H. E. Field , K. V. Holmes , and T. Schountz . 2006. Bats: important reservoir hosts of emerging viruses. Clinical Microbiology Reviews, 19: 531–545. Google Scholar
  • 11. C. J. Cleveland , M. Betke , P. Federico , J. D. Frank , T. G. Hallam , J. Horn , J. D. Lopez , G. F. McCracken , R. A. Medellin , A. Moreno-Valdez , et al. 2006. Economic value of the pest control service provided by Brazilian free-tailed bats in south-central Texas. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 4: 238–243. Google Scholar
  • 12. R. B. Davis , C. F. Herreid , and H. L. Short . 1962. Mexican freetailed bats in Texas. Ecological Monographs, 32: 311–346. Google Scholar
  • 13. D. C. Dearborn , and S. Kark . 2010. Motivations for conserving urban biodiversity. Conservation Biology, 24: 432–440. Google Scholar
  • 14. S. S. Ditchkoff , S. T. Saalfeld , and C. J. Gibson . 2006. Animal behavior in urban ecosystems: modifications due to human-induced stress. Urban Ecosystems, 9: 5–12. Google Scholar
  • 15. N. C. Downs , V. Beaton , J. Guest , J. Polanski , S. L. Robinson , and P. A. Racey . 2003. The effects of illuminating the roost entrance on the emergence behaviour of Pipistrellus pygmaeus. Biological Conservation, 111: 247–252. Google Scholar
  • 16. E. H. El-Ansary , R. D. Tee , D. J. Gordon , and A. J. Taylor . 1987. Respiratory allergy to inhaled bat guano. Lancet, 1: 316–318. Google Scholar
  • 17. A. C. Entwistle , P. A. Racey , and J. R. Speakman . 1997. Roost selection by the brown long-eared bat Plecotus auritus. Journal of Applied Ecology, 34: 399–408. Google Scholar
  • 18. M. J. Evelyn , D. A. Stiles , and R. A. Young . 2004. Conservation of bats in suburban landscapes: roost selection by Myotis yumanensis in a residential area in California. Biological Conservation, 115: 463–473. Google Scholar
  • 19. B. M. Fenton , 1997. Science and the conservation of bats. Jour nal of Mammalogy, 78: 1–14. Google Scholar
  • 20. S. C. Frantz , and B. R. Laniewicz . 2000. Comprehensive management of commensal bats. Pp. 172–185, in Ninth Wild life Damage Management Conference Proceedings ( M. C. Brittingham , J. Kays , and R. McPeake , eds.). University of Nebraska - Lincoln, State College, PA, 186 pp. Available at http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/icwdm_wdmconfproc/27. Google Scholar
  • 21. J. W. Hermanson , and K. T. Wilkins . 1986. Pre-weaning mortality in a Florida maternity roost of Myotis austroriparius and Tadarida brasiliensis. Journal of Mammalogy, 67: 751–754. Google Scholar
  • 22. E. J. Jepson , and M. M. Edwards . 2010. How possible is sustainable urban development? An analysis of planners' perceptions about New Urbanism, smart growth and the ecological city. Planning Practice and Research, 25: 417–437. Google Scholar
  • 23. M. C. Kalcounis-Rüppell , J. M. Psyllakis , and R. M. Brigham . 2005. Tree roost selection by bats: an empirical synthesis using meta-analysis. Wildlife Society Bulletin, 33: 1123–1132. Google Scholar
  • 24. B. J. Klug , D. A. Goldsmith , and R. M. R. Barclay . 2012. Roost selection by the solitary, foliage-roosting hoary bat (Lasiurus cinereus) during lactation. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 90: 329–336. Google Scholar
  • 25. T. H. Kunz , and M. B. Fenton . 2003. Bat ecology. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL, xix + 779 pp. Google Scholar
  • 26. T. H. Kunz , and S. Parsons . 2009. Ecological and behavioral methods for the study of bats. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD, 920 pp. Google Scholar
  • 27. C. L. Lausen , and R. M. R. Barclay . 2002. Roosting behaviour and roost selection of female big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) roosting in rock crevices in southeastern Alberta. Cana Dian Journal Of Zoology, 80: 1069–1076. Google Scholar
  • 28. C. L. Lausen , and R. M. R. Barclay . 2006. Benefits of living in a building: big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) in rocks versus buildings. Journal of Mammalogy, 87: 362–370. Google Scholar
  • 29. S. E. Lewis 1995. Roost fidelity of bats: a review. Journal of Mammalogy, 76: 481–496. Google Scholar
  • 30. H. Li , and K. T. Wilkins . 2014. Patch or mosaic: bat activity responds to fine-scale urban heterogeneity in a medium-sized city in the United States. Urban Ecosystems, 1013–1031. Google Scholar
  • 31. D. I. MacKenzie , J. D. Nichols , J. A. Royle , K. H. Pollock , L. Bailey , and J. E. Hines . 2006. Occupancy estimation and modeling: inferring patterns and dynamics of species occurrence. Else vier, Amsterdam, Netherlands, vii + 324 pp. Google Scholar
  • 32. S. L. Mann , R. J. Steidl , and V. M. Dalton . 2002. Effects of cave tours on breeding Myotis velifer. Journal of Wild life Management, 66: 618–624. Google Scholar
  • 33. K. Mazurska , and I. Ruczyński . 2008. Bats select buildings in clearings in Białowieża Primeval Forest. Acta Chiropterologica, 10: 331–338. Google Scholar
  • 34. R. S. McCormick , and A. N. Barrass . 2012. Status of Tadarida brasiliensis cynocephala, Le Conte's free-tailed bat, in Tennessee and surrounding states. Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science, 87: 157–163. Google Scholar
  • 35. G. F. McCracken , J. K. Westbrook , V. A. Brown , M. Eldridge , P. Federico , and T. H. Kunz . 2012. Bats track and exploit changes in insect pest populations. PLoS ONE, 7: e43839. Google Scholar
  • 36. S. L. Messenger , J. S. Smith , and C. E. Rupprecht . 2002. Emerging epidemiology of bat-associated cryptic cases of rabies in humans in the United States. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 35: 738–747. Google Scholar
  • 37. C. Moussy 2011. Selection of old stone buildings as summer day roost by the brown long-eared bat Plecotus auritus. Acta Chiropterologica, 13: 101–111. Google Scholar
  • 38. D. J. Neubaum , T. J. O'Shea , and K. R. Wilson . 2006. Autumn migration and selection of rock crevices as hibernacula by big brown bats in Colorado. Journal of Mammalogy, 87: 470–479. Google Scholar
  • 39. D. J. Neubaum , K. R. Wilson , and T. J. O'Shea . 2007. Urban maternity-roost selection by big brown bats in Colorado. Journal of Wildlife Management, 71: 728–736. Google Scholar
  • 40. J. M. O'Keefe , S. C. Loeb , J. D. Lanham , and H. S. Hill Jr. 2009. Macrohabitat factors affect day roost selection by eastern red bats and eastern pipistrelles in the southern Appalachian Mountains, USA. Forest Ecology and Management, 257: 1757–1763. Google Scholar
  • 41. T. J. O'Shea , D. J. Neubaum , M. A. Neubaum , P. M. Cryan , L. E. Ellison , T. R. Stanley , C. E. Rupprecht , W. J. Pape , and R. A. Bowen . 2011. Bat ecology and public health surveillance for rabies in an urbanizing region of Colorado. Urban Ecosystems, 14: 665–697. Google Scholar
  • 42. K. M. Parris , and D. L. Hazell . 2005. Biotic effects of climate change in urban environments: the case of the grey-headed flying-fox (Pteropus poliocephalus) in Melbourne, Australia. Biological Conservation, 124: 267–276. Google Scholar
  • 43. K. Patyk , A. Turmelle , J. D. Blanton , and C. E. Rupprecht . 2012. Trends in national surveillance data for bat rabies in the United States: 2001–2009. Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, 12: 666–673. Google Scholar
  • 44. R. W. Perry , R. E. Thill , and D. M. Leslie . 2008. Scale-dependent effects of landscape structure and composition on diurnal roost selection by forest bats. Journal of Wildlife Management, 72: 913–925. Google Scholar
  • 45. B. Podobnik 2011. Assessing the social and environmental achievements of New Urbanism: evidence from Portland, Oregon. Journal of Urbanism: International Research on Placemaking and Urban Sustainability, 4: 105–126. Google Scholar
  • 46. G. P. Quinn , and M. J. Keough . 2002. Experimental design and data analysis for biologists. Cam bridge University Press, New York, NY, xvii + 537 pp. Google Scholar
  • 47. J. D. Reichard , and S. R. Fellows . 2010. Thermoregulation during flight: body temperature and sensible heat transfer in free-ranging Brazilian free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis). Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 83: 885–897. Google Scholar
  • 48. D. Russo , L. Cistrone , G. Jones , and S. Mazzoleni . 2004. Roost selection by barbastelle bats (Barbastella barbastellus, Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) in beech woodlands of cen tral Italy: consequences for conservation. Biological Con ser vation, 117: 73–81. Google Scholar
  • 49. J. Rydell 2006. Bats and their insect prey at streetlights. Pp. 43–60, in Ecological consequences of artificial night lighting ( C. Rich and T. Long Core , eds.). Island Press, Washington, D.C., 458 pp. Google Scholar
  • 50. J. A. Scales , and K. T. Wilkins . 2007. Seasonality and fidelity in roost use of the Mexican free-tailed bat, Tadarida brasiliensis, in an urban setting. Western North American Naturalist, 67: 402–408. Google Scholar
  • 51. D. J. Schmidly 2004. The mammals of Texas. University of Tex as Press, Austin, TX, xiv + 490 pp. Google Scholar
  • 52. E. A. Snider , P. M. Cryan , and K. R. Wilson . 2013. Roost selection by western long-eared myotis (Myotis evotis) in burned and unburned pinon-juniper woodlands of southwestern Colorado. Journal of Mammalogy, 94: 640–649. Google Scholar
  • 53. R. R. Sokal , and F. J. Rohlf . 1995. Biometry: the principles and practice of statistics in biological research, 3rd edition. W. H. Freeman and Company, New York, NY, 887 pp. Google Scholar
  • 54. K. D. Soper , and M. B. Fenton . 2007. Availability of building roosts for bats in four towns in southwestern Ontario, Canada. Acta Chiropterologica, 9: 542–546. Google Scholar
  • 55. W. O. C. Symondson , K. D. Sunderland , and M. H. Greenstone . 2002. Can generalist predators be effective biocontrol agents? Annual Review of Entomology, 47: 561–594. Google Scholar
  • 56. C. G. Threlfall , B. Law , and P. B. Banks . 2012. Sensitivity of insectivorous bats to urbanization: implications for suburban conservation planning. Biological Conservation, 146: 41–52. Google Scholar
  • 57. C. G. Threlfall , B. Law , and P. B. Banks . 2013. Roost selection in suburban bushland by the urban sensitive bat Nyctophilus gouldi. Journal of Mammalogy, 94: 307–319. Google Scholar
  • 58. D. Trudeau , and P. Malloy . 2011. Suburbs in disguise? Ex amining the geographies of the New Urbanism. Urban Geo graphy, 32: 424–447. Google Scholar
  • 59. D. Tupinier 1989. La chauve-souris et l'homme. Editions L'Harmattan, Pairs, France, 218 pp. Google Scholar
  • 60. K. T. Wilkins 1989. Tadarida brasiliensis. Mammalian Spe cies, 331: 1–10. Google Scholar
  • 61. L. M. Williams , and M. C. Brittingham . 1997. Selection of maternity roosts by big brown bats. Journal of Wildlife Man a gement, 61: 359–368. Google Scholar
  • 62. N. S. G. Williams , M. J. McDonnell , G. K. Phelan , L. D. Keim , and R. Van Der Ree . 2006. Range expansion due to urbanization: increased food resources attract grey-headed flying-foxes (Pteropus poliocephalus) to Melbourne. Austral Ecology, 31: 190–198. Google Scholar
  • 63. D. E. Wilson , and S. Ruff . 1999. The Smithsonian book of North American mammals. UBC Press, Vancouver, Canada, xxv + 750 pp. Google Scholar
  • 64. J. C. Yelderman , and R. E. Cervenka . 1992. Environmental atlas of McLennan County. Baylor University, Department of Geology, Waco, TX, 19 pp. Google Scholar
  • 65. A. F. Zuur , E. N. Ieno , N. J. Walker , A. A. Saveliev , and G. M. Smith . 2009. Mixed effects models and extensions in ecology with R. Springer-Verlag, New York, NY, 574 pp. Google Scholar

Typ dokumentu

Bibliografia

Identyfikator YADDA

bwmeta1.element.agro-1292a47a-19c9-413b-a66c-93b25cb28da8
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.