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Roosting Behavior and Roost-Site Preferences of Forest-Dwelling California Bats (Myotis californicus)

Authors :
Robert M. R. Barclay
R. Mark Brigham
John C. Gwilliam
Maarten J. Vonhof
Source :
Journal of Mammalogy. 78:1231-1239
Publication Year :
1997
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 1997.

Abstract

We followed nine radiotagged female California bats ( Myotis californicus ) to 19 roosts in trees at two study sites in southcentral British Columbia. Bats regularly switched roosts and the number of bats emerging from known roosts fluctuated widely. Logistic-regression analysis showed that reproductively active females preferred trees further away from other trees of the same height or greater, and closer to neighboring trees, relative to available trees in the immediate vicinity of the roost. Diameter at breast height and distance to the nearest tree of the same or greater height explained significant proportions of the variation between roost and available trees found in other areas of the same forest stand. Roost trees had significantly larger diameters and were further away from trees of the same or greater height. Percentage of canopy closure also explained a significant proportion of the variation between roost and available trees, such that roost trees were situated in areas with lower canopy closure than available trees in other areas of the same stand. Roost and available trees were classified correctly >70% of the time based on the above tree characteristics. However, roost trees were only correctly classified 39% of the time in the analysis of site characteristics. Our results, combined with those from other recent studies, lead to the general hypothesis that forest-roosting bats require a number of large dead trees of specific species, in specific stages of decay, and that project above the canopy in relatively open areas. For management and conservation reasons, there should be a strong incentive to evaluate this hypothesis for a variety of species in a variety of locations to test its generality.

Details

ISSN :
00222372 and 15451542
Volume :
78
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Mammalogy
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a3e15c981ac9cb85aa27be1746e9f4a6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2307/1383066