Network analysis of a northern long-eared bat (Myotis septentrionalis) maternity colony in a suburban forest patch

Q2 Social Sciences
Katherine M Gorman, Elaine L. Barr, Tomás Nocera, W. Ford
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Many bat species are highly social, forming groups of conspecifics, particularly during the maternity season. In temperate North America, these social groups are typically comprised of closely related individuals or individuals that share some common trait (i.e. reproductive state or shared hibernacula from the previous winter). In the summer, when bats use forests for day-roosts, these social groups often demonstrate nonrandom patterns of periodically associating in common roosts and disassociating using different roosts as a ‘fission–fusion society’. As cave hibernating bat species in North America continue to decline due to the impacts of White-nose Syndrome, opportunities to describe these dynamics are becoming rare. Unfortunately, these patterns often are still poorly documented, yet understanding these behaviors is critical for species-specific habitat conservation and management. In our study, we tracked female northern long-eared bats (Myotis septentrionalis) to their day-roosts in a small, suburban forest fragment in coastal New York, USA, in the summers of 2018 and 2019. We confirmed that the bats shared roost sites and, using network analyses, analyzed social dynamics and space use. In contrast to previous research on this imperiled species in large, unfragmented core forests, we found a more dense, connected roost network that concentrated around forest patch edges. Unusual for this species, primary roosts were anthropogenic structures. Our findings suggest that northern long-eared bats can utilize small forest patches and that incorporation of specific types of anthropogenic roosts might be an effective strategy for long-term conservation in more urbanized landscapes where forest management actions to enhance day-roosting conditions are impractical and the risk of stochastic loss of roosts is high.
郊区森林中北方长耳蝙蝠(间隔性肌炎)产仔群的网络分析
许多蝙蝠都是高度群居的,形成同种的群体,特别是在生育季节。在温带的北美,这些社会群体通常由关系密切的个体或具有某些共同特征的个体组成(例如,繁殖状态或共享上一年冬天的冬眠)。在夏季,当蝙蝠利用森林进行日间栖息时,这些社会群体往往表现出非随机模式,周期性地在共同的栖息地结合,并在不同的栖息地分离,形成“裂变融合社会”。由于白鼻综合症的影响,北美洞穴冬眠的蝙蝠种类继续减少,描述这些动态的机会变得越来越少。不幸的是,这些模式往往仍然很少被记录,但了解这些行为对物种特定栖息地的保护和管理至关重要。在我们的研究中,我们在2018年和2019年的夏天追踪了雌性北方长耳蝙蝠(Myotis septentrionalis)在美国纽约沿海的一个小型郊区森林片段中的日间栖息地。我们证实了蝙蝠共享栖息地点,并使用网络分析,分析了社会动态和空间使用。与之前在大型、未破碎的核心森林中对这种危险物种的研究相比,我们发现了一个更密集、连接更紧密的栖息网络,集中在森林斑块边缘。不同寻常的是,这个物种的主要栖息地是人为的结构。我们的研究结果表明,北方长耳蝙蝠可以利用小的森林斑块,并且在城市化程度较高的景观中,采用特定类型的人为栖息地可能是一种有效的长期保护策略,在这些景观中,森林管理行动来改善日间栖息条件是不切实际的,并且栖息地随机丧失的风险很高。
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来源期刊
Journal of Urban Ecology
Journal of Urban Ecology Social Sciences-Urban Studies
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
15 weeks
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