科摩罗群岛极度濒危的 Pteropus livingstonii 的季节性趋势和种群状况。

IF 2.3 Q2 ECOLOGY
Isabella Mandl, Amelaid Houmadi, Ishaka Said, Badrane Ben Ali Abdou, Nastazia Mohamed, Abdoulkader Fardane, Samirou Soulaïmana, Misbahou Mohamed, Ben Anthoy M, Hugh Doulton
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引用次数: 0

摘要

翼狐狸属,尤其是栖息在岛屿上的翼狐狸,面临着越来越大的人为威胁压力。实施有效保护行动的第一步是建立监测项目,以了解物种的种群状况和趋势。翼手目物种受季节性影响很大,因此需要定期、重复和长期的数据来了解种群趋势以及对恶劣天气事件的反应。在本案例研究中,科摩罗在 2016 年至 2023 年期间对高度濒危的利文斯通果蝠(Pteropus livingstonii)实施了一年两次的定期种群普查,并将标准化监测结果与历史种群数据进行了比较。季节性对在栖息地发现的蝙蝠数量有很大影响,雨季出现的蝙蝠数量更多,但过去八年的数据显示,在昂儒昂岛上统计到的蝙蝠数量没有明显的增减。我们估计昂儒昂岛上约有 1,200-1,500 只蝙蝠,莫埃利岛上约有 300-400 只蝙蝠,并发现土地覆盖类型对栖息地的种群分布没有明显影响。我们的研究强调了长期调查的必要性,以了解过去的种群趋势,而且单次计数不足以得出物种状况的最终结论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Seasonal trends and population status of the highly threatened Pteropus livingstonii in the Comoros archipelago.

Seasonal trends and population status of the highly threatened Pteropus livingstonii in the Comoros archipelago.

Flying foxes of the genus Pteropus, especially those inhabiting islands, face increasing pressure from anthropogenic threats. A first step to implementing effective conservation actions is to establish monitoring projects to understand a species' population status and trend. Pteropus species are highly affected by seasonality which further requires regular, repeated, and long-term data to understand population trends, and reactions to severe weather events. In the present case study, a regular, bi-annual population census was implemented on Comoros between 2016 and 2023 for the highly threatened Livingstone's fruit bat, Pteropus livingstonii, and compared the results of standardized monitoring to historical population data. Seasonality had a large impact on the number of bats found at roost sites, with more bats present in the wet season, but the data over the past eight years revealed no significant in- or decrease in the number of bats counted on the island Anjouan. We estimated around 1,200-1,500 bats on Anjouan and 300-400 bats on Mohéli, and found that landcover type has no measurable effect on population distribution at roost sites. Our study highlights the need for long-term surveys to understand past population trends and that single counts are not sufficient to draw final conclusions of a species' status.

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