Cara R. Parsons , Maldwyn J. Evans , Darren S. Le Roux , Saul A. Cunningham , Brad Law , Philip Gibbons
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引用次数: 0
摘要
大树是一系列分类群的基石结构。食虫蝙蝠依靠大树作为栖息的栖息地,如空心和剥落的树皮,以及它们猎物的栖息地。然而,全球城市地区的大树数量正在减少。我们试图确定城市环境中食虫蝙蝠的丰富度和活动是否与大树的出现有关;在城市景观背景下,大树对食虫蝙蝠有最大的好处。通过在澳大利亚东部温带和亚热带城市的83个地点设置蝙蝠超声波探测器,我们从16种蝙蝠和4种蝙蝠复合体中鉴定了20,026种蝙蝠。我们发现四项蝙蝠指标(平均夜间活动、边缘适应蝙蝠的丰富度和活动以及蝙蝠活动)与≥50 cm DBH的大树数量呈正相关。我们还发现证据表明,在木本植被覆盖率较低的地区,大树支持更丰富的边缘适应蝙蝠。我们的数据表明,当大树被隔离时,大树对边缘适应蝙蝠的价值就会增强——这种关系先前在鸟类中得到证实,但在蝙蝠中没有。城市绿地中的大树,尤其是孤立的树木,为大量食虫蝙蝠提供了宝贵的栖息地。我们的研究结果强调了在城市绿地中保留大型孤立树木(原生和非原生)对蝙蝠保护的重要性。
Large urban trees are keystone structures for Australian microbats
Large trees are keystone structures for a range of taxa. Insectivorous bats depend on large trees for roosting habitat, such as hollows and peeling bark, as well as habitat for their prey. However, large trees are in decline in urban areas globally. We sought to determine if the richness and activity of insectivorous bats in urban environments is associated with the occurrence of large trees; and in which urban landscape context large trees have greatest benefit for insectivorous bats. Using ultrasonic bat detectors set at 83 sites spanning temperate and subtropical cities in eastern Australia, we identified 20,026 bat passes from 16 microbat species and four species complexes. We found strong positive associations between four bat metrics (mean nightly activity, richness and activity of edge-adapted bats and vespertilionid bat activity) and the number of large trees ≥50 cm DBH. We also found evidence that large trees supported a higher richness of edge-adapted bats in areas with lower woody vegetation cover. Our data indicate that the value of large trees for edge-adapted bats is enhanced when large trees are isolated – a relationship previously demonstrated for birds but not bats. Large trees in urban greenspace, especially trees in isolation, offer valuable habitat that supports a substantial community of insectivorous bats. Our results highlight the importance of retaining large, isolated trees (both native and non-native) in urban greenspace for bat conservation.
期刊介绍:
Biological Conservation is an international leading journal in the discipline of conservation biology. The journal publishes articles spanning a diverse range of fields that contribute to the biological, sociological, and economic dimensions of conservation and natural resource management. The primary aim of Biological Conservation is the publication of high-quality papers that advance the science and practice of conservation, or which demonstrate the application of conservation principles for natural resource management and policy. Therefore it will be of interest to a broad international readership.