高海拔针叶林天空群岛蝙蝠的季节活动模式

Pub Date : 2022-08-18 DOI:10.3161/15081109ACC2022.24.1.007
C. Diggins, W. Ford
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国东南部阿巴拉契亚山脉南部,高海拔栖息地的蝙蝠群落往往调查相对不足。高海拔栖息地可能为某些物种(即迁徙的树蝙蝠)提供重要的栖息地,并可能在干旱或高温期间作为气候避难所。我们在北卡罗来纳州西部阿巴拉契亚山脉南部的高海拔(1585–1920 m a.s.l.)山地云杉-冷杉林的十个调查区对蝙蝠群落进行了机会性声学调查。在每个调查区域,我们在2015年的三个季节(春季、夏季和秋季)随机放置了三个全谱声学探测器(N=30)。我们在每个季节部署了两个为期五天的探测器(n=900个调查夜晚)。尽管我们在调查中检测到了七种蝙蝠,但73%的回声定位文件归因于灰蝙蝠(Lasiurus cinereus)和夜蛾(Lasionycteris noctivagans)。这两种物种在阿巴拉契亚山脉普遍罕见,通常只在夏季中低海拔地区以低密度出现,在所有季节的所有地点都能检测到。总体而言,蝙蝠的平均夜间活动在夏季高于春季或秋季。我们观察到,与春季和秋季相比,夏季云杉-冷杉林中灰蝶乳杆菌的活性高出3.7-5倍,而夜蛾乳杆菌在夏季的活性是其他季节的1.3-5倍。在考虑了降水事件后,我们的有限混合模型表明,季节、温度、海拔和冠层高度影响灰蝶的活动,而季节和温度影响夜蛾的活动。我们的观察结果表明,高海拔的云杉冷杉林为北美南部的树蝙蝠提供了夏季觅食和可能的日间栖息栖息地。
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Seasonal Activity Patterns of Bats in High-Elevation Conifer Sky Islands
In the southern Appalachian Mountains of the southeastern USA, bat communities in high-elevation habitats tend to be relatively under-surveyed. High-elevation habitats may provide important habitat to certain species (i.e., migratory tree bats), and may serve as climate refugia during droughts or high temperatures. We conducted an opportunistic acoustic survey of bat communities in ten survey areas in high elevation (1,585–1,920 m a.s.l.) montane Picea rubens (red spruce)-Abies fraseri (Fraser fir) forest in the southern Appalachian Mountains of western North Carolina. In each survey area, we randomly placed three full spectrum acoustic detectors (N = 30) during three seasons (spring, summer and fall) in 2015. We deployed each detector for two five-day periods during each season (n = 900 survey nights). Although we detected seven bat species/groups during the surveys, 73% of echolocation files were attributed to Lasiurus cinereus (hoary bat) and Lasionycteris noctivagans (silver-haired bat). Generally rare in the Appalachians and typically present only at low densities in the summer at mid- and low-elevations, both species were detected at all sites during all seasons. Overall, mean nightly activity of bats was higher in the summer than the spring or fall. We observed 3.7–5 times greater activity of L. cinereus in spruce-fir forests during the summer compared to spring and fall, whereas L. noctivagans had 1.3–5 times more activity in the summer compared to other seasons. After accounting for precipitation events, our finite mixture models showed that season, temperature, elevation, and canopy height influenced L. cinereus activity, whereas season and temperature affected L. noctivagans activity. Our observations suggest that high-elevation spruce-fir forests are providing summer foraging and possibly day-roosting habitat of tree bats not previously documented this far south in North America.
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