The foraging activity of bats in managed pine forests of different ages

被引:0
|
作者
Andrzej Węgiel
Witold Grzywiński
Mateusz Ciechanowski
Radosław Jaros
Matina Kalcounis-Rüppell
Anna Kmiecik
Paweł Kmiecik
Jolanta Węgiel
机构
[1] Poznań University of Life Sciences,Faculty of Forestry
[2] University of Gdańsk,Faculty of Biology
[3] The Polish Society for Nature Conservation “Salamandra”,Department of Biology
[4] University of North Carolina at Greensboro,undefined
[5] Forest District Lądek Zdrój,undefined
[6] Forest District Międzylesie,undefined
来源
European Journal of Forest Research | 2019年 / 138卷
关键词
Chiroptera; Commuting; Diversity; Foraging; Forest management;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Temperate zone bats are associated with forests and affected by forest management practices. However, practices vary among regions and countries, and the relationship between bats and managed forest stands is not well understood. We compared the activity of bats in three forest management areas across four stand ages of managed Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) in western Poland. Stand ages included clear-cut stands, young (2–5 year) stands, middle-aged (41–60 year) stands, and mature (> 80 years) stands. We sampled bat activity by walking transects with a broadband ultrasound Pettersson D-1000X detector. Across our study area, highest bat activity was in clear-cut and young stands and lowest in mature stands. Bat species adapted to foraging in open habitats had high activity in clear and young stands, while those adapted to closed habitats had high activity in middle-aged and mature stands. Our results suggest that the presence of mature pine forests is important for closed-habitat foragers, including rare and threatened bat species, and active management to increase mature forest areas is important. At the same time, a mosaic of different growth stages of stands can support high activity of open- and edge-habitat foragers.
引用
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页码:383 / 396
页数:13
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