Bat activity at a major road in Sweden

Humans have changed ecosystems steadily over the years, leading to habitat fragmentation and loss. Road- and railroad networks are rapidly expanding around the world and disintegrating natural landscapes. Habitat loss, habitat fragmentation and habitat degradation are three factors why bat specie...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Sjölund, Amanda
Formato: M2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Ecology 2015
Materias:
_version_ 1855571379495108608
author Sjölund, Amanda
author_browse Sjölund, Amanda
author_facet Sjölund, Amanda
author_sort Sjölund, Amanda
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Humans have changed ecosystems steadily over the years, leading to habitat fragmentation and loss. Road- and railroad networks are rapidly expanding around the world and disintegrating natural landscapes. Habitat loss, habitat fragmentation and habitat degradation are three factors why bat species are threatened, and infrastructure such as roads has the potential to contribute to all of these factors. This is the first study of bats and the impact roads have on bats in Sweden. In this study we tested whether the major road acts as a barrier to movement of four different taxa of bats. Especially we focused on the activity of Myotis species at various environments in the landscape in relation to a major road. We placed auto boxes that automatically record bat ultra sounds in 34 study sites around Enköping for seven weeks. We had 8 sites along a major road, 8 sites in open gaps between forests without any roads, 4 sites at wildlife passages and 14 control sites within the forest. The results of this study show avoidance behaviour in Myotis, and Eptesicus species. For Nyctalus` the road does not reveal to be any obstacle. Observations of Pipistrellus species were too few to draw any conclusions. An important conclusion in this study is that there is not a difference in Myotis- activity between the road and open gaps in the forest. Both types of openings are avoided. However, wildlife passages are used for foraging and commuting. It is important to do further studies to improve the mitigation measures for bats in infrastructure projects in Sweden. More knowledge about the different taxa’s behaviour near major roads and an understanding of the thresholds, such as limit distances for Myotis in open gaps are necessary to draw conclusions about mitigation measures and alternatives for ecoducts.
format M2
id RepoSLU8606
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher SLU/Dept. of Ecology
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Ecology
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU86062016-04-26T07:31:58Z Bat activity at a major road in Sweden Sjölund, Amanda bat activity fragmentation road Myotis Eptesicus Nyctalus Pipistrellus Chiroptera Humans have changed ecosystems steadily over the years, leading to habitat fragmentation and loss. Road- and railroad networks are rapidly expanding around the world and disintegrating natural landscapes. Habitat loss, habitat fragmentation and habitat degradation are three factors why bat species are threatened, and infrastructure such as roads has the potential to contribute to all of these factors. This is the first study of bats and the impact roads have on bats in Sweden. In this study we tested whether the major road acts as a barrier to movement of four different taxa of bats. Especially we focused on the activity of Myotis species at various environments in the landscape in relation to a major road. We placed auto boxes that automatically record bat ultra sounds in 34 study sites around Enköping for seven weeks. We had 8 sites along a major road, 8 sites in open gaps between forests without any roads, 4 sites at wildlife passages and 14 control sites within the forest. The results of this study show avoidance behaviour in Myotis, and Eptesicus species. For Nyctalus` the road does not reveal to be any obstacle. Observations of Pipistrellus species were too few to draw any conclusions. An important conclusion in this study is that there is not a difference in Myotis- activity between the road and open gaps in the forest. Both types of openings are avoided. However, wildlife passages are used for foraging and commuting. It is important to do further studies to improve the mitigation measures for bats in infrastructure projects in Sweden. More knowledge about the different taxa’s behaviour near major roads and an understanding of the thresholds, such as limit distances for Myotis in open gaps are necessary to draw conclusions about mitigation measures and alternatives for ecoducts. SLU/Dept. of Ecology 2015 M2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8606/
spellingShingle bat activity
fragmentation
road
Myotis
Eptesicus
Nyctalus
Pipistrellus
Chiroptera
Sjölund, Amanda
Bat activity at a major road in Sweden
title Bat activity at a major road in Sweden
title_full Bat activity at a major road in Sweden
title_fullStr Bat activity at a major road in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Bat activity at a major road in Sweden
title_short Bat activity at a major road in Sweden
title_sort bat activity at a major road in sweden
topic bat activity
fragmentation
road
Myotis
Eptesicus
Nyctalus
Pipistrellus
Chiroptera