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Ecology of northern long-eared bats (Myotis septentrionalis) in a coastal setting after the introduction of White-nose Syndrome

Northern long-eared bat (Myotis septentrionalis) populations have declined sharply in recent years due to the introduction and rapid spread of White-nose Syndrome. This has prompted an urgent need for a greater understanding of their natural history in order to support the conservation of extant populations, particularly where forested day-roost and foraging habitats are being fragmented by development. Prior to 2006, with other Myotis species on the endangered species list, northern long-eared bats were understudied. In recent years, with the pressing concern to document the ecology of all cave bats affected by White-nose Syndrome on the landscape, researchers have now prioritized northern long-eared bat habitat needs, day-roost use, social dynamics, and barriers to gene flow. A relatively new discovery has been the numerous coastal populations that occur in smaller forest patches often surrounded by anthropogenic development. The goal of my research is to aid in informing future monitoring and management protocols that are specific to northern long-eared bats, particularly as they may shift from Threatened to Endangered under the Endangered Species Act. The chapters of this dissertation explore (1) similarities and differences between coastal and more documented upland habitat associations for populations of northern long-eared bats throughout the summer months through the use of acoustic detectors; (2) relationships between acoustic activity patterns and weather on an hourly basis for several bat species on Long Island, New York; and (3–4) day-roost characteristics and social network dynamics of a coastal northern long-eared bat maternity colony on Long Island, New York. I found that northern long-eared bat colonies have larger spatial footprints in – and a moderate tolerance for – forests in anthropogenically-developed areas than previously believed, though many natural history aspects of the bat were similar among coastal and interior populations. Installation of artificial day-roost structures such as bat boxes would likely be used and highly beneficial to colonies in these conditions, particularly to offset the deleterious effects of stochastic disturbance events on day-roost availability and to support social cohesion (and, by extension, reproductive success) for coastal maternity colonies. Additionally, I found that acoustic activity increased in riparian areas, or at sites closer to water features, and as proportion of forest coverage increased at a broad scale. However, immediately around the detector this relationship was reversed. Taken together, this demonstrates that riparian corridors, water features, and forest structural heterogeneity should explicitly be included in management guidelines. / Doctor of Philosophy / White-nose Syndrome is a fungal disease that has killed millions of cave bats in North America, including the northern long-eared bat (Myotis septentrionalis) that during the spring through fall uses forests for roosting and foraging habitat. As the disease continues to spread, and as forests are increasingly being lost to urbanization, it is imperative for researchers and land managers to understand the landscape needs of this species so that they can retain those forests that are used by this species. In addition to broader landscape needs, it is important to understand what specific forest stand to tree features the bats are using, how their social dynamics support their reproductive success, and how to best support habitat conditions foster mating in the fall swarm to avoid inbreeding. In recent years, more northern long-eared bats have been documented in coastal landscapes, suggesting that these areas might be more important to the conservation of the species than previously believed. In this dissertation, my aim was to explore how or why the landscapes in these coastal areas were being used by these bats both during nightly foraging and during the day as resting areas (day-roosts). Additionally, I explored how multiple species of bats were responding to weather conditions on the coast across seasons. Overall, I found that complex forests continue to be an important resource for northern long-eared bats, as well as water features whereby the latter should be more explicitly included in conservation management plans. Northern long-eared bats also show an ability to successfully use small forest patches within a larger urbanized landscape, including using human structures for day-roosts. Human structures might provide reliable, multi-year day-roosts in areas where extreme coastal weather events (hurricanes) occur or increase or as natural processes reduce the suitability of these forests to provide day-roosts. These structures, particularly artificial roost boxes could also support the social network of reproductive northern long-eared bats and thus maintain population stability to some extent.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/113209
Date17 January 2023
CreatorsGorman, Katherine M.
ContributorsFish and Wildlife Conservation, Ford, W. Mark, Powers, Karen E., Karpanty, Sarah M., Hamed, M. Kevin
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
FormatETD, application/pdf, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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