4.1 Article

Roosting ecology of insectivorous bats in a tropical agricultural landscape

Journal

MAMMALIA
Volume 86, Issue 2, Pages 134-143

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/mammalia-2021-0056

Keywords

agro-ecosystems; day roosts; pest control; Sri Lanka; tea plantations

Categories

Funding

  1. National Research Council, Sri Lanka [15-111]
  2. Rufford Foundation [17065-1]

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This study investigated the day roosts used by insectivorous bat species in tea plantations of Sri Lanka, finding that most recorded roosts were geomorphic, some were anthropogenic, and a few were in vegetation. H. lankadiva and M. cf. fuliginosus are the only species known to exclusively roost in geomorphic roosts, while others are more opportunistic. Maintaining and protecting natural roosts is crucial for bat conservation, and the introduction of artificial roosts may help increase bat populations for pest control in agricultural landscapes like tea plantations.
Bats spend more than half of their life in roosts, where key life events transpire. Therefore the availability and selection of roosts are important to bats everywhere, and may limit their ability to exploit every habitat, including agricultural landscapes such as paddy fields, orchards and tea plantations. This study aimed to investigate the day roosts used by insectivorous bat species in tea plantations of Sri Lanka. We surveyed 18 tea plantations where we recorded a total of 44 roosts involving five families and nine species of bats (Hipposideros galeritus, Hipposideros lankadiva, Hipposideros speoris, Rhinolophus beddomei, Rhinolophus rouxii, Megaderma spasma, Pipistrellus ceylonicus, Pipistrellus coromandra and Miniopterus cf. fuliginosus). Most (26) of the recorded roosts were geomorphic, (11) were anthropogenic, and (7) were in vegetation. H. lankadiva and M. cf. fuliginosus are the only species known to roost exclusively in geomorphic roosts; all others were opportunistic. Although protecting bat roosts is crucial for their conservation, it is challenging in view of existing tea management practices. Therefore, natural roosts should be maintained and protected. The introduction of artificial roosts might increase the number of bats able to forage over tea plantations and maximize their consumption of agricultural pests, thereby increasing tea production.

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