4.3 Article

Tree selection and landscape analysis of eastern red bat day roosts

Journal

JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
Volume 71, Issue 2, Pages 478-486

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.2193/2005-642

Keywords

discriminant function; Lasiurus borealis; Maryland; radio telemetry; red bat; roost

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Declining bat populations and increasing demands on forest resources have prompted researchers to investigate tree roost selection of forest bats. Few studies, however, have investigated different spatial scales and landscape pattern as criteria for selection of tree roosts. In 1999 and 2000, we radiotracked 23 eastern red bats (Lasiurus borealis) to 64 day roosts. Using univariate and multivariate comparisons, we tested roost tree variables with random tree data at 3 circular spatial scales: roost tree, plot, and landscape. We found 15 variables that were entered in a stepwise discriminant analysis to best differentiate between the roost and random samples; 11 (73.3%) were landscape variables measured with a geographic information system. On average (x +/- SE), red bats roosted in deciduous trees (42.0 +/- 2.1 cm dbh) that were located in plots with more (3.1 +/- 0.1 m(2)) basal area, higher (84.0 +/- 1.3) percentage of canopy closure, and lower (27.2 +/- 2.2) percentage of groundcover than random plots. At the landscape scale (by percent magnitude), red bat buffers (1,000-m-radius circle) had significantly less development (81.6%), less feeding operations (70.4%), more deciduous (52.9%) and pine forest (63.8%), and fewer local roads (5.4%) but more trails (94.1%), open water (61.4%), wetland areas (80.4%), and stream areas (63.1%) than random buffers. Red bat roost trees were significantly closer (chi(2) = 22.0088, df = 1, P <= 0.001) to trails (106.2 +/- 13.3 m) than to streams (279.4 +/- 28.5 m). Our results suggest that red bats in our study area select roosts in mature riparian forests near trails, open water, and wetlands. The high percentage of landscape values in the discriminant analysis lends support to using landscape metrics as an investigative technique of resource selection. We recommend that managers consider landscape factors when protecting red bat day-roost habitat.

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