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Long-term changes in abundance of bats as revealed by their frequency in tawny owls’ diet
Authors:Grzegorz Lesiński
Institution:(1) Division of Evolutionary Ecology, Zoological Institute, University of Bern, 3012 Bern, Switzerland;(2) Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, Biophore, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland;(3) Division of Environmental and Evolutionary Biology, Glasgow University, Graham Kerr Building, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, UK
Abstract:Percentage of bats in tawny owls’ diet was compared in three periods: I — before 1976, II — 1976–1992, III — 1993–2009, by using the published and unpublished material from Poland (only samples over 100 vertebrate prey items). This species of owl showed an opportunistic predation on bats and took them more frequently in periods of higher abundance. Before the mass use of toxic pesticides in Poland, in the period I bats constituted more than 2% of vertebrates in four out of five diet samples (median 2.4%). The lowest bat abundance occurred in Poland in the 1980s and resulted in the lowest percentage of bats taken by owls in the period II (n = 11, median 0.2%). Due to the recovery of bat populations in the period III, the percentage of bats in tawny owls’ diet increased (n = 23, median 0.7%). In large samples (over 200 vertebrate items, n = 21) collected in central and north-eastern Poland the percentage of bats increased from 1980 to 2009 (the estimated average value at the end of that period slightly exceeded 1%). Samples collected at the same five sites in 1975–1992 and again in 2000–2009, confirmed the increasing trend in percentage of bats captured by tawny owls noted in last years.
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