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Drivers affecting habitat use in Afrotropical hipposiderid and pteropodid bats
Authors:Claude Mande  Victor Van Cakenberghe  Lucinda Kirkpatrick  Anne Laudisoit  Luc De Bruyn  Guy-Crispin Gembu  Erik Verheyen
Institution:1. Department of Ecology and Wildlife Management, University of Kisangani, Kisangani, Democratic Republic of the Congo;2. Functional Morphology Lab Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium;3. Evolutionary Ecology Group, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium;4. Department of Ecology and Wildlife Management, University of Kisangani, Kisangani, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Biodiversity Monitoring Centre (CSB), University of Kisangani, Kisangani, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Abstract:Assessing how bats respond to habitat attributes requires an integrative approach to reliably predict direct community-level effects. We focused on hipposiderid and pteropodid bats because of their diverse resource use patterns, body size ranges, and dispersal abilities. We combined an array of bat species-level characteristics with key forest stand characteristics that may covary with habitat use. Twelve stations were sampled in the Lomami and Yangambi landscapes, Democratic Republic of the Congo. We investigated whether species-level flight ability of bats and forest stand characteristics can affect bat commuting flights and community-level estimates of both species detection and habitat occupancy. We captured bats for 108 trap-nights. Three sampling events (early evening, middle of the night, and early morning) were replicated for each survey night. Hipposiderids showed an early evening flight peak, while flight activity of pteropodids was constant throughout the night, but increased around the middle of the night. Species capture probability decreased with higher wing loading in hipposiderids and was negatively correlated with higher wing aspect ratio in pteropodids. Forest occupancy of hipposiderids increased along the gradient towards waterways, while pteropodid occurrence was not directly linked to measured forest stand variables. This suggests a consequence of habitat patterns at larger spatial scales, which would need clarifying through additional data collection. We discuss these findings in terms of resource-use strategies of clutter-tolerant and clutter-intolerant species. We argue that the occurrence of specific bat species and their habitat use patterns can serve as surrogate measures of ecosystem health.
Keywords:Chiroptera  conservation practice  Democratic Republic of the Congo  flight patterns  guild  occupancy  tropical forest
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