Summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories.

The eastern red bat (Lasiurus borealis) is widely considered to be in decline, inspiring interest in identifying important habitats for conservation in the eastern United States. Unfortunately, knowledge of important day-roosting habitats is lacking for much of the species' range. We examined p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Maria N Monarchino, Marnie L Behan, Joseph S Johnson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237103
id doaj-e798c541d56b4f8b86c2d7a1bf51e69b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e798c541d56b4f8b86c2d7a1bf51e69b2021-03-03T22:00:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01158e023710310.1371/journal.pone.0237103Summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories.Maria N MonarchinoMarnie L BehanJoseph S JohnsonThe eastern red bat (Lasiurus borealis) is widely considered to be in decline, inspiring interest in identifying important habitats for conservation in the eastern United States. Unfortunately, knowledge of important day-roosting habitats is lacking for much of the species' range. We examined patterns of day-roost selection by male and female eastern red bats at two study sites in southeastern Ohio, U. S. A, to help fill this information gap. We radio-tagged 28 male and 25 female bats during the summers of 2016-2019 and located 53 male and 74 female roosts. Day-roost selection differed between sexes and study areas. In a mostly even-aged forest with significant historical disturbance, we found males and females roosting in trees located at higher elevations, with no clear selection based on tree or stand characteristics. Specifically, males selected trees with larger diameters located at lower, cooler elevations than females, which selected smaller diameter trees found at higher, warmer elevations. However, in a forest with less historical disturbance and more structural diversity, we found sexes differed in how they selected from available habitats. These data show that heterogeneity in environmental conditions can lead to different patterns in selection, even between sites located within a small geographic area. They also show that eastern red bats sexually segregate on the local landscape in the presence of diverse forest conditions but may not do so in the absence of such diversity. We recommend managing forests to maintain structural diversity across an elevational gradient to provide male and female eastern red bats with suitable day-roosting habitat in southeast Ohio.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237103
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria N Monarchino
Marnie L Behan
Joseph S Johnson
spellingShingle Maria N Monarchino
Marnie L Behan
Joseph S Johnson
Summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Maria N Monarchino
Marnie L Behan
Joseph S Johnson
author_sort Maria N Monarchino
title Summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories.
title_short Summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories.
title_full Summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories.
title_fullStr Summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories.
title_full_unstemmed Summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories.
title_sort summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The eastern red bat (Lasiurus borealis) is widely considered to be in decline, inspiring interest in identifying important habitats for conservation in the eastern United States. Unfortunately, knowledge of important day-roosting habitats is lacking for much of the species' range. We examined patterns of day-roost selection by male and female eastern red bats at two study sites in southeastern Ohio, U. S. A, to help fill this information gap. We radio-tagged 28 male and 25 female bats during the summers of 2016-2019 and located 53 male and 74 female roosts. Day-roost selection differed between sexes and study areas. In a mostly even-aged forest with significant historical disturbance, we found males and females roosting in trees located at higher elevations, with no clear selection based on tree or stand characteristics. Specifically, males selected trees with larger diameters located at lower, cooler elevations than females, which selected smaller diameter trees found at higher, warmer elevations. However, in a forest with less historical disturbance and more structural diversity, we found sexes differed in how they selected from available habitats. These data show that heterogeneity in environmental conditions can lead to different patterns in selection, even between sites located within a small geographic area. They also show that eastern red bats sexually segregate on the local landscape in the presence of diverse forest conditions but may not do so in the absence of such diversity. We recommend managing forests to maintain structural diversity across an elevational gradient to provide male and female eastern red bats with suitable day-roosting habitat in southeast Ohio.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237103
work_keys_str_mv AT marianmonarchino summerdayroostselectionbyeasternredbatsvariesbetweenareaswithdifferentlandusehistories
AT marnielbehan summerdayroostselectionbyeasternredbatsvariesbetweenareaswithdifferentlandusehistories
AT josephsjohnson summerdayroostselectionbyeasternredbatsvariesbetweenareaswithdifferentlandusehistories
_version_ 1714814006382821376