Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation (Oct 2022)

How different farming practices influence the activity of insectivorous Neotropical bats

  • Marcelo Silva-Souza,
  • Leonardo Dias-Silva,
  • Sônia Aparecida Talamoni

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 4
pp. 394 – 400

Abstract

Read online

Recent bioacoustic studies have shown different responses of insectivorous bats to native habitat loss. We examined the activity and species/sonotypes composition of aerial insectivorous bats present in a human-modified karst landscape in Southeast Brazil, characterized by the presence of semideciduous forest, pastures and Eucalyptus globulus monocultures. Using ultrasonic detectors, we investigated activity and identified bat species and/or sonotypes in the three habitat types. We compared the activity (as a surrogate for abundance) and composition of species/sonotypes present and used Generalized Linear Models to investigated whether canopy density, understory density and food availability influence the response of bats in these habitat types. Our main results demonstrate that the variables general passes and species/sonotype richness did not differ significantly between forest and pasture, however, both variables in these two environments differed significantly from the values ​​found for eucalyptus. We conclude that, in the studied agropastoral landscape, pastures interspersed with forest areas can be used by aerial insectivorous bats during foraging. However, we also found evidence that eucalyptus monocultures, not yet mature and without an understory, have a negative impact on the species/sonotype richness and activity of Neotropical aerial insectivorous bats.

Keywords