Scientific Reports (Feb 2022)

The role of forest structure and composition in driving the distribution of bats in Mediterranean regions

  • Roberto Novella-Fernandez,
  • Javier Juste,
  • Carlos Ibañez,
  • Jesús Nogueras,
  • Patrick E. Osborne,
  • Orly Razgour

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-07229-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Forests are key native habitats in temperate environments. While their structure and composition contribute to shaping local-scale community assembly, their role in driving larger-scale species distributions is understudied. We used detailed forest inventory data, an extensive dataset of occurrence records, and species distribution models integrated with a functional approach, to disentangle mechanistically how species-forest dependency processes drive the regional-scale distributions of nine forest specialist bats in a Mediterranean region in the south of Spain. The regional distribution patterns of forest bats were driven primarily by forest composition and structure rather than by climate. Bat roosting ecology was a key trait explaining the strength of the bat-forest dependency relationships. Tree roosting bats were strongly associated with mature and heterogeneous forest with large trees (diameters > 425 mm). Conversely, and contrary to what local-scale studies show, our results did not support that flight-related traits (wing loading and aspect ratio) drive species distributional patterns. Mediterranean forests are expected to be severely impacted by climate change. This study highlights the utility of disentangling species-environment relationships mechanistically and stresses the need to account for species-forest dependency relationships when assessing the vulnerability of forest specialists towards climate change.