The importance of small cellars to bat hibernation in Poland

Inspections of 521 small cellars inhabited by bats in Poland revealed the occurrence of 10 species: Myotis myotis, M. nattereri, M, brandtii, M. dasycneme, M. daubentonii, Eptesicus nilssonii, E. serotinus, Plecotus auritus, P. austriacus , and Barbastella barbastellus . P. auritus was the most freq...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:mamm
Main Authors: Lesiński, Grzegorz, Kowalski, Marek, Domański, Jarosław, Dzięciołowski, Radosław, Laskowska-Dzięciołowska, Krystyna, Dzięgielewska, Magdalena
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Walter de Gruyter GmbH 2004
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/mamm.2004.034
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Summary:Inspections of 521 small cellars inhabited by bats in Poland revealed the occurrence of 10 species: Myotis myotis, M. nattereri, M, brandtii, M. dasycneme, M. daubentonii, Eptesicus nilssonii, E. serotinus, Plecotus auritus, P. austriacus , and Barbastella barbastellus . P. auritus was the most frequent and abundant (410 sites, 54.5% records). M. daubentonii dominated in cellars of the NW and NE regions of the country, while P. austriacus was the most abundant in the SW region. Communities of bats hibernating in small cellars and large underground hibernacula differed significantly. Plecotus spp. clearly preferred small hibernation sites, while M. myotis large ones. Species richness and diversity were highest in NW and NE region where this type of roost had greatest importance to bat hibernation. Despite the fact that only single individuals occurred in 44.7% of cellars, these roosts, common and numerous in Poland, could be in total inhabited by tens of thousands of bats yearly.