Swarming of bats at underground sites in Britain—implications for conservation

We investigated the extent of visitation of underground sites during late summer and autumn (‘swarming’) by bats. Bats were captured at eight cave, mine and tunnel sites in southern England over 6 years (1995–2000). A total of 3077 bats representing 11 of Britain’s 16 species was caught. Myotis bats...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Katharine N. Parsonsa, Gareth Jonesa, Ian Davidson-wattsb, Frank Greenawayc
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.664.1370
http://www.barlang.hu/pages/science/angol/BC2003_063.pdf
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Summary:We investigated the extent of visitation of underground sites during late summer and autumn (‘swarming’) by bats. Bats were captured at eight cave, mine and tunnel sites in southern England over 6 years (1995–2000). A total of 3077 bats representing 11 of Britain’s 16 species was caught. Myotis bats predominated in autumn. At some sites these are rarely seen during winter hibernation counts. Myotis nattereri and M. daubentonii were most common. However, species composition changed seasonally. At one site, M. brandtii dominated early in the season and at all sites peak activity ofM. daubentonii was earlier than inM. nattereri. Relatively high numbers of internationally vulnerable species such as M. bechsteinii and Barbastella barbastellus were recorded. There was a strong male bias in captures of swarming species. Swarming probably has an important reproductive function, most males are reproductively active at this time and such sites may be important for outbreeding. Due to this and the large number of individuals and species concerned, the conservation of ‘swarming sites ’ is vitally important. Clearly swarming sites merit special consideration in conservation management strategies for cave-dwelling bats.