What makes a good bat box? How box occupancy depends on box characteristics and landscape-level variables ...

Bat populations are in steep decline and presently, 16% of all species are classified as “threatened”. One main driver identified for this decline is the loss of natural roosting opportunities, caused by the removal of natural habitats. Installation of bat boxes is one solution to compensate for the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pschonny, Sandra, Leidinger, Jan, Weisser, Wolfgang, Leitl, Rudolf
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.brv15dvbc
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.brv15dvbc
Description
Summary:Bat populations are in steep decline and presently, 16% of all species are classified as “threatened”. One main driver identified for this decline is the loss of natural roosting opportunities, caused by the removal of natural habitats. Installation of bat boxes is one solution to compensate for the lack of natural roosting opportunities. Current recommendations for box design emphasize low maintenance costs and are rarely based on empirical evidence. We investigated occupancy of 13634 bat boxes in northern Bavaria, Germany. In our study boxes differed in type, age and mounting height, as well as in maximum community age, i.e. the length of time a group of boxes had been installed in a particular place, the size of box groups and the distance to the next box in the surrounding area, i.e. box isolation. Our results showed that box occupancy depended on box type and bat species. As a case study, we analysed the two most common species found within the investigated boxes, Pipistrellus pipistrellus and Myotis ... : During 2017, 13634 boxes were surveyed by volunteers that acted independently of one another. There was no systematic sampling design, volunteers were asked to check boxes at least once between June and October, on a cold day to avoid bat fly out and locally asynchronous to avoid double counting. For every box, northing, easting, elevation, calendar week of the check, box type, mounting height and age was recorded. A box was considered occupied when a bat was present or when indirect evidence of bat box use was obtained. Also, other species groups were recorded. Landscape-level variables included the land cover around the box, and the spatial placement of boxes and were calculated with ArcGIS version 10.4.1. The data 13634 included 26 box types of varying ages and mounting heights. Boxes older than 16 years were dominated by one box type, mostly installed at a height of 1–1.5m and up to 100m to its nearest neighbour. Boxes installed later were predominantly placed at a height of 3–4m, in groups of 4–8 boxes. ...