Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis

Cat predation upon bat species has been reported to have significant effects on bat populations in both rural and urban areas. The majority of research in this area has focussed on observational data from bat rehabilitators documenting injuries, and cat owners, when domestic cats present prey. Howev...

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Main Authors: Shaw, Kirsty, Khayat, Rana, Grant, Robyn, Ryan, Hazel, Dougill, Gary, Killick, David
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: University of Liverpool 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/2105/
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spelling ftuliverpoolrdc:oai:datacat.liverpool.ac.uk:2105 2023-05-15T17:59:53+02:00 Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis Shaw, Kirsty Khayat, Rana Grant, Robyn Ryan, Hazel Dougill, Gary Killick, David 2021-07-02 https://datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/2105/ English eng University of Liverpool Shaw, Kirsty orcid:0000-0001-9241-4195 , Khayat, Rana, Grant, Robyn, Ryan, Hazel, Dougill, Gary and Killick, David (2021) Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis. [Data Collection] Data Collection NonPeerReviewed 2021 ftuliverpoolrdc 2023-01-26T23:26:42Z Cat predation upon bat species has been reported to have significant effects on bat populations in both rural and urban areas. The majority of research in this area has focussed on observational data from bat rehabilitators documenting injuries, and cat owners, when domestic cats present prey. However, this has the potential to underestimate the number of bats killed or injured by cats. Here, we use forensic DNA analysis techniques to analyse swabs taken from injured bats in the United Kingdom, mainly including Pipistrellus pipistrellus (40 out of 72 specimens). Using quantitative PCR, cat DNA was found in two-thirds of samples submitted by bat rehabilitators. Of these samples, short tandem repeat analysis produced partial DNA profiles for approximately one-third of samples, which could be used to link predation events to individual cats. The use of genetic analysis can complement observational data, and potentially provide additional information to give a more accurate estimation of cat predation. Text Pipistrellus pipistrellus DataCat: The Research Data Catalogue (University of Liverpool)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCat: The Research Data Catalogue (University of Liverpool)
op_collection_id ftuliverpoolrdc
language English
description Cat predation upon bat species has been reported to have significant effects on bat populations in both rural and urban areas. The majority of research in this area has focussed on observational data from bat rehabilitators documenting injuries, and cat owners, when domestic cats present prey. However, this has the potential to underestimate the number of bats killed or injured by cats. Here, we use forensic DNA analysis techniques to analyse swabs taken from injured bats in the United Kingdom, mainly including Pipistrellus pipistrellus (40 out of 72 specimens). Using quantitative PCR, cat DNA was found in two-thirds of samples submitted by bat rehabilitators. Of these samples, short tandem repeat analysis produced partial DNA profiles for approximately one-third of samples, which could be used to link predation events to individual cats. The use of genetic analysis can complement observational data, and potentially provide additional information to give a more accurate estimation of cat predation.
format Text
author Shaw, Kirsty
Khayat, Rana
Grant, Robyn
Ryan, Hazel
Dougill, Gary
Killick, David
spellingShingle Shaw, Kirsty
Khayat, Rana
Grant, Robyn
Ryan, Hazel
Dougill, Gary
Killick, David
Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis
author_facet Shaw, Kirsty
Khayat, Rana
Grant, Robyn
Ryan, Hazel
Dougill, Gary
Killick, David
author_sort Shaw, Kirsty
title Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis
title_short Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis
title_full Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis
title_fullStr Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis
title_full_unstemmed Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis
title_sort data from: investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic dna analysis
publisher University of Liverpool
publishDate 2021
url https://datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/2105/
genre Pipistrellus pipistrellus
genre_facet Pipistrellus pipistrellus
op_relation Shaw, Kirsty orcid:0000-0001-9241-4195 , Khayat, Rana, Grant, Robyn, Ryan, Hazel, Dougill, Gary and Killick, David (2021) Data from: Investigating cat predation as the cause of bat wing tears using forensic DNA analysis. [Data Collection]
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