Authors
Kate E Jones, Jon A Russ, Andriy‐Taras Bashta, Zoltálan Bilhari, Colin Catto, István Csősz, Alexander Gorbachev, Páleter Győrfi, Alice Hughes, Igor Ivashkiv, Natalia Koryagina, Anikálo Kurali, Steve Langton, Alanna Collen, Georgiana Margiean, Ivan Pandourski, Stuart Parsons, Igor Prokofev, Abigel Szodoray‐Paradi, Farkas Szodoray‐Paradi, Elena Tilova, Charlotte L Walters, Aidan Weatherill, Oleg Zavarzin
Publication date
2013/4/12
Journal
Biodiversity monitoring and conservation: bridging the gap between global commitment and local action
Pages
211-247
Publisher
Wiley‐Blackwell
Description
Bats are an important component of mammalian biodiversity and fill such a wide array of ecological niches that they may offer an important multisensory bioindicator role in assessing ecosystem health. There is a need to monitor population trends of bats for their own sake because many populations face numerous environmental threats related to climate change, habitat loss, fragmentation, hunting, and emerging diseases. To be able to establish bat ultrasonic biodiversity trends as a reliable indicator, it is important to standardize monitoring protocols, data management, and analyses. This chapter discusses the main issues to be considered in developing a bat ultrasonic indicator. It focuses on the results from indicator bats program (iBats), a system for the global acoustic monitoring of bats, in Eastern Europe. Finally, the chapter reviews the strengths and weaknesses of the Program and considers the opportunities …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KE Jones, JA Russ, AT Bashta, Z Bilhari, C Catto… - Biodiversity monitoring and conservation: bridging the …, 2013