Authors
Giulliana Appel, Adrià López-Baucells, William Ernest-Magnusson, Paulo Estefano D Bobrowiec
Publication date
2017/7
Journal
Mammalian Biology
Volume
85
Pages
37-46
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Description
It is commonly assumed that aerial insectivorous bats in the tropics respond to moonlight intensity by decreasing their foraging activity during bright nights due either to an increase in predation risk, or to a reduction in insect availability.
The effect of moonlight on bat activity can be measured both between nights and within a single night. However, few studies have simultaneously used both approaches, and most authors generally compare bat activity with lunar phases. Our main aim was to evaluate how moonlight influences aerial insectivorous bat activity at different time scales: between nights and within the same night. Activity of five bat species was measured using autonomous ultrasound recording stations and moonlight intensity percentages retrieved from the Moontool program nightly throughout a 53-day sampling period. Only one species (Myotis riparius) responded negatively to moonlight …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
G Appel, A López-Baucells, W Ernest-Magnusson… - Mammalian Biology, 2017