posted on 2016-02-23, 11:50authored byTore Christian Michaelsen
Most bat species show
plasticity in their choice of habitat and landscape. This study focuses on the
distribution and activity of bats along the hillsides and onto the shores of a
low salinity marine Norwegian fiord at 62°N. Ultrasound was recorded using D500
detectors in June and July at 42 different sites from the shoreline and up the
hillsides to around 200 m. Detectors were placed in well-preserved woodlands.
Only Pipistrellus sp., northern bats Eptesicus nilssonii and bats of the Myotis
genus were common. There was a clear non-linear spatial distribution pattern
along these slopes, with a pronounced increase in the number of recorded bats
at short distances from the shore. On all six nights, the detector closest to
the shore had the highest number of recorded bats. A pattern was also seen in
bat distribution over time. Pipistrellus sp., northern bats and Myotis species
all had a peak near the shore during the darkest part of the night, which is
around 01.35 h in mid-summer at this latitude. At greater distances,
Pipistrellus sp. and northern bats had a peak around 40 minutes to one hour
before the darkest part of the night, respectively. Here, Myotis spp. peaked
about an hour after 01.35.