Fire is an important natural disturbance recently reintroduced into many North American ecosystems, spurring questions regarding how fire affects forest wildlife. Bats are an ecologically significant group within North American forests, and the diversity of this group includes species that may benefit or suffer negative impacts from habitat changes initiated by prescribed fires. To determine how fire affects a rare bat species that specializes on gleaning moths from forest vegetation, we studied home ranges and nocturnal habitat selection in Rafinesque's big-eared bats (Corynorhinus rafinesquii) in an upland forest ecosystem where small-scale, low-to-moderate intensity prescribed burning occurs in spring. We found home ranges of big-eared bats to be notably small (x = 169 ha; n = 41), not different in size among sexes and reproductive classes, and located nonrandomly on the landscape. Home ranges of females were located farthest from riparian areas, whereas home ranges of males were farthest from burned forests. Home ranges of lactating and postlactating females were closer to burned forests than expected, but no group of females had home ranges located closer to or farther from burned forests relative to unburned forests. All groups used habitats randomly within home ranges. Moth abundance and diversity (number of families) were lowest in riparian habitats, indicating that habitat selection by female bats at the landscape, but not home range, scale was influenced by prey availability. Results indicate that low-to-moderate intensity prescribed fires weakly affected the foraging patterns of Rafinesque's big-eared bats in upland forest ecosystems, provided burned forests exist in a matrix of unburned or less-frequently burned forest stands that support a diverse and abundant lepidopteran prey base.
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14 March 2019
Foraging patterns of Rafinesque's big-eared bat in upland forests managed with prescribed fire
Joseph S. Johnson,
Michael J. Lacki,
Shelby A. Fulton
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Journal of Mammalogy
Vol. 100 • No. 2
April 2019
Vol. 100 • No. 2
April 2019
Chiroptera
Corynorhinus rafinesquii
disturbance ecology
fire ecology
habitat selection
home range
Lepidoptera