2019
DOI: 10.1007/s11252-019-00913-2
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Size does matter: Passive sampling in urban parks of a regional bat assemblage

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…We rarely recorded Myotis bats in our study, which is similar to other studies carried out in urban parks [16,19,20]. Myotis bats are prone to negative effects of urbanization; they are usually recorded in suburban areas [48,49], particularly in the vicinity of rivers [11].…”
Section: Species Composition and Activitysupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…We rarely recorded Myotis bats in our study, which is similar to other studies carried out in urban parks [16,19,20]. Myotis bats are prone to negative effects of urbanization; they are usually recorded in suburban areas [48,49], particularly in the vicinity of rivers [11].…”
Section: Species Composition and Activitysupporting
confidence: 88%
“…We also confirmed another species of the genus, the Leisler's bat Nyctalus leisleri, within all the investigated phenological periods. Although in Ireland it is one of the most common bats frequently roosting in buildings [33,34], in Poland it is considered a rare and sensitive species; in European cities, it is found in relatively small numbers [11,19,35]. Our results may indicate an ongoing synurbization process in this species.…”
Section: Species Composition and Activitymentioning
confidence: 69%
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“…It can be thus conjectured that bat distribution will also be stressed by this process of urban encroachment (Goddard et al, 2010). Therefore, we study bat distribution using four complementary approaches: a) we sample the distribution of active bats within the study area to produce species distribution models (Elith and Leathwick, 2009); b) we use the occurrence probabilities of the species to detect the most important areas for bat conservation (Razgour et al, 2016); c) we carry out a gap analysis (Scott et al, 1993) to detect whether the best areas for bat conservation are included in the regional network of protected areas (Buckman-Sewald et al, 2014;Bosso et al, 2016;Kerbiriou et al, 2018); and d) we explore whether bats avoid the most urbanized areas (Tena et al, 2020a) and whether protected areas prevent the potential effects of urban encroachment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%