新南威尔士州绍尔黑文地区南海岸和山脉蝙蝠调查

Q2 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Australian Zoologist Pub Date : 2022-11-11 DOI:10.7882/az.2022.042
G. Daly, G. Hoye
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1989年至2021年,在新南威尔士州南海岸的绍尔黑文地区,主要通过竖琴捕捉和回声定位检测对蝙蝠进行了回声定位调查。共有399个地点通过竖琴捕捉进行了调查,175个地点通过回声定位呼叫检测进行了调查。1989年,曾在一个地点用雾网捕捉蝙蝠。调查覆盖了海拔从近海平面到海拔770米的一系列植被群落。174个竖琴陷阱位于保护区/国家森林内,其余位于自由保有土地上。每个地点都被困了1-4个晚上,总共666个竖琴陷阱之夜。电子调查的地点在1-2个晚上之间进行了抽样,共有230个样本,持续时间为30分钟或一整晚。在调查期间,共有18个物种被捕获在竖琴陷阱中。黄腹鞘尾蝙蝠在聚光灯调查中被观察到一次,并通过电子手段进行了检测。白色条纹的自由尾蝙蝠Austronomus australis在夜间被听到回声定位,并被电子探测到。澳大利亚小弯翼蝙蝠仅通过电子手段被探测到。捕获率最高的是Jerrawangala国家公园,一个晚上,由五个物种组成的38只动物被困在一个陷阱中。物种丰富度和密度最高的是高大的开阔森林,尤其是伊拉瓦拉悬崖沿线的森林。对丰度的分析发现,小森林蝙蝠Vespadelus vulturnus是最常见的物种,占被困动物的45%。目前根据《生物多样性保护法》(2016年)列出的七种物种被捕获,另一种被电子检测到。被困的有大耳派蝙蝠Chalinolobus dwyeri、东部Falsistrelle Falsistellus tasmaniensis、金尖蝙蝠Phoniscus papuensis、东部弯翼蝙蝠Miniopterus orianae oceanensis、东部沿海自由尾蝙蝠Micronomus norfolkenensis、大足Myotis Myotis macropus和大宽鼻蝙蝠Scoteanax ruepellii。此外,该地区罕见的Ride的自由尾蝙蝠Ozimops ridei被困。这项调查在南海岸地区提供了第一批东部森林蝙蝠的活标本,该地区的范围比瓦塔根山脉以前公认的记录以南约260公里。在梅鲁NP捕获的一只大耳派蝙蝠代表了该物种在南部范围的延伸。提供了形态测量数据以及对物种栖息地偏好的评论。
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Survey of bats on the south coast and ranges of the Shoalhaven region in New South Wales
Surveys for echolocating bats were conducted primarily by harp trapping and echolocation detection in the Shoalhaven region on the south coast region of New South Wales from 1989 to 2021. A total of 399 sites were surveyed by harp trapping and 175 sites through echolocation call detection. Mist nets were used to catch bats at one site in 1989. The survey covered a range of vegetation communities at altitudes that ranged from near sea level to 770m asl. One hundred and seventy-four harp trap sites were within conservation reserves/state forests and the rest were on freehold land. Each site was trapped from 1 - 4 nights for a total of 666 harp trap nights. Sites surveyed electronically were sampled between 1-2 nights for a total of 230 samples of either 30 minutes duration or an entire night. A total of 18 species were captured in harp traps during the survey. The Yellow-bellied Sheath-tailed Bat Saccolaimus flaviventris was observed once during spotlight surveys and detected electronically. The White-striped Free-tailed Bat Austronomus australis was heard echolocating at night and detected electronically. The Little Bent-wing Bat Miniopterus australis was only detected electronically. The highest capture rate was in Jerrawangala National Park where 38 animals consisting of five species were trapped in one trap on a single night. The highest species richness and density was found in tall open forests, especially those along the Illawarra escarpment. Analysis of abundances found that the Little Forest Bat Vespadelus vulturnus was the most common species accounting for 45% of animals trapped. Seven species currently listed under the Biodiversity Conservation Act (2016) were caught and another detected electronically. Those trapped were the Large-eared Pied Bat Chalinolobus dwyeri, Eastern Falsistrelle Falsistrellus tasmaniensis, Golden-tipped Bat Phoniscus papuensis, Eastern Bent-wing Bat Miniopterus orianae oceanensis, Eastern Coastal Free-tailed Bat Micronomus norfolkensis, Large-footed Myotis Myotis macropus and Greater Broad-nosed Bat Scoteanax rueppellii. In addition, the regionally rare Ride’s Free-tailed Bat Ozimops ridei was trapped. The survey provided the first live specimens of Eastern Forest Bat V. pumilus in the south coast region, a range extension of some 260km south of the previous accepted records in the Watagan Mountains. The capture of a Large-eared Pied Bat at Meroo NP represents a southern range extension for this species. Morphometric data are presented plus comments on species habitat preference.
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来源期刊
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Animal Science and Zoology
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: The Royal Zoological Society publishes a fully refereed scientific journal, Australian Zoologist, specialising in topics relevant to Australian zoology. The Australian Zoologist was first published by the Society in 1914, making it the oldest Australian journal specialising in zoological topics. The scope of the journal has increased substantially in the last 20 years, and it now attracts papers on a wide variety of zoological, ecological and environmentally related topics. The RZS also publishes, as books, and the outcome of forums, which are run annually by the Society.
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