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Acoustic Bat Monitoring System: Land Water

Bats in Wisconsin. Family: VespertilionidaeMyotis lucifugus Little brown batMyotis septentrionalisNorthern long-eared Perimyotis subflavusEastern pipistrelleEptesicus fuscusBig brown batMyotis sodalisIndiana batLasiurus borealisEastern Red batLasiurus cinereusHoary batLasionycteris noctivagansSilver-haired bat.

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Acoustic Bat Monitoring System: Land Water

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    1. Acoustic Bat Monitoring System: Land & Water David Redell & J. Paul White Wisconsin DNR Bureau of Endangered Resources Ecological Inventory & Monitoring

    2. Bats in Wisconsin Family: Vespertilionidae Myotis lucifugus Little brown bat Myotis septentrionalis Northern long-eared Perimyotis subflavus Eastern pipistrelle Eptesicus fuscus Big brown bat Myotis sodalis Indiana bat Lasiurus borealis Eastern Red bat Lasiurus cinereus Hoary bat Lasionycteris noctivagans Silver-haired bat

    3. Cave dwelling bats-hibernators Over-winter in Wisconsin

    4. Foliage-roosting and tree cavity dwelling bats-migrate south rather than stay to enjoy Wisconsin’s winter

    5. Life-history Bats vulnerable to extinction, in part because they are the slowest reproducing mammals on earth for their size More than 50% of American bat species are in decline or already listed as endangered. Losses are occurring worldwide.

    6. Why Bats? Loss of bats increases demand for chemical pesticides and can harm human economies Primary predators of night flying insects Ecosystem services Diet includes agricultural and forest pests Reduce reliance on chemical pesticides Long-lived species with low reproductive capacity Cautionary principle—as declining species are often slow and difficult to recover Issues arise and we have little available information making it difficult to respond to concerns Need to get in front with a comprehensive approach to describing bat activity, seasonal patterns, trends and distributions for the State of Wisconsin.

    7. Past Methods & Improvements Shotgun collection Detector in back of station wagon w/ generator 1960’s Mist-nets 1970’s & 1980’s: acoustic studies limited to researchers with large budgets and grant support -- used oscilloscopes & high-speed tape Late 80’s and 90’s: handheld detectors becoming more available to the field biologist 2000’s: improvements & cost reduction

    8. Bat Monitoring in the UK Strengths Species distribution & trends for land area 2x the size of Wisconsin High Volunteer retention Weaknesses Rely on heterodyne detectors Biases to deal with Extensive training required

    9. UK Citizen-based monitoring Transect surveys Hibernacula surveys Waterway routes Summer roost site monitoring

    10. UK Species Distribution Maps

    11. UK Species Trends

    12. Citizen-based Bat Monitoring in Wisconsin Developed specifically for volunteer participation of citizens Draw from and improve on the example of UK’s Bat Monitoring Program Different detection system Long-term Bat Monitoring Stations Mobile detection system

    13. Overview and Examples From this past summer Install 5 Long-term bat monitoring stations Stationary units collecting bat pass data every night Mobile units Land-based surveys Water-based surveys (Lakes & Rivers)

    14. Location of Long-term Bat Monitoring Stations in Wisconsin

    15. Long Term Bat Monitoring Station (LTBMS) Description 3 meter tower top mounted weather-resistant microphone enclosure and reflector plate (30ş above horizon acceptance angle) with a pre-amp signal driver for the audio cable extension 10W solar panel orientated south NEMA weather-proof locked enclosure which houses: 12V battery charge controller (EMS Systems, Berkeley CA) AnaBat detector and CF Storage ZCAIM (frequency division bat detection system)

    16. LTBMS Sites Habitat context near a water source proximity to edge Connectivity of features Site access accessible for on-site personnel to regularly maintain station Sun Exposure Unobstructed south facing view (present and future)

    18. Identifying the bat in the recording Build a Reference Library of echolocation calls for each species Capture the bat Identify the bat Release and Record

    21. Tragus

    26. Bat Monitoring Stations Tie to weather data Index activity Phenology and species patterns Nightly, Seasonal, Multi-year Investigate spatial context thru comparisons with mobile surveys Use as reference for an area’s relative activity level

    27. Exploratory Mobile Surveys Goals during development To gather insight of bat activity and species diversity at LTBMS’ Identify data collection process Provide map examples of mobile acoustic bat surveys Same broadband freq-div detector as in Stationary sites (LTBMS) Time & Date stamp for each pass ADDITIONS: GPS unit Latitude & longitude position fix of each bat encountered Map the route traveled PDA unit View sonograms of passing bats in real time

    36. Training, Equipment, Data Developing a training seminar & operator handbooks Earn your wings >:< Different levels of participation—similar to water monitoring A range of options sure to fit nearly any group or individual level of interest Equipment cost of approximately $2,500 - $3,000 for a complete system groups/individuals from an area may be able to work toward raising equipment funds, share or own equipment, and or take on individual responsibilities of organization and dissemination of data Website: Central point of information transfer, Scheduled meetings, options, Network opportunities, Summaries, reports and news Keep your eyes on the CBM website for link information Indicate your level of interest and sign up to receive notices for locations, dates, and times of next training seminar (small groups) Descriptions to look for on the website Bridge roost locators and monitoring Bat house roost monitoring Field Trips

    37. Acknowledgements Kemp NRS- Karla Ortman, Scott Craven. UW-Green Bay Cofrin Arboretum- Robert Howe UW-Stevens Point Schmeekle Reserve- Jim Bucholz, Ron Zimmerman, Eric Anderson Urban Ecology Center- Tim Vargo UW-Madison Arboretum Wisconsin DNR, Bureau of Endangered Resources- Ecological Inventory & Monitoring Section Web & GIS assistance- Jill Rosenberg Bat Capture assistance & volunteers- UW Platteville- Jeff Heubschman and Matt Willey, Milwaukee County Zoo- Mike Frayer Bat Conservation Trust- UK National Bat Monitoring Programme EME Systems, Berkeley CA Titley Electronics, Balina NSW Australia AnaBat System Development- Chris Corben

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