Bats may be well-adapted to forest fires: Study


Team Udayavani, Dec 7, 2019, 2:28 PM IST

Los Angeles: Bats may be well adapted to wildfire, according to a study which surveyed the effects of burn severity of 17 species of the flying mammal in forests that experienced fires.

The researchers, including those from the University of California (UC) Davis in the US, said while many forest bats are adapted to dense spaces, and others with open habitats, they found that species from both groups preferred burned forests to unburned or minimally burned forests.

To understand how wildfire was affecting bat habitat, the researchers used an acoustic surveying technology with microphones that emitted very high frequency sound, and tracked patterns in the way bats communicated.

The recordings were converted into visualizations of bat calls, using which the scientists could identify the species present, and compare their occurrence rates to habitat conditions.

The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, noted that while individual species responded to wildfire differently, the overall richness of bats increased from about eight species in unburned forests to 11 in forests that experienced moderate- to high-severity burns.

“Bats rely on forests for a number of resources. The key is recognizing that natural fire is useful to them because it creates a variety of habitat conditions,” said study lead author Zack Steel, a postdoctoral researcher with UC Davis.

“They are adapted to it. Many species seem to actually benefit from fire,” Steel said.

Steel believes this could be because decades of fire suppression created dense forests.

“Our forests are now so dense that even clutter-tolerant bats are preferring burned areas,” he said. “There are big areas of forests that haven’t seen fire in a century. When fires do occur, they create openings for these species,” he explained.

The researchers said these openings are entry ways for bats to better find insects to eat, along with dead trees that provided a roosting habitat for some of them.

Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.

Top News

K’taka water crisis: NGT seeks cricket association’s reply on water sources in Chinnaswamy stadium

SC to consider interim bail to Kejriwal due to LS polls, puts ED to notice

Make polling hours 6am-7pm for May 7 LS polls, K’taka BJP urges EC citing heatwave

Water scarcity: Water rationing introduced in Mangaluru city, Alternate day water supply from May 5

CBSE class 10, 12 board exam results likely to be announced after May 20: Board officials

‘Kallakkadal’ Alert: Coastal parts of Kerala, south Tamil Nadu warned of likely ocean swells

Rape case booked against Prajwal Revanna, says Siddarmaiah

Related Articles More

China is sending a probe to get samples from the less-explored far side of the moon

India flight tests missile-assisted torpedo release system

‘Real observations’ of galaxies support existence of invisible dark matter: Study

Samsung reports a 10-fold increase in profit as AI drives rebound in memory chip markets

ISRO delayed Chandrayaan-3 launch by 4 seconds to dodge space debris, report says

MUST WATCH

Skin Rash, Causes, Signs and Symptoms

11 bullets found in python’s body!

K. Jayaprakash Hegde Sharing His Memories

Grafting Jack Anil

Heat Illness


Latest Additions

K’taka water crisis: NGT seeks cricket association’s reply on water sources in Chinnaswamy stadium

Sexual abuse allegations: More trouble brewing for Revanna, Prajwal

Rohith Vemula not a Dalit, says police in closure report

Malaria infection may accelerate ageing process: Study

Bengaluru to host film festival in honour of Guru Dutt

Thanks for visiting Udayavani

You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.