* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project wikipedia , lookup
Introduced species wikipedia , lookup
Occupancy–abundance relationship wikipedia , lookup
Island restoration wikipedia , lookup
Biodiversity action plan wikipedia , lookup
Natural environment wikipedia , lookup
Reconciliation ecology wikipedia , lookup
Lake ecosystem wikipedia , lookup
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev The Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research The Albert Katz International School for Desert Studies Reducing the competitive load on desert bat communities by hampering the drinking ability of an invasive bat species, Kuhl’s pipistrelle (Pipistrellus kuhlii) Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of "Master of Science" By: Asael Greenfeld April 2012 Ben-Gurion University of the Negev The Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research The Albert Katz International School for Desert Studies Reducing the competitive load on desert bat communities by hampering the drinking ability of an invasive bat species, Kuhl’s pipistrelle (Pipistrellus kuhlii) Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of "Master of Science" By: Asael Greenfeld Under the Supervision of Prof. David Saltz and Prof. Carmi Korine Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology Author's Signature …………….……………………… Approved by the Supervisor…………….…………….. Approved by the Director of the School …………… Date ……………. Date ……………. Date ………….… I Reducing the competitive load on desert bat communities by hampering the drinking ability of an invasive bat species, Kuhl’s pipistrelle (Pipistrellus kuhlii) By: Asael Greenfeld This thesis is in partial fulfillment for the degree of Master of Science, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Albert Katz International School for Desert Studies, 2011 Abstract Among the species comprising the bat community of the Negev desert in Israel, three have expanded their range into the desert from Mediterranean habitats, probably due to anthropogenic developments such as the addition of bodies of open water and lights. The abundance and activity of bats in the desert is affected by the distribution of bodies of open water, which are used by bats for drinking and foraging sites. One of the species that has penetrated the Negev from Mediterranean habitats is Kuhl’s pipistrelle (Pipistrellus kuhlii), the most common bat in Israel. Kuhl’s pipistrelle competes for foraging habitats and food with three other species of bats (P.rueppellii, Hypsugo bodenheimeri and Eptesicus bottae), comprising the “background cluttered space” foraging guild. Kuhl’s pipistrelle drinks more frequently than the other species of its guild and requires a clear “swoop zone” to drink. I hypothesized that Kuhl’s pipistrelle uses newly established water bodies of II open to expand into desert habitats. To reduce the competitive load that Kuhl’s pipistrelle has on desert dwelling species, I proposed and tested a management tool to reduce the ability of Kuhl’s pipistrelle to drink from open bodies of water. I predicted that, by installing obstructions above the water surface, I could reduce the drinking ability of Kuhl’s pipistrelle, thus reducing their activity. First, using acoustic methods, I surveyed natural and artificial bodies of open water in the Ramon region in order to learn the current limits of Kuhl’s pipistrelle’s range expansion and to study the mechanisms of its expansion. To study the effect of obstructions on the water surface, I did field experiments. In each experiment, the manipulation and control treatments were alternated, and the activity levels of the different species present were monitored by acoustic methods. I found in the survey that Kuhl’s pipistrelle are abundant in the Central Negev Highlands, but absent from Makhtesh Ramon, and found activity levels of Kuhl’s pipistrelle high in natural sites as well as in artificial ones. In the first field experiment that tuck place in a swimming pool, I managed to prevent Kuhl’s pipistrelle's drinking by obstructing the water surface and leaving just a 1x1m of “swoop zone”. In the second manipulation experiment, in natural ponds in the Zin valley, I found that the obstructions had no effect on activity levels or species composition. This might have been the result of the proximity of untreated ponds to manipulated ponds in the study area. In the third experiment, I chose isolated natural ponds throughout the Negev. I found that, in some of the ponds, the manipulation significantly reduced Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity. This reduction was observed in ponds that initially had higher activity of Kuhl’s pipistrelle then of desert dwelling species. III I concluded that artificial bodies of open water may be part of the mechanism by which Kuhl’s pipistrelle is expanding its range into the Negev. The existence of bodies of open water pools in Makhtesh Ramon and the Southern Negev poses a risk of further expansion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle into desert habitats from which they are currently absent. With some further investigation of my predictions, manipulating artificial bodies of open water could be used as a management tool to reduce competitive load from desert dwelling species. Such a tool would be especially useful in the troughs established by the National Parks Authority in the Negev, which were intended to facilitate biodiversity by supporting wildlife, but are simultaneously threatening desert dwelling bat species. IV Acknowledgments First and foremost I would like to thank my supervisors, Prof. Carmi Korine who introduced me to the world of desert bats and invited me to continue my work at the Ramon Science Centre and turn it into an M.S. research project, and Prof. David Saltz, for giving me the opportunity to do this study under his supervision. I thank them both for their advice, help and guidance throughout the planning, executing and writing of my thesis. I would have not been able to carry out my field work and experiments without the help of many volunteers, neighbourhood friends and friends from the Libratory, family members, and especially my students from the Mizpe Ramon Environmental Studies Yeshiva high school. The pool experiment was performed with the help of two of the course students: Keira Edwards and Ben Evans from the University of Bristol, UK. I thank Noam Werner and Uri Shanas for lending me equipment, and Atlantis Aquariums and the Alpaca Farm for their help with pool construction. I am also grateful to the Israel Nature and National Parks Protection Authority for allowing me to carry out my research in nature reserves, and individually, for all their help and advice, to: Ben Drori, Nadav Tauba, Amram Tsabari, Gal Vine, and Assaf Tzoar. Finally, nothing would come to be without the love and support of my beloved wife Lea or without her smiles and those of our dear children, Rotem, Adi and Boaz. My research was funded through grants from Ben-Gurion University Seed Money to Carmi Korine and David Saltz, and from the Ministry of Technology and Science to Carmi Korine. This work was supported through a scholarship from the Albert Katz International School for Desert Studies. V Table of Contents 1. Chapter One - General Introduction.............................................................. 1 1.1 - Anthropogenic bodies of open water in desert environments and their effect on local wildlife ....................................................... 1 1.2 - Diversity of insectivorous bats in association with water sources .................................................................................................... 3 1.3 - The association between distribution of bodies of water and bats’ community structure in the Negev highlands ........................... 5 2. Chapter Two - Species composition of bat communities in different habitats in the Ramon region, and the range expansion mechanism of the Kuhl’s pipistrelle ...................................... 10 2.1 - Introduction ............................................................................... 10 2.2 - Methods ..................................................................................... 13 2.2.1 – Study area .................................................................... 13 2.2.2 – Survey species .............................................................. 15 2.2.3 – Field sampling methods .............................................. 17 2.2.4 – Data analysis of field sampling ................................... 20 2.3 - Results ...................................................................................... 21 2.3.1 – Total bat activity and Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity levels in the different areas of the Ramon region ...................... 22 2.3.2 – Activity levels in the different site types .................... 25 2.4 - Discussion ................................................................................ 26 2.4.1 – Species composition of the “background-cluttered space” guild in the Ramon region ........................................... 26 2.4.2 – Range expansion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle in the Ramon region............................................................................ 28 3. Chapter Three - Managing bat community species composition by placing obstructions to hamper the Kuhl’s pipistrelle ability to drink from desert ponds ................................................................. 30 3.1 - Introduction ............................................................................... 30 3.1.1 – Management of alien invasive bat species .................. 30 VI 3.1.2 – Interspecific differences in the use of bodies of water as the key for the management of desert bat communities 33 3.2 - Methods .................................................................................... 37 3.2.1 – Field experiment I: manipulation of the swimming pool ...................................................................................... 37 3.2.2 – Field experiment II: manipulation of natural ponds in the Zin valley .................................................................... 40 3.2.3 – Field experiment III: manipulation of isolated natural ponds ........................................................................... 44 3.3 – Field experiment results .......................................................... 48 3.3.1 – Manipulation of the swimming pool ........................... 48 3.3.2 – Manipulation of natural ponds in the Zin valley ......... 49 3.3.3 – Manipulation of isolated natural ponds ....................... 52 3.4 - Discussion ................................................................................ 55 3.4.1 – Manipulation of the swimming pool ........................... 55 3.4.2 – Manipulation of natural ponds in the Zin valley ......... 57 3.4.3 – Manipulation of isolated natural ponds ....................... 58 4. Chapter Four - General Discussion .............................................................. 60 4.1 - The current distribution of Kuhl’s pipistrelle, and its impact on local bat communities ............................................................. 60 4.2 - The effect of pond manipulation on species composition ........ 61 4.3 - The potential use of the grid as a management tool for the Negev bats ........................................................................................... 62 4.4 - Mitigation and Reconciliation rather than aggressive eradications as the future of invasive species management ........................ 63 5. Chapter Five - Bibliography ..................................................................................... 65 VII List of Figures Chapter 2 Figure 2.1 - The known distribution of Pipistrellus kuhlii in the Negev (2009)…...… 11 Figure 2.2 – Map of field sampling sites in the Ramon region…………………….… 20 Figure 2.3 – Activity of Pipistrellus kuhlii in the Ramon region…………………….. 23 Figure 2.4 – Species composition in each area of the Ramon region………………… 24 Figure 2.5 – Genaral bat activity levels at different site types ………………………. 25 Chapter 3 Figure 3.1 - Diagram of the grid covering of the swimming pool experiment……….. 38 Figure 3.2 - Field experiment II – temporary pond sites in the Zin valley………….... 41 Figure 3.3 – An example of the network that was placed on pond surfaces………….. 43 Figure 3.4 – Map of sites for field experiment III in isolated ponds in the Negev........ 45 Figure 3.5 – Activity and drinking passes in the swimming pool experiment ……..…49 Figure 3.6 –Average bat activity levels in the different sites used for experiment III.. 53 Figure 3.7 – Pipistrellus kuhlii proportion in different treatments in experiment III .. 54 VIII List of Tables Chapter 2 Table 2.1 - Field sampling sites in the Ramon region………………………………… 19 Table 2.2 – Number of recordings from each survey site in the Ramon region……… 21 Table 2.3 – Activity of bat species at the survey sites in the Ramon region…………. 22 Chapter 3 Table 3.1 – Sites for experiment II in the Zin valley………………………………… 40 Table 3.2- Staggered use of ponds for experiment II in the Zin valley……….…….... 42 Table 3.3 – Sites for experiment III in isolated bodies of water………………...……. 45 Table 3.4 - Design of experiment III based on alternating the treatments……...……. 47 Table 3.6 – Bat activity at ponds in experiment II in the Zin valley………………….. 51 Table 3.7 – Regression slopes of proportions in experiment III……………………… 51 Table 3.8 – Activity of Pipistrellus kuhlii in experiment III......................................... 52 1 Chapter One - General Introduction 1.1 Anthropogenic bodies of open water in desert environments and their effect on local wildlife Man-made elements that influence water availability are having increasing impact on arid ecosystems worldwide (Ragab and Prudhomme 2002). Arid and semiarid landscapes are unique ecosystems where continual water availability results in hotspots of biological diversity in an otherwise water-limited environment (Noy-Meir 1973, Stromberg et al. 1996, Stromberg 2001). This results sharp special differences between the vast xeric uplands and narrow mesic riparian environments and by sharp temporal transitions (Stromberg et al. 1996). Human development of arid and semiarid environments has, on the one hand, lowered the water levels that support the base flow in some deserts by ground water pumping which reduces the water availability to wildlife (Pool and Coes 1999), and on the other hand, has created new water sources in many places, increasing the water supply to desert fauna (O'Brien et al. 2006) and flora (Brooks et al. 2006). An important type of anthropogenic water source is “water developments” used by conservation authorities as an integral component in the maintenance and enhancement of wildlife habitats in arid regions. In the deserts of the USA, there are thousands of water developments (over 800 in Arizona alone), which go back as far as the 1940s, intended to benefit game species and other wildlife (Rosenstock et al. 1999). Contemporary water developments are now constructed in the USA to accommodate use by a variety of wildlife and to mitigate the loss of natural water sources (Rosenstock et al. 2004). 2 The importance of bodies of open water to wildlife increases during the dry season, and visits to anthropogenic bodies of open water by birds and mammals intensify with the rise in Ta (O'Brien et al. 2006). There has long been a controversy regarding the effects of water developments on local wildlife, in which critics argue that these developments do not yield expected benefits to game species and may have adverse impacts, such as affecting prey species by localizing predation (O'Brien et al. 2006). Additionally, the use of water for agriculture, sewage treatment, and recreational reservoirs affects the distribution of local wildlife and enhances the successful introduction and spread of invasive species (Griffin 1998, Dukes and Mooney 2004, Lobos et al. 2005). In recent years, the increase in human population and the concomitant increase of inland agricultural development in Israel have had strong negative effects on many vertebrate species (Yom-Tov and Mendelssohn 1988). In the Negev Desert, agricultural development has brought about an increase in the number of bodies of open water, mostly by collecting ground water in reservoirs (Portnov and Safriel 2004). An important type of water development in the Negev is construction of artificial water troughs for wildlife, first used in the 1990s to support the reintroduced population of Asiatic wild ass (Equus hemionus) (Saltz and Rubenstein 1995). Water developments in the Negev affect the distribution of wildlife and promote invasion by invasive species and the range expansion of others (Hawlena and Bouskila 2006). Invasive alien species have been found harmful to local native communities by means of resource competition with the local species, increased predation on the local prey communities, and the introduction of pathogens and parasites that may threaten local fauna (Simberloff 2010). Thus, the 3 invasion of alien Mediterranean species into the desert wildlife community may have a negative impact on local populations. 1.2 Diversity of insectivorous bats in association with water sources Among terrestrial mammals, bats play key roles in temperate and tropical ecosystems. This is due to their large number of species (species richness), enormous numbers of individuals, mobility, geographical distribution, and their important functions as seed dispersers, pollinators, and arthropod predators (Hill and Smith 1984). The activity level of insectivorous bats varies in time and space and is associated with several factors that have been well studied. Of these factors, those influencing the abundance of insects are of primary importance because the choice of foraging site is directly linked to food availability (Rydell 1992), the length of foraging bouts (Swift 1980), and the time of parturition (Kunz 1973, Arlettaz et al. 2000). Many studies report that insect activity is directly proportional to ambient temperature (Ta), and consequently, at low Ta, bat activity is reduced (Williams 1961, Bradley 1970, Rydell 1989, Wai-Ping and Fenton 1989, O'Farrell and Hayes 1997) and it is higher during the summer (O'Farrell and Bradley 1970, Seidman and Zabel 2001, Korine and Pinshow 2004, Adams and Thibault 2006). Bodies of open water also play a key role in bat distribution and habitat preference since they are used by bats as a source of drinking water and as foraging areas (Vaughan 1996, Grindal et al. 1999, Ciechanowski 2002, Razgour et al. 2010). The importance of drinking is demonstrated by Webb et al. (1995), who report immense water loss, up to 30% of a bat’s body mass in Plecotus auritus and Myotis daubentoni, two non-desert species, during one day while resting. Since 4 bats drink in flight, their drinking behavior depends on their flight performance (Norberg and Rayner 1987). Flight performance, in turn, is a combined product of wing morphology and mechanical properties of the wing membrane and bones. These attributes vary considerably among bats (Swartz et al. 2004). Bats that can hover can drink from almost any size of water body, while high speed flyers require an unobstructed ‘swoop zone’ (Harvey et al. 1999), and consequently, can drink from smaller and from more obstructed bodies of water, than larger bats (Tuttle et al. 2006). Insectivorous bats likely prefer hunting over open water because the echoes of insect bodies are reflected from the water surface and provide a stronger target than similar size prey in the open air (Siemers et al.2001). In a recent study (Jackrel and Matlack 2010) demonstrated how the drinking preferences of bats from artificial water tanks follow the physical properties of the water source. The authors found that bats drink more frequently from larger tanks (diameter = 3 m) than from smaller tanks (d = 1.2 m), from full tanks more than from half-full tanks, and that bats prefer tanks with less surrounding vegetation. All three criteria affected the drinking frequency, but not the total flight activity, suggesting that all tanks were equally suitable as foraging areas. Bat activity and species richness increase with pond size, and temporary ponds do not significantly differ from permanent ones in activity levels (Razgour et al. 2010). High levels of bat activity are consistently found over open water (Rydell et al. 1994, Walsh and Harris 1996, Vaughan et al. 1997, Russo and Jones 2003), including in the Negev desert (Korine and Pinshow 2004). The importance of open water bodies was further demonstrated by Greif and Siemers (2010), who showed that the recognition of bodies of water by the bats is innate. Their experiments may indicate that bats have evolved the adaptation to 5 innately locate water in complete darkness, allowing even juveniles, which have never before encountered an open body of water, to identify it as a source of drinking water by echolocating its smooth surface. 1.3 The association between distribution of bodies of water and bats’ community structure in the Negev highlands The availability of open bodies of water plays a key role in determining the abundance and composition of bat communities in specific habitats. The proximity to water was found to be an important factor in the choice of diurnal roosts by species of bats in semi-arid northern Arizona (Rabe et al. 1998), while similar studies done in wetter climates in Oregon (Betts 1998, Waldien 1998) found no such effect. However, other studies found no effect of water availability on roost preference, although night activity levels were higher near bodies of water (Waldien 1998). Since different species vary in their water requirements (Razgour et al. 2010), the abundance and nature of open bodies of water are expected to influence species composition, especially in desert bat communities. The link between water distribution and community structure has been studied in Poland (Ciechanowski 2002, Mysłajek et al. 2007) and, recently, in the Negev desert by Razgour et al. (2010). In the mesic Polish forest, smaller ponds have higher species richness than larger ponds or rivers. This was explained by the fact that, in ponds, the habitat requirements of both water-obligated foragers and of dense vegetation foragers are met (Ciechanowski 2002, Mysłajek et al. 2007). In the Negev desert, on the other hand, bat species richness and activity are inversely proportional to pond size (Razgour et al. 2010). Razgour et al. (2010) also report that, while total bat activity 6 is not affected by the hydro-period (the time that ponds hold water) of a pond, the bat community composition differs between permanent and temporary ponds. Nondesert bat species were found to drink more frequently at larger ponds either permanent, or with lengthy hydro-periods. Pond size also affects bat community structure based on species maneuverability, with larger species avoiding smaller ponds (Ciechanowski 2002, Razgour et al. 2010). Insectivorous bats are among the species most affected by anthropogenic disturbances to natural habitats (Yom-Tov and Mendelssohn 1988), and it seems that, in some cases, modification of the natural environment causes changes in bat community structure, resulting in competitive exclusion of some species. Arlettaz et al. (2000) suggest that artificial foraging sites facilitated the expansion of common pipistrelle (Pipistrellus pipistrellus) populations in the Swiss Alps. This apparently resulted in competition with the lesser horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus hipposideros), contributing to a decline in the population size of the latter. High levels of bat activity in artificial sites in the Negev Desert are linked with lower bat species richness (Korine and Pinshow 2004). Similarly, urban parks with lakes were found to support fewer bats and less diverse bat communities than those close to rural lakes (Kurta and Teramino 1992). Of the 34 insectivorous bat species found in Israel, 12 inhabit the Negev Desert (Korine and Pinshow 2004). Nine of the 12 Negev bat species are associated with arid areas, and the other three -- Kuhl's pipistrelle, the European free-tailed bat (Tadarida teniotis), and the rare lesser horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus hipposideros) -are invasive Mediterranean species that have expanded their distribution into the Negev in the 20th century (Yom-Tov and Mendelssohn 1988, Yom-Tov and 7 Kadmon 1998). Kuhl's pipistrelle, one of these Mediterranean species, shares the same guild with three other local species: Ruppell's pipistrelle (P. rueppellii), Bodenheimer's pipistrelle (Hypsugo bodenheimeri) and Botta's serotine (Eptesicus bottae). All four have similar diets of flying insects, mainly Lepidoptera (Whitaker et al. 1994, Feldman et al. 2000), have similar wing morphology and forage in similar habitats (Korine and Pinshow 2004). The four species belong to the same guild as defined by wing and ear morphology (Yom-Tov 1993), and also by habitat, as defined by Korine and Pinshow (2004), who named them the “backgroundcluttered space” guild, after their preferred foraging habitat. Kuhl's pipistrelle, Ruppell's pipistrelle, and Bodenheimer's pipistrelle evidently compete over the use of ponds for drinking and foraging, resulting in temporal and spatial partitioning between these species (Razgour et al. 2011). These authors also report that Kuhl's pipistrelle prefers smaller ponds and, when competitors are present, its activity peaks several hours after sunset; Ruppell's pipistrelle prefers medium-sized ponds and its activity peaks after sunset and before sunrise, in the presence of competition; and that Bodenheimer's pipistrelle prefers larger ponds, where its activity peaks three hours after sunset. On a seasonal scale, the increase in the size of the competing populations of Ruppell’s pipistrelle and Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle, in autumn and spring, was correlated with a decrease in the presence of Kuhl’s pipistrelle at ponds frequented by the two other species (Razgour et al. 2010). While these findings do not prove competitive displacement, they do suggest incomplete resource partitioning that leads to competition. Accessibility to drinking water is probably the limiting factor for the use of smaller ponds, and Mediterranean species 8 that drink most frequently were found to be associated with larger, permanent ponds (Razgour et al. 2010). Kuhl’s pipistrelle has expanded its range following human development (YomTov and Mendelssohn 1988). Artificial bodies of open water in the Negev highlands were found to be used mainly by two species of bats: Kuhl’s pipistrelle and the European free-tailed bat. These species are the two most common insectivorous bat species in Israel (Yom-Tov and Mendelssohn 1988) and are closely associated with human habitats in the Negev (Korine and Pinshow 2004). The documented competition of Kuhl’s pipistrelle with the desert-dwelling Ruppell’s pipistrelle and Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle that are restricted to only a few foraging areas (Razgour et. al 2010), combined with the increasing development of new bodies of open water in the Negev, raises two conservation-related concerns regarding local bat biodiversity: 1) Mediterranean bat species, such as Kuhl’s pipistrelle, may further expand their distribution and penetrate into even the more rural habitats, bringing with them possible resource competition, introduction of pathogens and parasites and other problems associated with invasive species. 2) In areas where Kuhl’s pipistrelle populations are already established, they may change the local species composition by means of competitive exclusion of other members of the guild. Ruppell’s pipistrelle and Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle are classified as regionally endangered (EN), and Botta's serotine as vulnerable (VU) (Dolev and Perevolotsky 2004), implying that any decrease in populations of these species would be harmful to regional biodiversity. 9 The main goal of my research was to address these two concerns by: 1) Exploring the more Southern parts of the Negev highlands, which were unexplored in terms of bat communities. Accordingly, I made a survey in which I determining the possible boundaries of the current range of Kuhl’s pipistrelle in this region. 2) Experimentally assessing the feasibility of a management tool which I propose, namely hampering the drinking ability of Kuhl’s pipistrelle from bodies of water by limiting the available “swoop zone.” This was done in an attempt to create “protected habitats” for desert-dwelling bats, in order to reduce the competitive use of bodies of water by Kuhl’s pipistrelle and the desert-dwelling species of its feeding guild. 10 2 Chapter Two – Species composition of bat communities in different habitats in the Ramon region, and the range expansion mechanism of the Kuhl’s pipistrelle 2.1 Introduction The dispersal of Kuhl’s pipistrelle into the Negev was first observed by YomTov and Mendelssohn (1988) and supported by the results of a cluster analysis of their distribution by Yom-Tov and Kadmon (1998), yet the limits of this range expansion are not clear. Most of the available data regarding species distribution in desert habitats in Israel were, until the late nineties, collected from the Dead Sea area and the Arava rift valley (Yom-Tov and Kadmon 1998).Yom Tov and Kadmon (1998) created a model predicting the regional distribution of bat species. The model is based on temperature and annual precipitation, and they predicted the presence of Kuhl’s pipistrelle throughout the entire Negev. The model does not take into account other local scale elements, such as water availability or interspecies interactions. In a later study of the insectivorous bat community of the northern Negev highlands, Kuhl’s pipistrelle was found to be highly abundant in all natural and man-modified sites surveyed as far South as the Zin Valley (Korine and Pinshow 2004). Their data, together with accumulated unpublished data (Korine personal communication and the SPNI database of 2011 that reports observations collected by the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel, on the abundance of Kuhl’s pipistrelle in the Arava, covered most of the more developed regions of the Negev (see Figure 2.1), but left an information gap comprising the whole southern 11 Negev, including the Ramon ridge, with only a vague indication of the extent to which Kuhl’s pipistrelle has penetrated this rural area. Incidental observations reported in the SPNI database 1122 report Kuhl’s pipistrelle in the Paran valley (1991), in Mitzpe Ramon (1991), at the Hemet and Lotz cisterns and Ein Hava (1994, 1996), and once at Ein Saharonim (1994). The first published report of the capture of a Kuhl’s pipistrelle in Eilat was in 2002 (Zelenova and Yosef 2003). More recently reports of Kuhl's pipistrelle in Eilat have become common in the International Birding and Research Centre, Eilat area (Shalmon, personal communication). Benda et al. (2008) surveyed the Sinai Peninsula and found no evidence of further expansion into the Sinai. The importance of the Ramon region, compared with the northern Negev and the Arava, is that it comprises the largest portions of undeveloped wilderness in Israel, with some of the largest nature reserves in the country, such as the “Tzinim Cliffs” and the “Har Hanegev” reserves. Many of the areas, in addition to being declared nature reserves, are further protected from development by serving as military training zones (Tal 2008). This makes them important as wildlife refuges, protecting desert species from the habitat modification caused by the residential and agricultural development Northern Negev occurring in the rest of the Negev (Mazor 2001). Figure 2.1 – The known distribution of Pipistrellus kuhlii in the Negev prior the survey (dots) was limited to the Northern Negev and the Arava, and anecdotal observations in the Ramon region and southern Negev. Map based on BioGIS (2012) Southern Negev 12 Korine and Pinshow (2004) suggested that bat populations are affected by the creation of artificial feeding and drinking sites in desert habitats. They based this contention on the fact that they recorded the highest activity levels of bats at artificial sites, and that Kuhl’s pipistrelle and the European free-tailed bat were the only species that were abundant at these sites. Artificial sites in the Ramon region are of two sources: 1) In towns and agricultural settlements (limited to the town of Mitzpe Ramon, and some small farms along Road 40 leading to the town). Mitzpe Ramon and the small farms have water treatment, swimming pools and artificial lights, all of which cause insects to congregate. Several army camps are located within the region and produce similar modifications of their surroundings. 2) Artificial watering troughs, built to support biodiversity of large animals, are also a potential threat to bat biodiversity since they may support the invasion of alien bat species that may eventually reduce bat biodiversity. Yet, there has been no monitoring of these troughs, as far as bats are concerned (NPA rangers, personal communication). One goal of my research was to achieve a better understanding of the role that artificial ponds may play in the mechanism by which Kuhl’s pipistrelle expand their range into desert habitats. This was done by studying the distribution of the bats at the edge of their range along their suspected expansion front, the Ramon region. Along with the abundance of Kuhl’s pipistrelle, I also monitored the abundance of the other members of the “background-cluttered space” guild, Botta's serotine, Ruppell’s pipistrelle and Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle, to explore understand possible competition or coexistence within this guild (Korine and Pinshow 2004). I also studied the effect of water availability on the activity levels of the abovementioned 13 species. I hypothesized that the distribution of Mediterranean insectivorous bats in desert habitats is influenced by anthropogenic activities. This led to the following predictions: 1) On the regional scale, Kuhl’s pipistrelle is more abundant in areas with anthropogenic disturbances, such as residential and military development, than in the rural areas, leading to differences in the species composition of bats among the areas. 2) On the local scale, Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity levels are higher near artificial water sources than near ephemeral natural water sources, and newly established water source will attract Kuhl’s pipistrelle and therefore their activity level will increase. 3) Where bodies of open water are available, a larger proportion of the total bat activity is that of Kuhl’s pipistrelle, than of desert-dwelling species. At sites far from bodies of open water, a higher proportion of the total bat activity is of desertdwelling species then of Kuhl’s pipistrelle. 2.2 Methods 2.2.1 Study area Field sampling of bat community compositions took place in areas that are estimated to be the front edges of expansion for the Mediterranean bat species, i.e. the Ramon region. The 200 m high Makhtesh Ramon south-facing cliff, extends over 40 km from the North-East (3069’N, 3495’E) to the South-West (3050’N, 3464’E). The cliff is a natural boundary between two climatic zones, arid at the top (700 m -1000m above sea level) and hyper-arid in the lower part of the 14 Makhtesh(450 m - 550 m above sea level), and is also the southern edge of agricultural and water developments in the Negev highlands (Mazor 2001). Incidental observations and preliminary recordings indicated that the Mediterranean bat species are present north of the cliff but not south of it (Korine unpublished data 2008, BioGis 2012). In this desert region rain occurs during winter with large annual differences in total precipitation and in its temporal and spatial distribution. Ta are highest during summer and are lowest in winter, with a daily mean of 25 °C in August, and 10-11 °C in January (Hillel and Tadmor, 1962). Bodies of open water in the Ramon region are limited, and most of them are associated with human activity. The region can be divided into three areas (Fig 2.2), based on climatic and ecological differences between them, following Ward et al. (2000): A. Central Negev Highlands This area consists of the highest mountaintops in the Negev region (Ramon Mountain - 1071 m), with occasional snow during some winters. These mountains are the origin of the big wadis that drain the entire area (Zin, Nitzana, Ramon). The area has been found to receive more annual rainfall (100 mm) than its surroundings (Ward and Olsvig-Whittaker, 1993). The area is unpopulated and uncultivated, and the only sources of anthropogenic disturbances to wildlife are limited to hiking, military camps, and military activity. B. Mitzpe Ramon and its surroundings The town of Mitzpe Ramon was established on the northern cliff of Makhtesh Ramon and is part of the Central Negev highlands, with a slightly lower altitude (880-900m) the their western side. This is an area with higher density of human 15 development than the Makhtesh and the rest of the Central Negev Highlands. The town of Mitzpe Ramon and the surrounding farms and water developments create an artificial oasis of modified habitat, in extreme contrast to the arid landscape surrounding it. C. Makhtesh Ramon This area is much lower (from 800 m and down to 420 m) and drier than the rest of the Ramon region, with an average of 56 mm of precipitation per year in the eastern, lower part, and up to 80 mm average annual precipitation at the western edge (Ward and Olsvig-Whittaker 1993). The vegetation is limited to the wadis. The area is unpopulated with no agriculture, and most of it is a nature reserve with limited hiking trails and dirt roads (Mazor 2001). 2.2.2 Surveyed species In the field, all bats species were recorded, but the following three species -Kuhl’s pipistrelle, Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle, Botta's serotine that belong to the “background-cluttered foraging" guild (Korine and Pinshow 2004) were the focus of my research. The fourth member of this guild, Rueppell’s pipistrelle, was never recorded In the Ramon region. Since Rueppell’s pipistrelle is not easy to differentiate acoustically from Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle, I chose to neglect the possibility that an occasional individual was present in my study sits and it’s passes were counted as though it was a Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle. A. Kuhl’s pipistrelle (Pipistrellus kuhlii) – family Vespertilionidae, subfamily Vespertilioninae. It is a small (body mass ~ 6.5-7.5 g) and common insectivorous bat, and it occurs in a wide variety of natural and anthropogenic habitats from 16 southwest Asia to southern and eastern Africa. In Israel, it is the most common bat and is found from the north of the rift valley and Mediterranean down to Eilat and in some desert habitats (Yom-Tov and Kadmon 1998). It is an aerial forager, tending to use artificial lights and bodies of water for foraging (Korine and Pinshow 2004). Most of its activity occurs in the early hours of the evening. Echolocation calls used by this bat while foraging are most intense at around 3540 kHz (Whitaker et al. 1994, Berger-Tal et al. 2008). B. Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle (Hypsugo bodenheimeri) – family Vespertilionidae, subfamily Vespertilioninae. It is the smallest bat species in Israel (body mass 2.5-2.9 g). It occurs in the desert regions of Arabia and Egypt (Benda et al. 2008), and in Israel, it is found in the rift valley from Ein Geddi to Eilat and in the southern Negev (Yom-Tov and Mendelssohn 1988). It is an aerial forager that tends to fly low over the ground, around trees and, mainly around bodies of water. Most activity occurs in the early hours of the evening. The echolocation calls of this bat are most intense at around 44-46 kHz (Whitaker et al. 1994, Riskin 2009). C. Botta's serotine (Eptesicus bottae)- family Vespertilionidae, subfamily Vespertilioninae. It is a small/medium-sized (body mass 7-9 g) insectivorous bat. It occurs in dry habitats, from India and western China to Egypt and the Eastern Mediterranean (Benda et al. 2008), and is found in Israel from the north of the rift valley down to Eilat and the Negev Desert (Yom-Tov and Mendelssohn 1988). It is an aerial forager, commonly foraging above vegetation (Korine and Pinshow 2004). The echolocation calls of this bat are most intense around 32-33 kHz (Benda et al. 2008, Holderied et al. 2005). 17 2.2.3 Field sampling methods I measured the activity levels of the different bat species by sampling their echolocation calls, using Bat detectors (AnaBat II, Titley Electronics, Australia). I defined bat activity as the number of bat passes per hour of recording at each pond, whereby a pass is a sequence of bat calls (Fenton 1970). The echolocation call frequencies of the bat species found in the Negev do not overlap (Benda et al. 2008). Therefore, I was able to distinguish individual calls at the species level. Only echolocation calls emitted during foraging were used to distinguish between the species and to determine activity levels for each species. I studied the bat community compositions in each of the three areas, Makhtesh Ramon, the Central Negev Highlands and the Mitzpe Ramon area. In each area, I sampled three locations, which represent three different habitats (Table 2.1): natural sources of water such as water holes, artificial bodies of water (see description below), and, as a control, wadis without any known source of water but with vegetation cover. Due to the extremely dry winter of 2008-2009, with only 50% of the annual mean precipitation and the last rain event occurring in March, all the natural water sources surveyed did not contain ponds throughout the entire survey. Natural water sources were expected to attract high bat activity levels even without water, due to the fact that they were surrounded by dense vegetation. Sites surrounded by dense vegetation, studied by Korine and Pinshow (2004) have higher bat activity levels compared with the sites categorized as dry sites. Sampling locations were chosen based on the home ranges of similar bat species, Common pipistrelle and the Soprano pipistrelle, that were found to forage up to 2-3 km away from their roosts, and never more than 3.8 km away (Nicholls 18 and Racey 2006). These distances were recorded for non-desert species in Great Britain, a fact that may affect their relevance to my study, yet they allow a rough estimate of commuting distances. To lower the probability that bats from the same populations would be recorded in different areas, I made sure that the distances among the areas exceed 8 km, namely, more than twice the maximum estimated commuting range of Kuhl’s pipistrelle. The distances between the sites within areas were chosen to exceed 3 km to minimize the probability of counting the same bat at two sites in one night. All sampling sites were located in wadis with dense vegetation compared to the surrounding slopes. One new artificial pool was built in the Mitzpe Ramon area, within the vicinity of the Alpaca farm (30°36'36"N, 34°46'39"E). The other two artificial pools that already existed in Makhtesh Ramon and the Negev highlands north of Mitzpe Ramon (NPA troughs) were reconstructed to the same dimensions, thus controlling for pond characteristics (shape and size) that may affect bat activity (Razgour et al. 2010). They were all located at ground level, rectangular in shape, and 3 2.5 m minimal size. To construct the pools, I dug 30-50 cm deep ditches and covered them with 0.8 mm thick, black P.V.C sheets (Sera GmbH,Heinsberg, Germany). The water level was kept 20-30 cm deep using a valve with a float, allowing inflow to compensate for evaporation. Each site was sampled at least three nights in each of three seasons during 2009: spring (March-May), summer (June-August), and fall (September-November), from dusk (17:45-19:00, GMT+2) to dawn (04:30-05:45). In 2010 and 2011, partial sampling was performed at the artificial site in the Alpaca farm. All sampling nights took place during and close to the new moon, to prevent possible bias caused by the 19 increased lunar illumination that reduces bat activity, as was reported for some species (reviewed by Lang et al. 2006). Each sampling night consisted of recording bat calls using an AnaBat detector, positioned at a distance of approximately 5 m from the pond at a vertical angle of 45°, and measuring proximate Ta (±0.5 °C) every hour using iButton® data loggers (Dallas Semiconductor, Maxim Integrated Circuits, Dallas, USA), which were sensitive. iButtons were placed approximately 1m above the ground, sheltered within vegetation from the wind. Table 2.1- Field sampling sites in the Ramon region, Israel. Sites were designed to cover the three different areas by surveying three types of sites in each area. Natural water sources Dry Wadis Makhtesh Ramon 1. Saharonim – A natural spring. 30°36'13.22"N 34°56'14.11"E 2. Ramon – On the banks of the eastern Ramon Wadi. 30°36'58.87"N 34°55'18.85"E Artificial 3. Afor - An NPA trough bodies of in the Afor Wadi. 30°36'44.98"N water 34°54'39.87"E High Negev Mountain 4. Lotz – One of the Borot Lotz cisterns. 30°30'22.56"N 34°36'45.64"E 5. Dorban – A tributary of the Nitzana Wadi. 30°33'8.97"N 34°38'59.91"E 6. Nitzana – An NPA trough in the Nitzana Wadi. 30°32'32.30"N 34°38'43.40"E Mitzpe Ramon area 7. Hemet – A cistern 8 km west of the town. 30°35'36.85"N 34°42'35.73"E 8. Zin – On a tributary of the Zin Wadi, 6 km west of the town. 30°35'59.78"N 34°45'12.61"E 9. Alpaca farm – A pool set up for the experiment. 30°36'36.11"N 34°46'39.07"E 20 10 Km Mitzpe Ramon area Makhtesh Ramon Central Negev Highlands Figure 2.2 - Field sampling sites in the Ramon region: Makhtesh Ramon area (1-3), Central Negev Highlands (4-6), Mitzpe Ramon area (7-9). The different site types are represented by colors: natural water sources (green), dry wadis (red), and artificial bodies of water (blue). The broken line represents the northern cliff of Makhtesh Ramon. 2.2.4 Data analysis of field sampling I analyzed the calls using the software AnalookW 3.3q. Each AnaBat recording file contains at least one bat pass. I counted the number of passes for each species for each night and standardized the data by dividing the total passes for each night by the number of hours from dusk to dawn. Since the activity levels for all species were not normally distributed and their among-group variance lacked homogeneity, and since many ‘0’ values were recorded, some of the statistical tests required 21 log(x+1) transformation and the use of non-parametric statistics. I used the multivariant statistics “one way ANOSIM” which is a tool that uses non-parametric multi-dimensional scaling (nMDS) to present the degree of similarity compared to a null hypothesis of identity. 0 < R < 1 is defined as the degree of similarity, and ranks from R = 0 (different) to R = 1 (identical). I used ANOSIM to test the differences between the species compositions in different areas with PAST software (Hammer et al. 2001). All other analyses were done with STATISTICA7 software. Results were considered significant at p < 0.05. 2.3 Results Bat recordings were obtained from nine sites, during 10 months (FebruaryNovember) in 2009. Data from ten nights were lost due to vandalizing of equipment or technical problems. Therefore, data are available from 80 full night recordings (Table 2.2). Distribution of sampling nights between seasons was even, except for the Zin site where data for the spring was lost. Partial recordings continued in 2010 and 2011 at the Alpaca farm for studying the long term effects of the new water source. Table 2.2 – The number of night recordings for which data were available from each site during survey of 2009 in the Ramon region, Israel: Central Negev Mitzpe Ramon Makhtesh Total nights Highlands area Ramon per site type Lotz Hemet Saharonim 25 Natural 7 9 9 Nitzana Alpaca farm Afor 30 Artificial 11 9 10 Dorban Zin Ramon 25 Wadi without 10 6 9 water 28 24 28 Total per Area 80 22 2.3.1 Total bat activity and the activity level of Kuhl’s pipistrelle in the Ramon region Activity varied considerably among nights and sites (min = 0, max = 59.88). Variations among the different sites were considerable (max in Afor = 14.59, and min in Zin = 0.03, Mann–Whitney U-test, p = 0.0048, Table 2.3). Total activity was positively correlated with Ta (Spearman rank correlation: r2 = 0.4, p = 0.0002). Table 2.3 – Activity levels of Pipistrellus kuhlii, Eptesicus bottae, Hypsugo bodenheimeri at each of the 2009 survey sites in the Ramon region, Israel. Activity is presented in average pass per hour ±SD. Area A. Makhtesh Ramon B. Central Negev HIghlands C. Mitzpe Ramon area Site name P. kuhlii E.bottae H. bodenheimeri 1.Saharonim 2. Ramon 3. Afor 4. Lotz 5. Dorban 6. Nitzana 7. Hemet 8. Zin 9. Alpaca Total 0 0 0.06±0.08 0.14±0.16 2.13±4.01 8.64±15.02 1.82±2.63 0.015±0.037 0.013±0.04 1.68±6.29 2.68±3.21 0.16±0.29 3.67±3.94 0 0 0.18±0.50 0.14±0.26 0.02±0.05 0.05±0.09 0.83±2.17 5.43±4.56 1.45±2.11 10.88±17.51 0 0.01±0.03 1.20±3.91 0.03±0.06 0 0.01±0.03 2.305±7.27 Kuhl’s pipistrelle was highly active in the areas of the Central Negev Highlands (mean activity level= 4.19 ± 10.14 pass/hour), less so at the Mitzpe Ramon sites (0.67 ± 1.79), and nearly absent from the Makhtesh sites (0.02 ± 0.05). In fact, only two Kuhl’s pipistrelle passes were recorded with certainty south of the Makhtesh cliff during the entire year of the survey and in additional recordings during the following year (Table 2.3 and Figure 2.3). The differences between the Central Negev Highlands and the Makhtesh areas were significant (two-tailed Kruskal- 23 Wallis ANOVA on transformed data: H1,55 =16.90, p = 0.0003). The differences between the Central Negev Highlands and Mitzpe Ramon were also significant (H1,51 = 6.42, p = 0.019), but the differences were not significant between Mitzpe Ramon and the Makhtesh (H1,51= 2.07, p = 0.30). 8 A 7 6 4 3 / hour / hour Passes Passes 5 B B 2 1 0 Central Negev Highlands Mitzpe Ramon area Makhtesh Ramon Area Figure 2.3 – Average activity levels ±SD of Pipistrellus kuhlii throughout the survey in the three different areas of the Ramon region, Israel. Different letters above bars indicate significant differences (Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA p< 0.02). Species composition was significantly different between the High Negev Mountains and the Makhtesh Ramon (one-way ANOSIM: p < 0.002, R = 0.73). Kuhl’s pipistrelle dominated the Central Negev Highlands community and was absent from the Makhtesh, while Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle dominated the Makhtesh community and was less common in the Central Negev Highlands and Mitzpe Ramon areas. The community of the Mitzpe Ramon area was intermediate 24 in the proportion of each species between the Central Negev Highlands and Makhtesh communities, but was closer in its composition to the community of the Central Negev Highlands (one-way ANOSIM: p < 0.002, R = 0.08) than to the Makhtesh community (one-way ANOSIM: p < 0.002, R = 0.47) (Figure 2.4). Figure 2.4 – The species composition of bats from the "background cluttered space" guild, is illustrated by the proportion of each species from the total activity in each area of the Ramon region, Israel. The three assemblages differ significantly from each other (ANOSIM, p < 0.002). 25 2.3.2 Activity levels in the different site types Total activity levels varied between the different site types, with the highest total bat activity at the artificial water sources (8.57 ± 14.87 pass/hour), lower at the natural water sources (3.67 ± 5.25), and lowest at the dry wadi sites (1.45 ± 2.89) (Figure 2.5). Differences were significant only between the natural water sources and the dry sites (two-tailed Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA H1,49 = 4.25, p = 0.043). A B Figure 2.5 – Total activity levels for all three species (Pipistrellus kuhlii, Eptesicus bottae and Hypsugo bodenheimeri) at different types of sites in the three areas of the Ramon region, Israel. Letters above bars indicate significant differences. Kuhl’s pipistrelle’s activity levels, excluding the Makhtesh area from which it was absent, were highest in artificial bodies of open water (4.76 ± 11.75), but were not significantly different from the activity levels at natural water sources (1.09 ± 26 2.11) or dry wadi sites (1.34 ± 3.28). Two-tailed Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA on transformed data: H1,51= 0.34, p = 0.89. 2.4 Discussion 2.4.1 Species composition of the "background-cluttered space" guild in the Ramon region The factors determining species composition at a given location can be divided into large scale processes and local factors. The large scale processes, such as geographical and historical phenomena, set the upper limit on species diversity, while local factors, such as environmental characteristics and biological interactions, can determine the site-specific species composition (Gaston 2000, Ricklefs 2004 for all species; Ford 2005 for bats). The activity levels of all bat species surveyed in the Ramon region followed the well-established correlation with Ta (for instance, Williams 1961, Hayes 1997). This correlation is associated with the seasonal pattern of activity levels that increases with the advancement of the spring and summer, and then drops in the autumn (Korine and Pinshow 2004). The climatic requirements of the Kuhl’s pipistrelle enable its presence in all of the Negev (Yom-Tov and Kadmon 1998) on a large scale, but it seems to be absent from some habitats, at least from Makhtesh Ramon as shown in Table 2.3. The other two desert-dwelling species, Botta’s serotine and Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle, were found in all surveyed areas. This could be due to water availability, which is much lower in the Makhtesh, where there are no artificial water sources, and where the hotter and dryer conditions may induce greater drinking needs than in the northern areas of the region. In addition to the limited number of bodies of open 27 water available for the Kuhl’s pipistrelle to drink from in this region, its absence may also be associated with interspecific competition over the use of the few bodies of water that are available (Razgour et al. 2011). It seems that in areas that have sufficient water available within the home range of Kuhl’s pipistrelle’s populations their activity is not limited to the water sites alone, but they are active in dry sites as well (Figure 2.5). This is an important observation since it may indicate that water sources that can support Kuhl’s pipistrelle populations in dry habitats may become stepping stones for range expansion of the Kuhl’s pipistrelle to surrounding dry sites as well. The choice of sites for this survey was far from optimal. The scarcity of bodies of open water in the study area forced me to compare sites, without an effective method to control for important factors, such as the isolation of each site, its distance from roosts, or the flight paths that may be of more importance than actual aerial distance. For example, the Hemet site is closer to the two Mitzpe Ramon sites than to any Central Negev Highlands site, but it is drained by Wadi Nitzana that shares its drainage basin with the two Mitzpe Ramon sites. Since it is the site with the highest activity in the Mitzpe Ramon area, changing its classification would affect the analysis. Unexpected disturbances to ponds (for example: several dry outs of the troughs) and to equipment (for example: a bat recorder was vandalized at the Zin site causing data loss and the changing of the site location), resulted in a reduced sample size and some questionable reliability of some data points. The results are also limited by the small number of ponds - just one of a type for each area. 28 2.4.2 Range expansion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle in the Ramon region With caution, I assume that, at least at the time of the study, Kuhl’s pipistrelle had not yet established populations in Makhtesh Ramon. This may change in the future. The phenomenon of time lag between the introduction of an invasive species and the time of population outburst has been documented for many organisms, including several vertebrates, and was explained by either changes in the environment or genetic adaptations to the new environment (reviewed by Simberloff 2010). The presence of a permanent body of water (NPA trough) and development plans for visitor facilities in Makhtesh Ramon, which include an artificial lake (NPA project manager, personal communication), may be enough to allow Kuhl’s pipistrelle to further expand its range into areas from which it is yet absent in the Negev. This threat is supported by the limited data collected from the trough I set in the Alpaca Farm. The trough was monitored irregularly for bat activity during the three years of its existence, and Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity was apparently higher each succeeding year. Another type of disturbance that is associated with anthropogenic development and that gives a competitive advantage to Kuhl’s pipistrelle over desert-dwelling bats is artificial light. Kuhl’s pipistrelles forage near street lamps while the Botta’s serotine avoids the light (Polak et al. 2011). The Negev has been undergoing intensive development over the past decades and more development is planned for the coming years (Avigdor 2004). Anthropogenic development of the Negev, as manifested by water developments and artificial illumination, provides at least two known benefits to Kuhl’s pipistrelles. This process may support the establishment of Kuhl’s pipistrelle populations around settlements and even in rural areas, and 29 may be causing increased competition among local desert-dwelling bat communities (Razgour et al 2011), sharing similar ecological requirements (Feldman et al. 2000, Korine and Pinshow 2004) .The abundance of Kuhl’s pipistrelle in all of Israel’s climatic areas enables this species to expand its range to all habitats, opposed to the rest of its guild that are more limited in their distribution (Yom-Tov and Kadmon 1998). I assume that not much can be done on the regional scale to prevent the competition of invading Kuhl’s pipistrelle with desert-dwelling species, and the knowledge acquired on the importance of pond characteristics in shaping the local species composition (Razgour et al. 2010), encouraged me expand my research to identify possible management schemes that will limit the distribution of Kuhl’s pipistrelle. Such an approach is described in Chapter Three. 30 3 Chapter Three – Managing bat communities' species composition by placing obstructions to hamper Kuhl’s pipistrelle’s ability to drink from desert ponds 3.1 Introduction 3.1.1 Management of invasive bat species Bat conservation is traditionally concerned with the protection of endangered bat species by protecting either their roosting sites by placing gates at the entrance of caves to prevent cave activities during the breeding or hibernation periods (Martin et al. 2000), preventing habitat loss (Russo and Jones 2003), or by conserving major foraging habitats (Sparks et al. 2005). Several bat conservation plans have considered both roosting and foraging habitat protection (Schmidt 2003, Ellison et al. 2003, Wermundsen 2010). Alien invasive species are considered a major threat to biodiversity (Simberloff 2010), and bat species are threatened by invasive terrestrial mammals such as rats (McClelland 2002). Almost all conservation research has focused on the threats to bat species and their protection needs. However, as diverse and abundant as they are worldwide, no insectivorous bat has ever been declared an invasive species. This is mainly because, as opposed to other vertebrates that humans tend to deliberately relocate (pets etc.), bats lack such a relationship with humans in most cultures and are not deliberately transported (Clout and Russell 2008). This might explain the absence of literature regarding the management of invasive bat populations. There are a few exceptions of studied cases of bats endangering other bat species (Baagøe 1986, Arlettaz et al. 2000). In these cases, the population growth or range expansion of the threatening populations were due to their use of artificial 31 lights for foraging, thus obtaining a competitive advantage over bats that did not benefit from this disturbance. The same phenomenon was observed by Polak et al. (2011) studying Kuhl’s pipistrelle in the Negev Desert. Both Arlettaz et al. (2000) and Polak et al. (2011) suggested the control of light pollution and habitat preservation as management tools. However, these studies did not deal with the competitive effect of the threatening species beyond the disturbed areas. Kuhl’s pipistrelle may pose a threat to local species beyond the surroundings of bodies of water (Section 2.4) and therefore local bat communities may benefit from management of Kuhl’s pipistrelle as an invasive species. Due to the lack of studies on invasive species of bats, I explored the literature on invasive vertebrates and birds, in particular. The most effective approach when confronting the dangers of invasive species is prevention -- either of the introduction itself or of further range expansion (Wittenberg and Cock 2001, Simberloff 2010). Once an invasive species has been established, and especially one with high maneuverability such as flying vertebrates that may be impossible to keep away, constant monitoring and effective management may still be useful in reducing the invader’s impact on local ecosystems (Wittenberg and Cock 2001, Simberloff 2010). Any form of management must take into account the species’ effect on other species in the habitat and the interspecific interactions with other endangered species (Gumm et al. 2011). The hierarchy of management tools suggested both by Wittenberg and Cock (2001) and Simberloff (2010) starts with the eradication of the invader as the most effective tool, when possible. The eradication of large scattered populations of flying vertebrates is not easily carried out. In Europe for example, international 32 efforts for over 20 years to eradicate the American Ruddy duck (Oxyura jamaicensis) that poses a threat to local duck species in several European countries, are unsuccessful (Genovesi 2005). I found only one documented case of successful bird eradication, on private farm land in Nevada Starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) had competitively excluded local birds, and with their removal, the local bird community has restored itself naturally (Weitzel 1988). Containment of the invasion in a well-defined territory or exclusion from vulnerable habitats have been discussed mostly in regard to slow growing or slow moving organisms (Brown and Carter 1998) and are not feasible tools for flying vertebrates (Tidemann 2001). When none of the above methods of controlling the population size and range of the invader are feasible, mitigation has been used. Mitigation focuses on the native species and involves taking measures to reduce the effect of the invader on native endangered species, rather than confronting the invading species population directly (Wittenberg and Cock 2001). In some cases, as with the common myna (Acridotheres tristis) in Australia (Tidemann 2001), and with the protection of sea birds (Wilcox and Donlan 2007), means of population control were used as a successful type of mitigation. This type of management often involves a development of artificial roosting or feeding sites for local species when threatened by feeding competition or habitat degradation. Mitigation by the construction of artificial roosting sites is a common practice in bat conservation, but in the context of habitat loss and not interspecific competition (Appleton 2003, Briggs 2004). Management practices designed to keep only specific animals away are found in the form of fences (Andrew et al. 1997, Larsen et al. 2011) but are irrelevant for bats. 33 The activity of Kuhl’s pipistrelle is repeatedly found to be at higher levels than any other bat species in the Negev (Korine and Pinshow 2004, Razgour et al 2010, current survey figure 2.4), suggesting that it may be the most abundant insectivorous bat in the region. Moreover, Kuhl’s pipistrelle is the only bat species in the Negev that is assumed to have increased its population size over the past decade (2000-2010) (Shalmon 2010, Korine unpublished data 2011). If the species richness of Negev bats is to be conserved, the increasing competitive load presented by populations of Kuhl’s pipistrelle on the rest of the desert-dwelling bat community (Polak et al. 2011, Razgour et al 2011) requires management. Since direct reduction of the competitive load of Kuhl’s pipistrelle by eradication or population control methods are hardly possible, mitigation can be used to locally reduce Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity and provide local ìcompetition freeî sites for desert-dwelling bats. 3.1.2 Interspecific differences in the use of bodies of water as the key for the management of desert bat communities All four species of the “background-cluttered spaceî guild -- Kuhl's pipistrelle, Ruppell's pipistrelle, Bodenheimer's pipistrelle, and Botta's serotine-- share the same families of insects in their diet (Feldman et al. 2000) and foraging behavior (Korine and Pinshow 2004). Considering that Kuhl’s pipistrelle in the Negev is an invasive species, it seems as if any attempt at eradication or population control will necessarily harm the endangered desert-dwelling bats. One possible mitigation scheme may therefore lie within their different drinking behaviors, which may influence local species assemblages. 34 Bats worldwide have been found to leave day roosts after sunset and commute to productive foraging sites, peaking their activity levels within the first hours after sunset and then again near dusk (Hayes 1997, Nicholls and Racey 2006). In arid habitats, open bodies of water are preferred by bats as foraging and drinking sites (O'Farrell and Riddle 2006, Razgour et al. 2010). For example, Myotis species in arid habitats, were found fly shortly after sunset to nearby water holes (Adams and Thibault 2006). The spatial distribution of foraging usually consists of commuting from the roost to a patchy foraging site where longer amounts of time are spent and finally returning to the same roost (Nicholls 2006). Bat species with similar diets and morphology (body mass 4-8g) to my study species were studied in the British Islands: the Common pipistrelle (P. pipistrellus) and the Soprano pipistrelle (P. pygmaeus). Both species were found to commute between 0.5 and 3 km (3.8 km max) from roosting sites to foraging areas (Nicholls and Racey 2006). The time allocation between foraging sites or patches is determined by the resource value of the patch, compared to the costs of obtaining the resource (Arlettaz 1996). Both values depend on bat population density and can be influenced by competition, promoting spatial partitioning (Kunz 1973, Arlettaz 1999, Razgour et al. 2011) and temporal partitioning (Kunz 1973, Adams and Thibault 2006, Razgour et al. 2011) between bat species with similar diets and foraging habitats. Bats in the Zin Valley in the Negev Desert differ in the way they use ponds (Razgour et al. 2010, 2011), with the Mediterranean species (the European freetailed bat and Kuhl’s pipistrelle) drinking seven and four (respectively) times more frequently than the desert-dwelling bat species. Competition over the use of bodies of water is found between the two sets of bats (Razgour et al. 2011): 1) The 35 Mediterranean species, the European free-tailed bat and Kuhl’s pipistrelle, compete for drinking space over bodies of water, and seem to be obliged to drink. 2) Within the “background-cluttered space” guild, Kuhl’s pipistrelle, Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle and Rueppell’s pipistrelle compete for foraging space over bodies of water. This competition results in spatial partitioning between the Kuhl’s pipistrelle, which is associated with small temporary ponds, and the European free-tailed bat, which is associated with large permanent ponds and tends not to visit medium and small temporary ponds. These two species are temporally partitioned, with their activity level speaking at different times. Similar partitioning was found among the “background cluttered space” species that compete for foraging space. Rueppell’s pipistrelle was found to be associated with medium ponds and its activity peaks in the fifth and sixth hours of the night. Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle is associated with large permanent ponds and its activity peaks during the first and last hours of the nightand Kuhl’s pipistrelle prefers small temporary ponds and its activity peaks between the second and fourth hours of the night. Razgour et al. (2011) suggested that these partitioning mechanisms may prevent the expected competition due to the high niche overlap between the two sets of competing bat species. The Mediterranean species drink more frequently than the desert-dwelling species, and therefore, the Kuhl’s pipistrelle's competitive load may be higher in foraging sites that allow drinking. Several studies have reported reduced drinking activity when the surface area of the water body was reduced in size experimentally (Tuttle et al. 2006, Razgour et al. 2010), or when the swoop zone was limited (Tuttle et al. 2006). Nonetheless, in both studies, the manipulations caused an increase in the total activity at the sites, possibly due to repeated unsuccessful 36 drinking attempts. The different drinking frequencies of Mediterranean and desertdwelling bats, reported by Razgour et al. (2010), may suggest that different species are affected more than others by such manipulations of drinking area. Tuttle et al. (2006) do not differentiate between the responses of different species to the manipulation, but Razgour et al. (2010) do. They found that the manipulation, leaving 8 m of pond free for drinking, reduced the activity of all four species of the ìbackground-cluttered spaceî guild. These results may have been due to the short and intensive periods of disturbance caused by the manipulation. The results do not shed light on the question of whether a stronger manipulation, preventing Kuhl’s pipistrelle from drinking, would have a stronger effect on Mediterranean species. My experimental approach was an attempt to show whether such a disturbance can prevent Kuhl’s pipistrelle from drinking, thus reducing competitive loads from the desert-dwelling species, which will benefit from a higher value foraging site. I hypothesized that placing obstructions above open bodies of water would hamper the drinking ability of Kuhl’s pipistrelle and would have a lesser effect on desert-dwelling bat species since the former drink more frequently than the latter. The resulting reduction in Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity would create "competition free" foraging sites for desert-dwelling bats. I did three different field experiments and tested the following predictions: 1) Increasing the density of obstructions over a body of water, used only by Kuhl’s pipistrelle and only for drinking, reduces the drinking frequency of the bats and, eventually, prevents it. 37 2) The activity level of Kuhl’s pipistrelle (measured by their echolocation calls) is higher in un-manipulated ponds (explained hereinafter) than in the same ponds, once manipulated. The activity level of Ruppell’s pipistrelle, Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle and Botta’s serotine is higher in manipulated ponds (explained hereinafter) than in the same un-manipulated ponds due to reduced competition from Kuhl’s pipistrelle. Field experiment II (manipulation of natural ponds in the Zin valley (Section 3.2.2)), and the following year field experiment III (manipulation of isolated natural ponds (Section 3.2.3)) were designed to test this prediction. The manipulation was formed by obstructions constructed over open bodies of water to hamper bat drinking, as is explained in detail (Section 3.2.1). 3.2 Methods 3.2.1 Field experiment I: Manipulation of the swimming pool Study area and site This experiment took place in Midreshet Ben Gurion in the Negev Desert, in the summer of 2010. In this desert region rain occurs during the winter and averages 97 mm per year. Ta are highest during summer and are lowest in winter, with a daily mean of 25.3 ºC in August, and 9.7 ºC in January in Midreshet Ben-Gurion (Meteorology unit BIDR 2010). The study site used was the local swimming pool, 25 m by 25 m and ‘L’ shaped (Figure 3.1), located at 30°51'13.57"N, 34°47'08.53"E and at 478 m elevation. This pool was chosen since Kuhl’s pipistrelle had previously been observed drinking in it and it is located ~ 100 m from a known Kuhl’s pipistrelle roosting site (Berger-Tal et al. 2008). Kuhl’s pipistrelle is 38 apparently the only species that uses this site (Korine, personal communication, and verified by vocalizations recordings during the experiment). Experimental design The swimming pool was covered with a grid of black Polypropylene string with an average diameter of 2 mm, limiting the water surface to sections of 1 1 m. This was done to prevent the Kuhl’s pipistrelle from drinking from the pool. The experimental plot was created by leaving the non-experimental area covered by the string grid and uncovering a 9 9 m experimental area (Figure 3.1). Four different treatments were done on the 9 9 m section of the pool. For the control treatment, the experimental area was left uncovered, and for the other treatments, this area was sectioned into varying sized squares: 4.5 4.5 m, 3 3 m and 1 1 m (Figure 3.1). The string was elevated 10 cm above the surface of the water. 25m Figure 3.1 A diagram of the swimming pool, at which the experiment was carried out, is shown. It measured 25 m in length and 12.5 m in width. The black line represents the 1 1 m fixed grid covering the non-experimental area. The area without a black line represents the 9 9 m experimental area (also used as the 9 9 m control treatments). The other colored lines, green (1 1 m), red (3 3 m) and 1m blue (4.5 4.5 m) represent the three different treatments. 3m 4.5 m 12.5m 39 The four treatments were scheduled to be done at different times over five evenings, to control for the fact that bat activity varied at different times throughout the night. This also controlled for possible affects on drinking due to a preceding treatment, as each treatment was preceded by a different treatment on each of the nights. The experiment began each night 30 min after sunset (~19:30), and the periods used for the different treatments each night were: 20:10 - 20:30, 21:30 21:50, 22:10 - 22:30 and 22:40 - 23:00. I counted the number of passes and drinking events over the experimental area in a set period of time. This was done by direct un-aided observations. In all of the trials, there was one artificial light source, set 10 m away from the pool, and observers used head lamps. I used an AnaBat detector to monitor the experimental area acoustically. This allowed an auditory prompt for bat arrival, and the data recorded were analyzed using AnaLookW (3.3) software to ascertain that all observations were of Kuhl’s pipistrelle. Data analysis Since the data on the number of drinking events were not normally distributed, their variance among treatments lacked homogeneity and since many ‘0’ values were recorded, some of the statistical tests required transforming the activity data by log(x+1). A repeated-measures ANOVA was used to determine whether there was a difference between nights. When the different nights were found to have no effect on bat activity, a one-way ANOVA was used to determine whether there was a difference between treatments. All tests done for all three field experiments were two-tailed, and the results were considered to be significant at p < 0.05. All tests in the three field experiments were done using STATISTICA 7. 40 3.2.2 Field experiment II: Manipulation of natural ponds in the Zin Valley Study area and sites This field experiment examined drinking ability of bats from manipulated ponds in areas where Mediterranean bat species are well established – the Zin Valley in the proximity of Midreshet Ben-Gurion (30º52' N, 34º47' E) in the Negev Desert Highlands (Climatic description in section 3.2.1). The field experiment took place in temporary and permanent open ponds located in the Zin and Akkev Wadis. In both wadis, springs sustain permanent ponds all year round, while temporary ponds dry out during the spring or the beginning of the summer (Table 3.1). Table 3.1 – Sites chosen for experiment II. All sites are located within the Zin Valley in the Negev, Israel. The measures marked by * changed during the three week period of the experiment. The values in the table are the measured maxima at the time of the experiment. Site name A.White Cliff East B. Akkev East C. White Plains A D. Bor Nabati E. White Plains B F. White Cliff West G. Australia Pond H. Conglomerate Pond J. Heart Pond K. Salon Pond L. Akkev Horseshoe Description Temporary pond inWadi Zin Temporary pond in the Akkev Wadi Temporary pond in the Akkev Wadi Temporary pond in the Zin Wadi Temporary pond in the Akkev Wadi Temporary pond in the Zin Wadi Temporary pond in the Zin Wadi Temporary pond in the Zin Wadi Temporary pond in the Akkev Wadi Temporary pond in the Zin Wadi Temporary pond in the Akkev Wadi Compass Coordinates 30°50'37.69"N 34°47'24.29"E 30°49'35.38"N 34°48'38.82"E 30°49'54.71"N 34°48'46.51"E 30°50'31.50"N 34°48'42.32"E 30°49'50.54"N 34°48'46.61"E 30°50'36.53"N 34°47'22.37"E 30°50'30.24"N 34°46'37.11"E 30°50'14.24"N 34°46'30.17"E 30°49'3.59"N 34°48'45.04"E 30°50'38.82"N 34°46'59.49"E 30°49'33.13"N 34°48'35.42"E Pond length (m)* Distances from nearest pond(m)* 8 50 7 10 19 5 10 20 15 0 5 50 6 150 8 3 3 5 50 30 5 50 41 Figure 3.2 - Field experiment temporary pond sites in the Zin Valley. Experimental design From among many temporary ponds in the Zin Valley that were filled with water by the winter floods of January 2010 (Israel Meteorology Service 2010), I chose 11 that held water for several months. This allowed for the experiment to begin in April when bat activity levels are sufficiently high. I chose ponds that were large (mean pond length: 7.67±4.96 m) and deep enough (>15 cm), so I could expect them not to dry out during the three weeks of the experiment, and that were at least 3 m long to ensure that they would facilitate drinking activity and not only foraging. The ponds were not isolated (mean distance from nearest other pond: 47.5±51.67 m, min=0 m, max=150 m), but were chosen to make distances between ponds as far as possible, to prevent calls from a nearby pond from being mistakenly accounted for in the analysis. The experiment was done in three ponds simultaneously, but I manipulated only one pond at a time (Table 3.1). This was 42 done to control for temporal factors that may affect bat activity. I did the experiment from the beginning of April to the end of July 2010. I recorded bats by placing an AnaBat detector 3-5 m from the pond bank. Since experimental treatments required several nights of monitoring, AnaBat detectors were concealed in hard plastic boxes with their microphones protruding, facing 45° vertically toward the pond. The devices were connected to a 12 v battery, allowing for continuous monitoring for seven nights. Proximate Ta was measured for each recording night and for each pond using iButton® data loggers as described in Section 2.2.3. I measured pond length and the distance from the nearest open body of water with a tape measure (distances < 30 m), and by locating sites on a map aided by hand held G.P.S (eTrexÆ-H by Garmin, accuracy ±25m) and measuring the line of site, for longer distances. Each experiment consisted of three phases: 1) Recording of bat activity levels for seven nights before the manipulation (control treatment); 2) manipulation of the size of the pond (Figure 3.3), and recording bat activity for seven nights; and 3) recording for seven nights after removing the manipulation (control treatment). Table 3.2- Temporally staggered use of ponds for field experiment in the Zin Valley, Israel. Each pond was monitored for bat activity with three following treatments. In most of the experiments, three ponds were handled simultaneously, but never with the same treatment in two ponds at the same time, to control for the effect of environmental factors Week number Pond 1 Pond 2 Pond 3 Pond 4 Pond 5... 1 2 Control Manipulation Control 3 4 5 6 Control Manipulation Control Control Manipulation Control Control Manipulation Control Control Manipulation 43 The obstruction of the ìswoop zoneî was created by a network of corrugated plastic sheets, leaving the total surface area of the pond unchanged, but minimizing the largest free water surface to 1 × 1 m (Figure 3.3). Figure 3.3 – An example of the network made of corrugated plastic sheeting, to cover the pond surface. This is the pond in the Alpaca farm near Mitzpe Ramon, Israel. 3.5 m 2m Data Analysis I counted and normalized the bat calls as described previously (section 2.2.4). Following Ciechanowski (2002), I used the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle’s activity level from the total bat activity within the "background-cluttered space" guild, and I used arcsine transformation on the proportions to increase the sensitivity of the index at extremely high and low proportions. The transformed data were not normally distributed. To test if the manipulation affected the proportions, I performed a non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA, with the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity as the dependent variable, and for three treatments (control 1, manipulation, post manipulation). The effects of other factors, such as Ta, pond length and distance from nearest pond -- on the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity were tested using a Spearman rank correlation. 44 Another statistical approach was to look for effects of the manipulation between the different nights of each treatment (rather than just between treatments). This was done by calculating linier regression slopes of the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity between the nights of each treatment in each pond. Then I used the regression slopes of the different treatments as the dependent variable to test for changes in species composition during treatments. By this approach positive values of the slops would mean that Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity increased compared to the activity of desert dweling species, while negative values would indicate that it has decreased during the treatment. 3.2.3 Field experiment III: Manipulation of isolated natural ponds Study area and sites The experiment was conducted in eight bodies of water in a wide variety of habitats in the Negev Highlands and the Dead Sea area. The sites were chosen for their isolation from other potential drinking sites (mean distance of site from the next nearest open body of water: 1650 ± 840 m, max: pond no.4 = 3000 m, min: pond no.1 = 300 m) in order to ensure that bats lacked the option of drinking at a nearby pond during the manipulation treatments (Table 3.3). All ponds were large enough to ensure that bats could drink but small enough to be manipulated easily with the string grid (mean length: 7.28 ± 2.69 m, min: pool no.6 = 4 m, max: pool no.1 = 20 m). 45 Table 3.3 – Sites chosen for experiment III. All the sites were comparatively isolated from other bodies of water that could serve as other potential drinking sites for bats (= length of pond > 3m). The measures marked by * may change over time and are here mentioned as recorded at the time of the experiment. Site name 1. Revivim 2. Makhtesh Gadol 3. Ein Yorkeam 4. Gev Yamin 5. Ein UmTina 6. Gev Zarhan 7. Serpentine Pond 8. Ein Ahava Description Temporary pond in Revivim Wadi by the road (40) side Temporary pond at the exit of the Makhtesh Permanent spring and pond Temporary pond in Yamin Wadi Temporary pond in Zarhan Wadi Temporary pond in Zarhan Wadi Temporary pond in Zin Valley near EinAvdat National Park Permanent spring and pond in the Dead Sea Valley GPS Coordinates Pond length(m)* Distance from nearest body of water(m)* 31° 0'34.31"N 34°46'44.98"E 20 300 30°57'2.03"N 35° 1'48.20"E 6 1800 12 1800 7 3000 5 2100 4 2100 30°50'35.51"N 34°46'44.84"E 9 1300 30°57'21.92"N 35°21'50.02"E 8 800 30°56'13.28"N 35° 2'30.57"E 30°56'38.19"N 35° 4'22.74"E 30°49'9.97"N 34°56'36.99"E 30°50'1.04"N 34°57'29.48"E 20 Km Figure 3.4 - Field experiment sites in isolated ponds in various parts of the Negev. 46 Experimental design I tested the effect of the manipulation on a shorter temporal scale then In field experiment II, with two treatments, ‘Manipulation’ and ‘Control’, which were alternated every 20 min. I selected this time because I demonstrated in the pool experiment that it was sufficient in which to observe behavioral differences in Kuhl’s pipistrelle (Section 3.3.1). Each experiment ran for two nights, switching treatment orders to control for the effect of time, since drinking activity was observed to peak at beginning of the night (Table 3.4). Assembly of the manipulation construction was done in day light, and recordings and the first treatment began 20 minutes after sunset and ended after four treatments, or continued if activity was still high. Recording was done with AnaBat detectors, and a proximate for Ta was measured with iButton® data loggers as described (Section 2.2.3). I measured the length of each pond with tape measure, and the distance from the nearest water source was measured by identifying the ponds on a 1:50,000 topographical map and measuring the line of site. For the manipulation, I constructed, for each pond, a special grid from black Polypropylene string (average diameter 2 mm) on a frame, in the shape of the pond surface, made of metal wire. This design made alternating between treatments fast, taking less than one minute in most cases. 47 Table 3.4 -Design of experiment III: Studying manipulation effects on bat activity at isolated natural ponds in the Negev, Israel. This experiment was based on alternating the treatments several times (4-6 treatments per night), two nights in each site, and starting with a different treatment each night. For full list of ponds see Table 3.3. Treatment number Start time from to Pond 1, 1st night Pond 1, 2nd night Pond 1, 1st night Pond 1, 2nd night Ponds 3…6 1 3 4 5 6 20min 40min 60min 80min 100min Control Manipulation Control Manipulation Manipulation Control Manipulation Control Manipulation Control Manipulation Control Manipulation Control Manipulation Control Control Manipulation Control Manipulation 0min 2 Control Manipulation Control Manipulation Data Analysis I counted and normalized the bat calls as described previously (Section 2.2.4), dividing each treatment into four sections of five min each. When analysis required the use of the activity levels of the full 20 min. of treatment, I used the mean of the four samples to avoid pseudo replication. To identify changes in species composition, I used the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity as described above (Section 3.2.2). The effect of the manipulation on the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle within the bat communities of the different sites was tested by a general linear model in which the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity was the dependent variable. The treatment and the site (random) were used as categorical factors, and the treatment 48 number (first each night = 1, 2nd = 2, etc.) and proximate Ta were used as continuous predictors. I also looked for effects during the treatment using regression slopes of the treatment sub-units (Section 3.2.2). 3.3 Field experiment results 3.3.1 Manipulation of the swimming pool In total, I obtained 170 observations of bat activity at the swimming pool during five nights, made up of 152 flight events and 18 drinking events. All recorded observations were identified as Kuhl’s pipistrelle. No significant difference in activity levels or in drinking frequency were found among the different nights of the experiment (repeated-measures ANOVA, F3 = 0.645, p = 0.605). Therefore, data from all nights were pooled for the rest of the analysis. Drinking passes, as a proportion of total activity, was significantly different between treatments (one-way ANOVA: F3,19 = 3.926, p = 0.028). The highest proportion of drinking events to total activity was recorded in the control treatment, and no drinking events were recorded in the 1 1 m and 3 3 m treatments. 49 70 Passes without drinking passes per tretment 60 50 Drinking passes 40 30 20 10 0 9mx9m 4.5 m x 4.5 m 3mx3m Treatment 1mx1m Figure 3.5 – Passes without drinking and drinking passes of Pipistrellus kuhlii in the swimming pool experiment during the different treatments. Each treatment divided the experimental plot into sections of different size: 1 1 m, 3 3 m, 4.5 4.5 m, and 9 9 m (control). The proportion of drinking from the total activity, was significantly different between treatments (one-way ANOVA: F3,19 = 3.926, p = 0.028). 3.3.2 Manipulation of natural ponds in the Zin Valley Out of the 11 ponds that I chose, useful data were obtained from eight (Table 3.6). I did not use the data from three of the ponds for the following reasons: one pond dried out during the manipulation treatment (Pond E), and there were technical malfunctions at ponds H and L. Total bat activity and species composition at the experiment sites Total bat activity varied significantly between ponds (Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA: H6,144 = 3.17, p < 0.0001) but did not vary between the different nights (Kruskal- 50 Wallis ANOVA: H93,144 = 87.07, p = 0.653) (Table 3.6). Total bat activity was not correlated with Ta (Spearman rank correlation: R105 = 0.083, p = 0.399). Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity as a proportion of total activity, was not significantly different among the ponds (Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA: H6,143 =14.145, p=0.28). Kuhl’s pipistrelle dominated all ponds with average proportion of 0.957±0.074 from the total bat activity. The proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity was positively correlated with pond length (Spearman rank correlation: R142 = 0.273, p = 0.001). Manipulation effects on species composition The manipulation did not reduce the proportion, of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity of total bat activity. Proportional activity of Kuhl’s pipistrelle was not affected by the treatments (Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA: H2,143 = 0.3427462, p = 0.8425) . The treatments did not account for any significant differences in the activity levels of Kuhl’s pipistrelle (Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA: H2,143 = 3.402, p = 0.1825), the activity levels of desert-dwelling bats (Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA: H2,70=0.214, p=0.898), or total bat activity (Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA: H2,144 = 2.638435, p = 0.2673). The regression slopes of the proportions of Kuhl’s pipistrelle between the nights did not differ between treatments (one-way ANOVA: F2 = 1.73, p = 0.201), and the slope of the regression between the night of manipulation treatment was negative in some ponds but positive in others (Table 3.7), indicating that there was no consistent effect of the manipulation on any of the species activity levels between the treatment nights. The slopes were not affected by pool length or distance to the nearest pond. 51 Table 3.6 – Total bat activity and proportional activity of Kuhl’s pipistrelle for each night for the eight ponds from which data were obtained in experiment II in the Zin Valley, Israel. P. kuhlii activity (passes per night) Total bat activity (passes per night) 432.9±448.1 470.4±485.5 P.kuhlii passes / total passes 0.96±0.03 27.6±12.8 38.0±16.8 0.98±0.03 C. White Plains A 140.8±116.1 154.1±124.9 0.94±0.08 D. Bor Nabati 126.6±109.4 135.5±113.3 0.94±0.10 F. White Cliff West 40.1±44.1 39.4±45.4 0.97±0.05 G. Australia Pond 83.2±55.0 95.5±61.5 0.97±0.03 J. Heart Pond 439.9±598.8 444.4±598.8 0.99±0.05 K. Salon Pond 34.9±39.5 39.0±41.8 0.91±0.12 164.6±318.8 173.1±324.2 0.96±0.07 Site name A.White Cliff East B. Akkev East Total Table 3.7 – The linier regression slopes of the proportions of Pipistrellus kuhlii of total bat activity between the nights of each treatment of field experiment II in the Zin Valley, Israel. Positive slops indicate an increase in the proportion of P. kuhlii of total bat activity during the treatment, and negative slopes indicate a decrease. The type of treatment had no significant effect on the slopes. Site name Control Manipulation Post Manipulation A.White Cliff East 0.17 -0.06 0.03 B. Akkev East 0.17 0.04 0 C. White Plains A 0.39 -0.03 -0.03 D. Bor Nabati 0.10 0.03 -0.03 F. White Cliff West 0.07 0.03 0.39 G. Australia Pond -0.03 -0.02 -0.02 J. Heart Pond 0.03 0 -0.02 K. Salon Pond -0.10 0.10 -0.08 52 3.3.3 Manipulation of isolated natural ponds Data were obtained from six out of eight ponds (Table 3.8), with two ponds lacking sufficient activity of the appropriate species for the analysis (ponds 5,6). Total bat activity and species composition at the experiment sites Total bat activity levels differed significantly at the six ponds (GLM: F1,43 = 6.586, p = 0.0001) and so did the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity of total bat activity (GLM: F5,35 = 5.22, p = 0.016) (Figure 3.6). Activity levels were positively correlated with Ta for each pond (GLM: F5 = 6.562, p = 0.0001). The proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity at each site was negatively correlated with Ta at the site (GLM: F1,35 = 12.72, p = 0.001). Table 3.8 – Activity of Pipistrellus kuhlii and total bat activity in the eight ponds used for the experiment. Ponds no.5 and 6 were excluded from the analysis due to low / absent activity of P. kuhlii. Site name P. kuhlii activity (passes per treatment) 152.56±81.00 Total bat activity (passes per treatment) 174.94±97.38 P.kuhlii passes / total passes 0.85±0.24 2. Makhtesh Gadol 3. Ein Yorkeam 16.00±22.85 51.19±56.87 0.35±0.27 21.61±41.57 83.00±78.60 0.40±0.42 4. Gev Yamin 32.33±36.58 61.5±60.38 0.55±0.26 5. Ein Um-Tina 1.33±0.66 1.33±0.66 1 6. Gev Zarhan 0 2.05±2.49 0 7. Serpentine 22.33±20.69 26.96±26.70 0.93±0.16 8. Ein Ahava 2.88±4.57 92.88±40.39 0.03±0.05 41.28±34.54 81.74±60.06 0.52±0.23 1. Revivim Total (analyzed ponds only) 53 Figure 3.6 – The proportions of Pipistrellus kuhlii activity levels and desert-dwelling bats (Eptesicus bottae and Hypsugo bodenheimeri) of the total activity in each of the sites used for the experiment III in isolated ponds in the Negev, Israel. Proportions of P. kuhlii of the total bat activity were found to be significantly different (GLM: F5,35 = 5.22, p = 0.016). Manipulation effects on species composition The manipulations had no significant effect on the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity of the total bat activity when all six ponds were included in theanalysis (GLM: F(6,35)=1.02, p=0.429). When I included only the three sites that had higher proportions of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity to begin with (Ponds 1, 4 and 7. Table 3.8), the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity was significantly lower in the manipulation treatments (GLM: F(2,11)=4.6, p=0.035) (Figure 3.7). 54 * - - Figure 3.7 – The proportion of Pipistrellus Kuhlii activity of total bat activity in the different treatments at each site. P. Kuhlii proportional activity was significantly lower during manipulation treatments only when sites marked by asterisk (*) were included. When testing the different factors using the linier regression slopes of the proportions of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity within treatments as the dependent variable, trends were similar to those of proportions were observed: treatment slopes were significantly affected by site (GLM: F5,34=6.89, p = 0.0004), and were positively correlated with the treatment from the beginning of the night (GLM: F5,34=10.44, p = 0.003). The regression slopes were not significantly reduced by the manipulation (GLM: F6,34 = 0.17, p = 0.98). Linear regression slopes of proportions of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity were also not affected by pool length or distance to nearest pond. 55 3.4 Discussion 3.4.1 Manipulation of the swimming pool The size of clear space above the water was found to effect the drinking activity of Kuhl’s pipistrelle. In accord with my prediction, increasing the density of the string above the water caused a decrease in the number of drinking events in proportion to flight events, over the experimental area. This indicates that there is a certain size of water surface area that must be unobstructed to allow drinking by Kuhl’s pipistrelle. This is consistent with previous studies (Razgour et al 2010, Tuttle et al., 2006, Jackrel and Matlack 2010). The fact that total bat activity did not drop with the increase of string densities, along with drinking activity, may be due to bat approaches towards the pond in attempts to drink, and flying off once the disturbance was detected. A similar phenomenon of increase in bat activity when drinking was disturbed was observed by Tuttle et al. (2006) and by Razgour et al. (2010). No drinks occurred in the 3 3 m treatment or the 1 1 m treatments, but drinking did take place in the 4.5 4.5 m treatment. This suggests that the minimum length of unobstructed water required for Kuhl’s pipistrelle to drink lies between 3-4.5 m. However, based on my field observations, as shown in Table 2.1, a large population of Kuhl’s pipistrelle forage around the NPA trough in Nitzana Wadi being the only open body of water in the area. This trough, even when enlarged for the survey, did not exceed 3 2.5 m, yet was used for drinking (personal observation). Theoretically, the explanation for these results could be that the obstructions, laid < 3 m apart, were dense enough to prevent the identification 56 of the body of water. This explanation, though, is challenged by Greif and Siemers (2010) who reported that the innate recognition by echolocation is a stronger cue for water recognition than prior knowledge of the nature of water bodies by bats. Another problem with this explanation is that the Kuhl’s pipistrelle’s roost close by (Berger-Tal et al. 2008) and are assumed to have prior knowledge of the pool as a drinking source. Another way to look at the experimental results, not as indicating a physical limit of 3 3 m prohibiting drinking altogether, but rather as an indication of the bats’ immediate response to the manipulation, which may weaken with time. Previous studies by Razgour et al. (2010) do not shed light on this question since the length of clear water area after the manipulation were much larger (>8m). However, Tuttle et al. (2006) and Jackral and Matlack (2010) did reduce clear water surface in troughs to less than 2 m and still observed drinking by several bat species. This contradiction could be resolved by using a similar experimental design over an extended time period to determine whether Kuhl’s pipistrelle would remain present in the area and resume drinking at least in the 3 3 m plots, or would change their foraging and drinking behavior and start drinking elsewhere. Despite these remaining questions, it seems safe to assume that in I have found a method that does prevent the Kuhl’s pipistrelle from drinking, for a short time frame, by making a grid of 1 x 1 m, and this was the method used in the field experiments, as described (Section 3.2), to manipulate natural ponds used by Kuhl’s pipistrelle and other bats as drinking and foraging sites. 57 3.4.2 Manipulation of natural ponds in the Zin Valley The experiment in the Zin Valley was intended to explore the possibility of manipulating species' composition by disturbing the drinking ability of the Kuhl’s pipistrelle, that is known to drink often. Though activity levels varied between sites, species composition was similar (Section 3.3.2). My manipulations did not affect the activity levels of any bat species, and I offer two explanations for the failure of this experimental design. First, my indicator of changes in species compositions was measuring activity levels of bats without the ability to distinguish between drinking and foraging flights. Previous studies that manipulated ponds found reduced drinking flights but an increase in total activity (Tuttle et al. 2006, Razgour 2010). The increase in total activity may have occurred during my manipulation treatments, and interpreted in the results as “No reduction of activity” even when it did decrease. Second, the local conditions of the experiment may have affected the manipulation’s success. The Zin Valley has received extraordinary amounts of water in the winter of 2010, mainly in a rare rain event on the 17-18th of January, with 139mm of rain in 48 hours at Midreshet Ben Gurion (Israel Meteorology Service 2010). This major rain event left the Zin Valley full of ponds in near each other (average distance between recording site to the nearest drinking site = 47.5±51.7m) half way through July. Thus, drinking was not a limiting factor on foraging for Kuhl’s pipistrelle at the time of the experiment. A manipulated pond was not abandoned, presumably because drinking was available at nearby ponds. The same explanation was suggested by Ciechanowski (2002) to explain why bats did not avoid small ponds in the forest that were elsewhere neglected, due to those ponds' proximity to larger ponds that allowed them to drink. 58 According to the first explanation, the total activity level remains high when ponds are manipulated, so the idea of disturbing the Kuhl’s pipistrelle drinking cannot be used as a management tool since it would not reduce its competitive load on the other species of the guild. If the second explanation is correct and the manipulation works only when the distance to the nearest drinking site is considerable, then it would be an ideal management tool to reduce the disturbance caused by isolated troughs. Deciding between the two explanations could be done either by repeating the same experiment, but using a method that can separate drinking from foraging activity, or by manipulating isolated bodies of water as I did in experiment III. 3.4.3 Manipulation of isolated natural ponds The important finding from this experiment lines with my original predictions; in certain ponds and for a short period, smaller proportions of Kuhl’s pipistrelle were observed during the manipulation by a string grid. My conclusion is that the manipulation changed the activity levels, thus decreased the competition on the desert-dwelling species, Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle and Botta's serotine. However, this approach is effective for short periods and only if the ponds are isolated. These results are different from the results of experiment II in the Zin Valley, and from those of Razgour et al.(2010), where the pond surface was partly covered. Their experiment was done in the same area with the same species of bats, and found that the activity levels of all three species were reduced by the manipulation. The different results way be due to the fact that the ponds I used in experiment II and by Razgour et al (2010) were not isolated. 59 An alternative interpretation of Razgour et al. (2010) results may be the material used to cover the ponds. They used a smooth, clear plastic sheet as a cover, which was recently shown by Greif and Siemers (2011) to imitate the acoustics of the water surface and might have been perceived by bats as regular water. Thus the reduction of bat activity found by Razgour (2010) may have been due to the reduction in its foraging quality caused by the prevention of water access. This may explain why all three species were affected in Razgour et al. (2010) experiment. In contrast to the Zin Valley measurements in experiment II, where species composition was similar in all sites, in experiment III, the significant differences in species composition turned out to form a gradient between the six sites in the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity of the total bat activity. Higher proportions of Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity occurred in the sites with lower Ta, as would have been expected from the species known distribution and Mediterranean origin (Yom-Tov and Kadmon 1998). The manipulation did not have a significant effect on the proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle at all the sites but during the manipulation Kuhl’s pipistrelle proportions were smaller in the sites where Kuhl’s pipistrelle was more abundant. This can be explained by stronger competitive load on the desertdwelling species, in sites where Kuhl’s pipistrelle dominates the bat communities. In sites with stronger competition, the reduction of competitive load by the manipulation was detectable. 60 4 Chapter Four – General discussion 4.1 The current distribution of Kuhl’s pipistrelle and its impact on local bat communities The exact process that brought about the current distribution of Kuhl’s pipistrelle in the Negev Desert and the rate of its expansion are not clear. I, however, suggest that anthropogenic development processes involving the introduction of new water bodies play a role in the Kuhl’s pipistrelle range expansion. Evidence for the role of new bodies of water in the species' range expansion is the constant growth in the activity levels of Kuhl’s pipistrelle, which I observed at the Alpaca Farm pool since it was built (March 2009- August 2011). Range expansion will not end anywhere in the Negev due to climatic reasons since Kuhl’s pipistrelle have been found as far away and in as hot a climate as Eilat (Zelenova and Yosef 2003, Shalmon personal communication 2011). Field surveys and observations confirm that Kuhl’s pipistrelle are not limited to anthropogenic sites or to water sources but are active in all habitat types within the range of their distribution (Korine and Pinshow 2004). Kuhl’s pipistrelle are apparently absent from the eastern part of Makhtesh Ramon, and due to their high frequency of drinking (Razgour et al 2010), it can be assumed that the bats are absent from most of the southern Negev, i.e., from the Ramon cliff and down to the Paran Valley, that lacks open bodies of water. The important exceptions to this lack of drinking opportunities are the NPA troughs in Makhtesh Ramon and the Paran Valley, the tourist lake being built in Makhtesh Ramon, and the waste water pool in the Shdema facility (30∞30'46.78"N, 34∞56'58.10"E). To date, there have been no 61 more than anecdotal sightings of Kuhl’s pipistrelle in Makhtesh Ramon and the Paran troughs, but my recent observations using AnaBat detectors,indicate regular activity of Kuhl’s pipistrelle near the Shdema waste water pool. Bodies of open water such as Shdema waste water pool should be focal points of any program aimed at monitoring the range expansion of the Kuhl’s pipistrelle in the Negev. 4.2 The effect of pond manipulation on species composition Sharing the same diet, using the foraging mode (flying low above the vegetation) and preferring the micro-habitats surrounding open bodies of water, Kuhl’s pipistrelleare in competition with the other members of their guild (Razgour et al. 2011).The competition is over foraging space more than over drinking area since the frequency of drinking flights in desert-dwelling species is significantly lower compared to Kuhl’s pipistrelle (Razgour et al 2011). I claim that the presence of Kuhl’s pipistrelle may cause competitive exclusion of the desert-dwelling species. This may seem contradictory to Razgour’s conclusion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle reducing their activity at preferable habitats once they are dominated by Rueppell’s pipistrelle and Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle during the spring and fall. My claim is not based on a different data set but on a different perspective. When using community ecology tools and treating Kuhl’s pipistrelle as an integral part of the community, one can calculate competitive loads, as Razgour et al. (2011) did, and conclude that the Kuhl’s pipistrelle are subdued by Rueppell’s pipistrelle and Bodenheimer’s pipistrelle more than vice versa. From my conservation perspective, any competition by the range expanding species Kuhl’s pipistrelle with a local species is a disturbance to the latter. Proceeding along this line, I view any reduction of 62 Kuhl’s pipistrelle activity in its shared habitats with desert-dwelling species as an important part of the mitigation (Wittenberg and Cock 2001) necessary for the conservation of the Negev bat communities. 4.3 The potential use of the grid as a management tool for the Negev bats I have shown in the pool experiment that the drinking of Kuhl’s pipistrelle can be limited and maybe even prevented by a string grid, at least temporarily. The grid did not appear harmful to bats since no collisions with the strings or accidents (falling into the water) were observed, as was also observed by Tuttle et al. (2006). This is a low cost tool and seemingly harmless to other components of the desert ecosystem. The field experiments did not give a conclusive answer to how does manipulation affect the activity patterns of the different species. I found that, in isolated ponds with high proportion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle, the short term manipulation reduced the activity of Kuhl’s pipistrelle compared to the activity of desert dwellers. "Isolated bodies of water" may be a specific case, relevant to only a handful of sites in the Negev. However, these bodies of water, mostly NPA troughs, have high potential to facilitate the further range expansion of the Kuhl’s pipistrelle. The grid cannot be put to use as a management tool until its long-term efficiency is studied over a period of months or years since significant effects of the manipulation were demonstrated only in the last experiment, when treatments 20 minutes long were used. Though seemingly harmless, possible effects on other wildlife should be looked In to as well. Even if this manipulation is proven to be efficient on a large temporal scale, any long term use of the grid should be accompanied by monitoring of bat activity since local micro-habitat characteristics 63 have an important effect on community composition (Razgour et al. 2010) and will determine the outcome of the manipulation at each specific site. 4.4 Mitigation and reconciliation rather than aggressive eradications as the future of invasive species management Kuhl’s pipistrelle has invaded some desert habitats, yet it can hardly be treated as a dangerous pest. On the contrary, as a widely distributed insectivorous bat, which has a strong affiliation to anthropogenic habitats (Korine and Pinshow 2004, Polack et al. 2011), it is invaluable for natural insect control in human habitats. "Bat boxes" have long been used in successful accommodation of different bat species to human habitats (Brittingham and Williams 2000, Long et al. 2004).The knowledge of Kuhl’s pipistrelle’s abundance in urban habitats and its potential benefits as an insect controller have promoted the use of roosting boxes designed for Kuhl’s pipistrelle within urban parks in Israel (Herzliya municipality 2009), as has been done similarly with other insectivorous bats (Rohds 2006, Ibanez et al. 2009). Eradication or complete prevention of further expansion of Kuhl’s pipistrelle does not only seem unfeasible (Section 4.1), but also undesirable in certain areas. The strict classical methodology suggests that the ultimate goal of management, when it comes to invasive species, is to turn back the clock and restore former species composition expansion (Wittenberg and Cock 2001, Simberloff 2010). This may be utopian, and in the real world, it is rarely achieved (Genovesi 2005). A different perspective towards the management of species' composition was suggested by Rosenzweig (2003, 2005). Promoting what he calls Reconciliation Ecology, he shows how nature reserves are too small to maintain biodiversity, due to the log-linear relationship between area and 64 species richness. For this reason, the classical preservation of nature reserves cannot prevent the possible coming mass extinctions, and the only way to save biodiversity is by reconciling as many species as we can within human developed areas. Adopting the concept of reconciliation to my study species, conservation of desert-dwelling bats will not be guaranteed by classical protection of nature reserves in the Negev, since current and future development will harm it by facilitating competing invaders. Allocating conservation resources and research towards the development of open bodies of water, that will prevent Mediterranean bats from drinking, and thus reduce the competition with desert-dwelling bats can help sustaining biodiversity. By focusing on mitigation of the natural bat communities with the outcomes of anthropogenic development in the Negev, I believe there will be room for all species, without reducing the valuable enterprise of human settlement in the Negev. This may well be a better approach rather than tilting at windmills to prevent habitat loss, when dealing with the challenges that human development presents to conservation. Let us invest conservation resources in mitigation of the invaded ecosystems, instead of repeatedly failing to prevent the spread of species into new natural habitats, and then unsuccessfully trying to eradicate them once they have established. 65 5 Literature Cited Adams, R.A. and Thibault, K.M. 2006.Temporal resource partitioning by bats at water holes. Journal of Zoology 270: 466-472. Andrew, N.G., Lesicka, L.M. and Bleich, V.C. 1997. An improved fence design to protect water sources for native ungulates. Wildlife Society Bulletin 4: 823-825. Appleton, C. 2003. The effect of building work on bats: ten case studies. The National Trust.CD.87 p. Arlettaz, R. 1999. Habitat selection as a major resource partitioning mechanism between the two sympatric sibling bat species Myotis myotis and Myotis blythii. Journal of Animal Ecology 68: 460-471. Arlettaz, R. 1996. Feeding behaviour and foraging strategy of free-living mouse-eared bats, Myotis myotis and Myotis blythii. Animal Behaviour 51: 1-11. Arlettaz, R., Godat, S. and Meyer, H. 2000. Competition for food by expanding pipistrelle bat populations (Pipistrellus pipistrellus) might contribute to the decline of lesser horseshoe bats (Rhinolophus hipposideros).Biological Conservation 93:55-60. Avigdor, Y. 2004. South county district plan, change no. 42 – The wine route (in Hebrew). Israel ministry of interior. Available online at: http://mavat.moin.gov.il/MavatPS/ Forms/SV4.aspx?tid=4&pid=99003072 Baagøe, H. 1986. Summer occurrence of Vespertilio murinus Linné, 1758 and Eptesicus serotinus (Schreber, 1780)(Chiroptera, Mammalia) on Zealand, Denmark, based on records of roosts and registrations with bat detectors. Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums in Wien 88: 281-291. Benda, P., Dietz, C., Andreas, M., Hotovy, J., Lucan, R., Maltby, A., Meakin, K., Truscott, J. and Vallo, P. 2008. Bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera) of the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East. Part 6.Bats of Sinai (Egypt) with some taxonomic, ecological and echolocation data on that fauna. Acta Societatis Zoologicae Bohemicae 72:1-103. 66 Berger‐Tal, O., Berger‐Tal, R., Korine, C., Holderied, M. and Fenton, M. 2008.Echolocation calls produced by Kuhl's pipistrelles in different flight situations. Journal of Zoology 274: 59-64. Betts, B.J. 1998. Roosts used by maternity colonies of silver-haired bats in northeastern Oregon. Journal of Mammalogy.79:643-650. BioGIS. 2012. Israel Biodiversity Information System. [http://www.biogis.huji.ac.il] Briggs, P. 2004. Effect of barn conversion on bat roost sites in Hertfordshire, England. Mammalia 68:353-364. Brittingham M.C. and Williams L.M. 2000. Bat Boxes as Alternative Roosts for Displaced Bat Maternity Colonies. Wildlife Society Bulletin 28:197-207 Brooks, M., Matchett, J. and Berry, K. 2006.Effects of livestock watering sites on alien and native plants in the Mojave Desert, USA. Journal of Arid Environments 67:125147. Brown, J.R. and Carter, J. 1998. Spatial and temporal patterns of exotic shrub invasion in an Australian tropical grassland. Landscape Ecology 13: 93-102. Ciechanowski, M. 2002. Community structure and activity of bats (Chiroptera) over different water bodies. Mammalian Biology-Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 67:276285. Clout, M.N. and Russell, J.C. 2008.The invasion ecology of mammals: a global perspective Wildlife Research 35:180-184. Dolev, A. and Perevolotsky, A. (eds) 2002, The red book: Vertebrates in Israel, Magnes, Jerusalem. Dukes, J.S. and Mooney, H.A. 2004. Disruption of ecosystem processes in western North America by invasive species. Revista Chilena De Historia Natural 77: 411-437. Ellison, L.E., Wunder, M.B., Jones, C.A., Mosch, C., Navo, K.W., Peckham, K., Burghardt, J.E., Annear, J., West, R. and Siemers, J. 2003. Colorado bat conservation plan.Colorado Committee of the Western Bat Working Group, . 67 Feldman, R., Whitaker, J.O. and Yom-Tov, Y. 2000.Dietary composition and habitat use in a desert insectivorous bat community in Israel. Acta chiropterologica 2:15-22. Fenton, M.B. 1970. A technique for monitoring bat activity with results obtained from different environments in southern Ontario.Canadian journal of zoology 48:847851. Gaston, K.J. 2000.Global patterns in biodiversity. Nature 405:220-227. Genovesi, P. 2005, Eradications of invasive alien species in Europe: a review. Biological Invasions 7:127-133. Greif, S. and Siemers, B.M. 2010. Innate recognition of water bodies in echolocating bats. Nature Communications1:107. Griffin, M. 1998. The species diversity, distribution and conservation of Namibian mammals. Biodiversity and Conservation7:483-494. Grindal, S.D., Morissette, J.L. and Brigham, R.M. 1999. Concentration of bat activity in riparian habitats over an elevational gradient. Canadian journal of zoology 77:972977. Gumm, J., Snekser, J., Leese, J., Little, K., Leiser, J., Imhoff, V., Westrick, B. and Itzkowitz, M. 2011.Management of interactions between endangered species using habitat restoration. Biological Conservation 144:2171-2176. Hammer, Ø., Harper, D.A.T., and P. D. Ryan, 2001. PAST: Paleontological Statistics Software Package for Education and Data Analysis. Palaeontologia Electronica 4: 9-13. Harvey, M.J., Altenbach, J.S. and Best, T.L. 1999. Bats of the United States. Arkansas Game and Fish Commission. Arkansas. Hawlena, D. and Bouskila, A. 2006. Land management practices for combating desertification cause species replacement of desert lizards. Journal of Applied Ecology 43:701-709. Hayes, J.P. 1997. Temporal variation in activity of bats and the design of echolocationmonitoring studies. Journal of mammalogy 78:514-524. 68 Herzliya municipality, Spokesman department. 2009 חיסול:פתרון אקולוגי בפארק הרצליה חרקים מזיקים באמצעות עטלפי חרקיםAvailable at: http://www.herzliya.muni.il/pdf/hodaa-24336.pdf (In Hebrew). Hill, J.E. and Smith, J.D. 1984, Bats: a natural history, British Museum (Natural History). Hillel, D. and Tadmor, N. 1962, Water Regime and Vegetation in the Central Negev Highlands of Israel. Ecology 43:33-41 Holderied, M.W., Korine, C., Fenton, M.B., Parsons, S., Robson, S. and Jones, G. 2005.Echolocation call intensity in the aerial hawking bat Eptesicus bottae (Vespertilionidae) studied using stereo videogrammetry. Journal of Experimental Biology 208:13-21. Israel Meteorology Service, Climate information. Available at: http://www.ims.gov.il/ IMSEng/CLIMATE/ (accessed September 2011) Jackrel, S.L. and Matlack, R.S. 2010. Influence of Surface Area, Water Level and Adjacent Vegetation on Bat Use of Artificial Water Sources. The American Midland Naturalist1 64:74-79. Korine, C., Izhaki, I. and Arad, Z. 1999. Is the Egyptian fruit-bat Rousettus aegyptiacus a pest in Israel? An analysis of the bat's diet and implications for its conservation. Biological Conservation 88:301-306. Korine, C. and Pinshow, B. 2004. Guild structure, foraging space use, and distribution in a community of insectivorous bats in the Negev Desert. Journal of zoology 262:187196. Krutzsch, P.H. 1954. Notes on the habits of the bat, Myotis californicus. Journal of mammalogy 35:539-545. Kunz, T.H. 1973. Resource utilization: temporal and spatial components of bat activity in central Iowa. Journal of mammalogy 54:14-32. Kurta, A. and Teramino, J.A. 1992. Bat community structure in an urban park. Ecography 15:257-261. 69 Lang, A.B., Kalko, E.K.V., Römer, H., Bockholdt, C. and Dechmann, D.K.N. 2006. Activity levels of bats and katydids in relation to the lunar cycle. Oecologia 146: 659-666. Larsen, R.T., Bissonette, J.A., Flinders, J.T. and Robinson, A.C. 2011. Does small‐perimeter fencing inhibit mule deer or pronghorn use of water developments?.The Journal of Wildlife Management 75: 1417–1425. Lobos, G., Ferres, M. and Palma, R.E. 2005. Presence of the invasive genera Mus and Rattus in natural areas in Chile: an environmental and epidemiological risk. Revista Chilena De Historia Natural 78:113-124. Long R, Kiser W, Kiser S. 2006. Well-placed bat houses can attract bats to Central Valley farms. California Agriculture 60:91-94. Martin, K.W., Puckette, W.L.,Hensley, S.L., Leslie Jr, D.M. 2000. Internal cave gating as a means of protecting cave-dwelling bat populations in eastern Oklahoma.Proceedings of the Oklahoma Academy of Science. 80:133-137 Mazor, E. 2001.Harmonizing Mitzpe Ramon with the surrounding nature. The Makhteshim country: a laboratory of nature: geological and ecological studies in the desert region of Israel, Edited by Krasnov B. and Mazor E. 393p. Pensoft publishers, Sofia. McClelland, P. 2002. Eradication of Pacific rats (Rattus exulans) from Whenua Hou Nature Reserve (Codfish Island), Putauhinu and Rarotoka Islands, New Zealand. Turning the tide: the eradication of invasive species: proceedings of the International Conference on Eradication of Island Invasives IUCN, 173p. Meteorology Unit, Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research. Desert meteorology. Available at http://www.bgu.ac.il/BIDR/research/phys/meteorology/(accessed September 2011). Mysłajek, R.W., Kurek, K., Szura, C., Nowak, S. and Orysiak, P. 2007. Bats (Chiroptera) of the Silesian Beskid Mountains. Fragmenta Faunistica 50:77-85. 70 Nicholls, B. and Racey, P. 2006. Contrasting home-range size and spatial partitioning in cryptic and sympatric pipistrelle bats. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 61:131142. Norberg, U.M. and Rayner, J. 1987. Ecological morphology and flight in bats (Mammalia; Chiroptera): wing adaptations, flight performance, foraging strategy and echolocation. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences, , pp. 335-427. Noy-Meir, I. 1973.Desert ecosystems: environment and producers. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 4:25-51. O'Brien, C.S., Waddell, R.B., Rosenstock, S.S. and Rabe, M.J. 2006. Wildlife use of water catchments in southwestern Arizona.Wildlife Society Bulletin 34:582-591. O'Farrell, M.J. and Bradley, W.G. 1970. Activity patterns of bats over a desert spring. Journal of Mammalogy 51:18-26. Polak, T., Korine, C., Yair, S. and Holderied, M.W. 2011.Differential effects of artificial lighting on flight and foraging behaviour of two sympatric bat species in a desert. Journal of Zoology, 285: 21-27. Pool, D.R. and Coes, A.L. 1999. Hydrogeologic investigations of the Sierra Vista subbasin of the Upper San Pedro river basin, Cochise county, southeast Arizona.US Geological Survey Water-resources Investigations Report 99, 41p. Portnov, B.A. and Safriel, U.N. 2004.Combating desertification in the Negev: dryland agriculture vs. dryland urbanization. Journal of Arid Environments 56:659-680. Qumsiyeh, M.B. 1985, The bats of Egypt, Texas Tech Press (Lubbock, Tex.). Rabe, M.J., Morrell, T.E., Green, H., deVos Jr, J.C. and Miller, C.R. 1998.Characteristics of ponderosa pine snag roosts used by reproductive bats in northern Arizona. The Journal of wildlife management 62:612-621. Ragab, R. and Prudhomme, C. 2002. SW: Soil and Water* 1:Climate Change and Water Resources Management in Arid and Semi-arid Regions: Prospective and Challenges for the 21st Century. Biosystems Engineering 81: 3-34. 71 Razgour, O., Korine, C. and Saltz, D. 2010. Pond characteristics as determinants of species diversity and community composition in desert bats. Animal Conservation 13: 505-513. Razgour, O., Korine, C. and Saltz, D. 2011. Does interspecific competition drive patterns of habitat use in desert bat communities?. Oecologia 167:1-10. Riskin, D.K. 2009. Pipistrellus bodenheimeri. Mammalian Species 651:1–3. Rosenstock, S.S., Rabe, M.J., O'Brien, C.S. and Waddell, R.B. 2004. Studies of wildlife water developments in southwestern Arizona: wildlife use, water quality, wildlife diseases, wildlife mortalities, and influences on native pollinators. Arizona Game and Fish Department, Research Branch Technical Guidance Bulletin 8:1-15. Rosenstock, S.S., Ballard, W.B. and Devos, J.C. 1999. Viewpoint: Benefits and impacts of wildlife water developments. Journal of Range Management 52: 302-311. Russo, D. and Jones, G. 2003. Use of foraging habitats by bats in a Mediterranean area determined by acoustic surveys: conservation implications. Ecography 26:197-209. Rydell, J. 1989. Feeding activity of the northern bat Eptesicus nilssoni during pregnancy and lactation. Oecologia 80:562-565. Rydell, J 1992.Exploitation of insects around Streetlamps by bats in Sweden.Functional Ecology6:744-750. Rydell, J., Bushby, A., Cosgrove, C.C. and Racey, P.A. 1994.Habitat use by bats along rivers in north-east Scotland. Folia Zoologica 43:417-424. Saltz, D. and Rubenstein, D.I. 1995. Population-dynamics of a reintroduced Asiatic wild ass (Equus hemionus) herd. Ecological Applications 5:327-335. Schmidt, C.A. 2003. Conservation Assessment for the silver-haired bat in the Black Hills National Forest, South Dakota and Wyoming .US Department of Agriculture. 21p. Schnitzler, H.U., Moss, C.F. and Denzinger, A. 2003. From spatial orientation to food acquisition in echolocating bats. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 18:386-394. Seidman, V.M. and Zabel, C.J. 2001. Bat activity along intermittent streams in northwestern California. Journal of Mammalogy82:738-747. 72 Shalmon B. 2010. עטלפי ישראל – תמונת מצב לסיכום העשור, Ecology and environment 1:5154 (in Hebrew). Siemers, B.M., Stilz, P. and Schnitzler, H.U. 2001.The acoustic advantage of hunting at low heights above water: behavioural experiments on the European 'trawling bats' Myotis capaccinii, M. dasycneme and M. daubentonii. Journal of Experimental Biology 204:3843-3854. Simberloff, D. 2010. Chapter 7: Invasive species. Conservation Biology for All, Sodhi N. S. and Ehrlich P.R.Oxford press, Oxford. p. 131-153. Sparks, D.W., Ritzi, C.M., Duchamp, J.E. and Whitaker,J.O. Jr. 2005.Foraging habitat of the Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis) at an urban-rural interface. Journal of Mammalogy 86:713-718. Stromberg, J. C., R. Tiller, and B. Richter (1996), Effects of ground water decline on riparian vegetation of semiarid regions: The San Pedro,Arizona, Ecol. Appl. 6:113131. Stromberg, J.C. 2001.Restoration of riparian vegetation in the south-western United States: importance of flow regimes and fluvial dynamism. Journal of Arid Environments 49:17-34. Stromberg, J.C., Tiller, R. and Richter, B. 1996. Effects of groundwater decline on riparian vegetation of semiarid regions: the San Pedro, Arizona. Ecological Applications 6:113-131. Swartz, S.M., Bishop, K. and Aguirre, I.M.F. 2004. Dynamic complexity of wing form in bats: implications for flight performance. Functional and evolutionary ecology of bats. Oxford Press, Oxford. p.110-144. Swift, S.M. 1980. Activity patterns of pipistrelle bats (Pipistrellus pipistrellus) in northeast Scotland. Journal of Zoology 190:285-295. Tal, A. 2008. Space matters: Historic drivers and turning points in Israel’s open space protection policy. Israel Studies 13:119-151. Tidemann, C.R. 2001. Mitigation of the impact of mynas on biodiversity and public amenity Australian National University, School of Resources, Environment 73 and Society. Tuttle, S.R., Chambers, C.L. and Theimer, T.C. 2006.Potential effects of livestock watertrough modifications on bats in northern Arizona. Wildlife Society Bulletin 34:602608 Vaughan, N., Jones, G. and Harris, S. 1996. Effects of sewage effluent on the activity of bats (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) foraging along rivers. Biological Conservation78: 337-343. Vaughan, N., Jones, G. and Harris, S. 1997. Habitat use by bats (Chiroptera) assessed by means of a broad-band acoustic method. Journal of Applied Ecology 34:716-730. Wai-Ping, V. and Fenton, M.B. 1989.Ecology of spotted bat (Euderma maculatum) roosting and foraging behavior. Journal of Mammalogy 70:617-622. Waldien, D.L. 1998. Characteristics and spatial relationships of day-roosts and activity areas of female long-eared myotis (Myotis evotis) in western Oregon. . Walsh, A.L. and Harris, S. 1996. Foraging habitat preferences of vespertilionid bats in Britain.Journal of Applied Ecology33: 508-518. Ward, D. and Olsvig-Whittaker, L. 1993. Plant species diversity at the junction of two desert biogeographic zones. Biodiversty Letter. 1:172–185 Ward, D., Saltz, D. and Olsvig-Whittaker, L. 2000. Distinguishing signal from noise: long-term studies of vegetation in Makhtesh Ramon erosion cirque, Negev desert, Israel. Plant Ecology 150:27-36. Webb, P., Speakman, J. and Racey.P. 1995. Evaporative water loss in two sympatric species of vespertilionid bat, Plecotus auritus and Myotis daubentoni: relation to foraging mode and implications for roost site selection, Journal of Zoology 235:269278. Weitzel, N.H. 1988. Nest-site competition between the European starling and native breeding birds in northwestern Nevada.The Condor 90: 515-517. Wermundsen, T. 2010. Bat habitat requirements: implications for land use planning. Department of Forest Sciences Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry University of Helsinki. Vantaa. 49 p. 74 Whitaker J.O. Jr., Shalmon, B. and Kunz, T.H. 1994. Food and feeding habits of insectivorous bats from Israel. Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 59:74-81. Wilcox, C. and Donlan, C.J. 2007. Compensatory mitigation as a solution to fisheries bycatch-biodiversity conservation conflicts. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 5:325-331. Williams, C.B. 1961. Studies in the effect of weather conditions on the activity and abundance of insect populations. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences 244:331-378. Wittenberg, R.and Cock, M.J.W. (2001) Invasive alien species. How to address one of the greatest threats to biodiversity: A toolkit of best prevention and management practices. CAB International, Wallingford, Oxon, UK. Yom-Tov, Y. 1993.Character displacement among the insectivorous bats of the Dead Sea area. Journal of Zoology, London 230:347-356. Yom-Tov, Y. and Kadmon, R. 1998. Analysis of the distribution of insectivorous bats in Israel. Diversity and Distributions4:63-70. Yom-Tov, Y. and Mendelssohn, H. 1988.Changes in the distribution and abundance of vertebrates in Israel during the 20th century. Monographiae Biologicae 62:515-547. Zelenova N. and Yosef R. 2003: Bats in the Eilat region (Israel), spring 2002. Nyctalus (Neue Folge) 9:57–60