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Published byDominic Barrett Modified over 9 years ago
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North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat)
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Purpose Create a continental-wide program to monitor bats at local to range-wide scales Provide data to promote effective conservation decision-making and long-term viability of bat populations across the continent.
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Goals Develop and maintain a long-term continental program to monitor bat distributions and indices of abundance at range-wide, regional, and local scales.
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Goals Provide regular analyses and reporting on the status and trends of bat populations to inform managers and policy makers so that they can manage bat populations effectively.
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Some Important Points Best for larger scale analyses But, can be scaled down Long-term nature – On the order of decades
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National State, Federal, Tribal Response Plan Conservation and Recovery Workgroup
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The Process Collaborative International Series of 4 workshop
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Targeted Species 47 Species – Common to US, Canada, Mexico
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Monitoring Methods Acoustic Surveys – Mobile Transects – Stationary Points Colony Counts – Hibernacula – Maternity Colonies
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Sampling Design – 10 x 10 km grid
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Sampling Design- 10 x 10 km grid
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Sampling Design Generalized Randomized Tessellation Stratified (GRTS) Sample Spatially balanced approach Flexible – Grid cells can be dropped for logistical reasons – Grid cells assigned weights or inclusion probabilities – Can include some samples outside design
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Sampling Design Any subset of grid cells is also random and balanced Can “over-sample” selected properties – FS – DoD – NPS – Refuge
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A Few Examples…
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“Over Sampling” a Property
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DoD Cells
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Colony Surveys Hibernacula surveys – Continue current surveys – 2 Independent surveys – Use NABat protocols Data collection Data submission – No need to follow GRTS draw Searching for new colonies – GRTS order may be useful
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Stationary Point Acoustic Sampling 2-4 stationary points 4 nights Preferably 1 point/5 x 5 km quadrant Any type of detector except time- expansion or heterodyne
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Selection of Stationary Point Sites
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Mobile Transect 25-48 km (15-30 mi) long Secondary roads Safe to drive @ 20 mph Assume 1 pass = 1 bat – No or minimal stops – Don’t want to back track on route Variety of habitats Need to record associated lat/longs
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Species Assignments - Acoustics Potentially biggest bottleneck Requires knowledge & expertise Investment of time and personnel
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Species Assignments - Acoustics > 2 ID methods – Auto-ID programs BCID DFA model (Britzke et al. 2011) Echoclass Kaleidoscope Sonobat – Filters (e.g., AnalookW) – Qualitative ID
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Species Assignments - Acoustics Lowest taxon possible Species groups when necessary Some visual verification needed Frequency (kHz) Time
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Data Submission Bat Population Database – https://my.usgs.gov/bpd/ https://my.usgs.gov/bpd/
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Data Submission Data partnerships – Allow NABat access – Control other access
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Data Sheets Ensure all necessary data collected – Acoustic – Colony counts Will develop apps for tablets and smartphones
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Acoustic Data Uploaders Will accept spreadsheets generated by – Echoclass – Kaleidoscope – BCID – Sonobat
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Caveats/Concerns Acoustic identification – Many models, which is correct? – Metadata – Archive original data – Robustness to false +’s and –’s? Unknown hibernacula – Particularly in western NA Better/alternate analyses?
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Analysis & Products General Technical Report – Draft available now – Final on web -- May Analyses – State, regional, and rangewide analysis – Distribution & abundance State of North American Bats Report
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Further Info Laura Ellison – ellisonl@usgs.gov Susan Loeb – sloeb@clemson.edu
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Questions?
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