Adequate roost sites for hibernacula are an important factor in the distribution and abundance of temperate bat species and knowledge of specific hibernacula is necessary to make sound management decisions. Caves are recognized as one of the most important roosting sites for bats, yet surveys in caves are uncommon in North America. This paper presents data on the distribution and abundance of bats hibernating in Iowa (U.S.A.) caves and includes new hibernacula records. These are the first published records of bats in Iowa caves in almost 25 years
This project was an investigation of the status of the Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis) in Wisconsin. Th...
The bat fauna of Jewel Cave National Monument in the Black Hills of South Dakota is poorly known. T...
The cave myotis (Myotis velifer) is a cavernicolous bat that ranges northward from Honduras to the s...
Adequate roost sites for hibernacula are an important factor in the distribution and abundance of te...
Adequate roost sites for hibernacula are an important factor in the distribution and abundance of te...
Nineteen caves in the eastern Iowa counties of Dubuque, Jackson, and Jones were surveyed for bat usa...
In the fall and winter of 1958 and 1959 four species of bats, Myotis lucifugus, Myotis sodalis, Epte...
Caves are often essential during hibernation, a sensitive stage in the life cycle of bats. Caves off...
Across the eastern United States, caves historically supported large aggregations of overwintering b...
Efforts to conserve bats in the western United States have long been impeded by a lack of informatio...
Efforts to conserve bats in the western United States have long been impeded by a lack of informatio...
Cave-roosting bats are important to the nutrient-poor cave ecosystem because they import organic mat...
The Northern Long-eared Myotis (Myotis septentrionalis) is known to hibernate in mines and caves, of...
abstract: Desert ecosystems of the southwest United States are characterized by hot and arid climate...
Documentation of autumn and winter roosts of many species of hibernating bats are lacking from weste...
This project was an investigation of the status of the Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis) in Wisconsin. Th...
The bat fauna of Jewel Cave National Monument in the Black Hills of South Dakota is poorly known. T...
The cave myotis (Myotis velifer) is a cavernicolous bat that ranges northward from Honduras to the s...
Adequate roost sites for hibernacula are an important factor in the distribution and abundance of te...
Adequate roost sites for hibernacula are an important factor in the distribution and abundance of te...
Nineteen caves in the eastern Iowa counties of Dubuque, Jackson, and Jones were surveyed for bat usa...
In the fall and winter of 1958 and 1959 four species of bats, Myotis lucifugus, Myotis sodalis, Epte...
Caves are often essential during hibernation, a sensitive stage in the life cycle of bats. Caves off...
Across the eastern United States, caves historically supported large aggregations of overwintering b...
Efforts to conserve bats in the western United States have long been impeded by a lack of informatio...
Efforts to conserve bats in the western United States have long been impeded by a lack of informatio...
Cave-roosting bats are important to the nutrient-poor cave ecosystem because they import organic mat...
The Northern Long-eared Myotis (Myotis septentrionalis) is known to hibernate in mines and caves, of...
abstract: Desert ecosystems of the southwest United States are characterized by hot and arid climate...
Documentation of autumn and winter roosts of many species of hibernating bats are lacking from weste...
This project was an investigation of the status of the Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis) in Wisconsin. Th...
The bat fauna of Jewel Cave National Monument in the Black Hills of South Dakota is poorly known. T...
The cave myotis (Myotis velifer) is a cavernicolous bat that ranges northward from Honduras to the s...