The earth is now subject to climate change and habitat deterioration on unprecedented scales. Monitoring climate change and habitat loss alone is insufficient if we are to understand the effects of these factors on complex biological communities. It is therefore important to identify bioindicator taxa that show measurable responses to climate change and habitat loss and that reflect wider-scale impacts on the biota of interest. We argue that bats have enormous potential as bioindicators: they show taxonomic stability, trends in their populations can be monitored, short- and long-term effects on populations can be measured and they are distributed widely around the globe. Because insectivorous bats occupy high trophic levels, they are sensit...
Biodiversity in Britain, along with the rest of the world, is threatened by anthropogenic factors wh...
Recent years have seen increased attention to bats as an effective bioindicator group for assessing ...
Since we know that some bat populations attain astronomical size, bat conservation may seem inconseq...
The earth is now subject to climate change and habitat deterioration on unprecedented scales. Monito...
Bats show responses to anthropogenic stressors linked to changes in other ecosystem components such ...
Bats are among the most misperceived and undervalued animals on the planet. For wildlife ecologists,...
In the last few decades bats are affected by climate change. Changes in average temperatures affect ...
There are more than 1,100 species of bats, representing nearly 20 % of all species of mammals (Simmo...
For prioritizing conservation actions, it is vital to understand how ecologically diverse species re...
Understanding how species respond to climate change is key to informing vulnerability assessments an...
The decline of biodiversity across the globe has become a central concern in the field of conservati...
Understanding population trends is important in achieving global targets to restore and conserve b...
As ecologists we are tasked with studying the effects of environmental changes on ecosystems, but it...
Order Chiroptera is the second most diverse and abundant order of mammals with great physiological a...
Anthropogenic climate change poses a significant threat to the wellbeing of the planet. Many scienti...
Biodiversity in Britain, along with the rest of the world, is threatened by anthropogenic factors wh...
Recent years have seen increased attention to bats as an effective bioindicator group for assessing ...
Since we know that some bat populations attain astronomical size, bat conservation may seem inconseq...
The earth is now subject to climate change and habitat deterioration on unprecedented scales. Monito...
Bats show responses to anthropogenic stressors linked to changes in other ecosystem components such ...
Bats are among the most misperceived and undervalued animals on the planet. For wildlife ecologists,...
In the last few decades bats are affected by climate change. Changes in average temperatures affect ...
There are more than 1,100 species of bats, representing nearly 20 % of all species of mammals (Simmo...
For prioritizing conservation actions, it is vital to understand how ecologically diverse species re...
Understanding how species respond to climate change is key to informing vulnerability assessments an...
The decline of biodiversity across the globe has become a central concern in the field of conservati...
Understanding population trends is important in achieving global targets to restore and conserve b...
As ecologists we are tasked with studying the effects of environmental changes on ecosystems, but it...
Order Chiroptera is the second most diverse and abundant order of mammals with great physiological a...
Anthropogenic climate change poses a significant threat to the wellbeing of the planet. Many scienti...
Biodiversity in Britain, along with the rest of the world, is threatened by anthropogenic factors wh...
Recent years have seen increased attention to bats as an effective bioindicator group for assessing ...
Since we know that some bat populations attain astronomical size, bat conservation may seem inconseq...