Conservation increasingly operates at the landscape scale. For this to be effective, we need landscape scale information on species distributions and the environmental factors that underpin them. Species records are becoming increasingly available via data centres and online portals, but they are often patchy and biased. We demonstrate how such data can yield useful habitat suitability models, using bat roost records as an example. We analysed the effects of environmental variables at eight spatial scales (500 m - 6 km) on roost selection by eight bat species (Pipistrellus pipistrellus, P. pygmaeus, Nyctalus noctula, Myotis mystacinus, M. brandtii, M. nattereri, M. daubentonii, and Plecotus auritus) using the presence-only modelling softwar...
Bats and their reproductive roost sites are strictly protected by legislation in Europe. Although kn...
Predicting species occurrence based upon landscape-scale characteristics is a fundamental goal of ec...
The extent to which a resource (e.g. nest site, food resource) is available and utilised in the wild...
<div><p>Conservation increasingly operates at the landscape scale. For this to be effective, we need...
To develop effective conservation strategies we need to know the ecological drivers of species' dist...
Conservation increasingly operates at the landscape scale. For this to be effective, we need landsca...
Although spatial scale is important for understanding ecological processes and guiding conservation ...
In the UK, four out of 18 bat species are listed on the EU Habitats Directive, including the lesser ...
Context: Unveiling the scale at which organisms respond to habitat features is crucial to understand...
Context Bat conservation in the eastern United States faces threats from white nose syndrome, win...
1. Landscape modification is often considered the principal cause of population decline in many bat ...
Aim: Bats are important components of mammalian biodiversity and strong bioindicators, but their fin...
Bats are the second most speciose order of mammals in the world and perform a myriad of ecosystem fu...
International audienceThe destruction and fragmentation of habitats due to anthropogenic land use ch...
Biodiversity in Britain, along with the rest of the world, is threatened by anthropogenic factors wh...
Bats and their reproductive roost sites are strictly protected by legislation in Europe. Although kn...
Predicting species occurrence based upon landscape-scale characteristics is a fundamental goal of ec...
The extent to which a resource (e.g. nest site, food resource) is available and utilised in the wild...
<div><p>Conservation increasingly operates at the landscape scale. For this to be effective, we need...
To develop effective conservation strategies we need to know the ecological drivers of species' dist...
Conservation increasingly operates at the landscape scale. For this to be effective, we need landsca...
Although spatial scale is important for understanding ecological processes and guiding conservation ...
In the UK, four out of 18 bat species are listed on the EU Habitats Directive, including the lesser ...
Context: Unveiling the scale at which organisms respond to habitat features is crucial to understand...
Context Bat conservation in the eastern United States faces threats from white nose syndrome, win...
1. Landscape modification is often considered the principal cause of population decline in many bat ...
Aim: Bats are important components of mammalian biodiversity and strong bioindicators, but their fin...
Bats are the second most speciose order of mammals in the world and perform a myriad of ecosystem fu...
International audienceThe destruction and fragmentation of habitats due to anthropogenic land use ch...
Biodiversity in Britain, along with the rest of the world, is threatened by anthropogenic factors wh...
Bats and their reproductive roost sites are strictly protected by legislation in Europe. Although kn...
Predicting species occurrence based upon landscape-scale characteristics is a fundamental goal of ec...
The extent to which a resource (e.g. nest site, food resource) is available and utilised in the wild...