BAT COMMUNITIES OF 3 SMALL PSEUDOKARSTIC CAVES IN EASTERN BOHEMIA (CZECH-REPUBLIC)

Authors
Citation
K. Weidinger, BAT COMMUNITIES OF 3 SMALL PSEUDOKARSTIC CAVES IN EASTERN BOHEMIA (CZECH-REPUBLIC), Folia Zoologica, 43(4), 1994, pp. 455-464
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
01397893
Volume
43
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
455 - 464
Database
ISI
SICI code
0139-7893(1994)43:4<455:BCO3SP>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
Bat communities of three small pseudokarstic caves in the Svitavska pa horkatina Highland (Eastern Bohemia, Czech Republic) were investigated by nettings and winter censuses between 1985 to 1992. A total of 821 records of 11 netted species and 1 672 records of 7 over-wintering spe cies were evaluated. M. emarginatus, P. auritus and M. nattereri domin ated in the samples obtained by netting (32, 23, and 19 %, respectivel y). The dominance of M. emarginatus in the sites studied seems to be t he highest found in central Europe. R. hipposideros prevailed in winte ring bat assemblages (94 %), and one of the caves studied appeared to be the most densily occupied hibernaculum of this species in Bohemia. The species diversity index was 2.56 in the total sample obtained by n etting and 0.38 in the assemblage of wintering bats. A netted specimen of M. blythi represented the record of extreme NW edge of the species ' central-European range. The area studied represents a part of a corr idor used for dispersal of certain bat species from southern Moravian lowlands to the Bohemian basin, the reason termophilous species of sou th-European origin were found with local species of European forest or igin. Considerable heterogeneity in bat community composition was obse rved, formed in the period of transitory migrations and/or in winter w ithin a small and geographically closed territory and underground shel ters of a similar type. The results of both methods applied were not c orrelated, and the attractiveness of caves to bats differed in the per iod of transitory migrations and in winter.