Green roofs provide habitat for urban bats

Understanding bat use of human-altered habitat is critical for developing effective conservation plans for this ecologically important taxon. Green roofs, building rooftops covered in growing medium and vegetation, are increasingly important conservation tools that make use of underutilized space to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: K.L. Parkins, J.A. Clark
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-07-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989415000840
id doaj-bb9fc663d9314a078e5aa1cbbeabfa88
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bb9fc663d9314a078e5aa1cbbeabfa882020-11-24T22:04:17ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942015-07-014C34935710.1016/j.gecco.2015.07.011Green roofs provide habitat for urban batsK.L. ParkinsJ.A. ClarkUnderstanding bat use of human-altered habitat is critical for developing effective conservation plans for this ecologically important taxon. Green roofs, building rooftops covered in growing medium and vegetation, are increasingly important conservation tools that make use of underutilized space to provide breeding and foraging grounds for urban wildlife. Green roofs are especially important in highly urbanized areas such as New York City (NYC), which has more rooftops (34%) than green space (13%). To date, no studies have examined the extent to which North American bats utilize urban green roofs. To investigate the role of green roofs in supporting urban bats, we monitored bat activity using ultrasonic recorders on four green and four conventional roofs located in highly developed areas of NYC, which were paired to control for location, height, and local variability in surrounding habitat and species diversity. We then identified bat vocalizations on these recordings to the species level. We documented the presence of five of nine possible bat species over both roof types: Lasiurus borealis, L. cinereus, L. noctivagans, P. subflavus,andE. fuscus. Of the bat calls that could be identified to the species level, 66% were from L. borealis. Overall levels of bat activity were higher over green roofs than over conventional roofs. This study provides evidence that, in addition to well documented ecosystem benefits, urban green roofs contribute to urban habitat availability for several North American bat species.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989415000840Acoustic monitoringBatsGreen roofUrban ecologyUrban wildlifeUrbanization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K.L. Parkins
J.A. Clark
spellingShingle K.L. Parkins
J.A. Clark
Green roofs provide habitat for urban bats
Global Ecology and Conservation
Acoustic monitoring
Bats
Green roof
Urban ecology
Urban wildlife
Urbanization
author_facet K.L. Parkins
J.A. Clark
author_sort K.L. Parkins
title Green roofs provide habitat for urban bats
title_short Green roofs provide habitat for urban bats
title_full Green roofs provide habitat for urban bats
title_fullStr Green roofs provide habitat for urban bats
title_full_unstemmed Green roofs provide habitat for urban bats
title_sort green roofs provide habitat for urban bats
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2015-07-01
description Understanding bat use of human-altered habitat is critical for developing effective conservation plans for this ecologically important taxon. Green roofs, building rooftops covered in growing medium and vegetation, are increasingly important conservation tools that make use of underutilized space to provide breeding and foraging grounds for urban wildlife. Green roofs are especially important in highly urbanized areas such as New York City (NYC), which has more rooftops (34%) than green space (13%). To date, no studies have examined the extent to which North American bats utilize urban green roofs. To investigate the role of green roofs in supporting urban bats, we monitored bat activity using ultrasonic recorders on four green and four conventional roofs located in highly developed areas of NYC, which were paired to control for location, height, and local variability in surrounding habitat and species diversity. We then identified bat vocalizations on these recordings to the species level. We documented the presence of five of nine possible bat species over both roof types: Lasiurus borealis, L. cinereus, L. noctivagans, P. subflavus,andE. fuscus. Of the bat calls that could be identified to the species level, 66% were from L. borealis. Overall levels of bat activity were higher over green roofs than over conventional roofs. This study provides evidence that, in addition to well documented ecosystem benefits, urban green roofs contribute to urban habitat availability for several North American bat species.
topic Acoustic monitoring
Bats
Green roof
Urban ecology
Urban wildlife
Urbanization
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989415000840
work_keys_str_mv AT klparkins greenroofsprovidehabitatforurbanbats
AT jaclark greenroofsprovidehabitatforurbanbats
_version_ 1725829663200116736