Author:
Baudinette RV,Wells RT,Sanderson KJ,Clark B
Abstract
A 2-year study of Bat and Robertson caves in south-eastern South Australia provided information
on the microclimatic conditions in a maternity cave of the bat Miniopterus schreibersii. The
study also monitored changes in the temperature and humidity conditions in what is believed to
be a former maternity site, Robertson Cave, following restoration of the damaged dome. The
maternity cave, Bat Cave, was characterised by mild hypoxic and hypercapnic conditions, high
relative humidity, and temperatures in the roosting area of around 30°C. Accumulated guano
deposits had some areas of heat generation, but the bats themselves appeared to be the primary
modifiers of their own microenvironment. To support this finding, the recapping of Robertson
Cave resulted in high humidities and a narrow range of temperature fluctuations; however, the
temperature never reached the levels seen in Bat Cave. Our conclusion that the heat production of
the bats themselves is the prime factor affecting microclimatic conditions necessary for breeding
may relate to the observation that few maternity sites serve large and widespread populations of
this species.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
31 articles.
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