Abstract

In this study, we investigated how Little Brown Myotis (Myotis lucifugus), North America's northernmost bat species, adjusted to variable spring and autumn conditions and very little darkness during the boreal summer. We recorded bat activity around Anchorage and the lower Matanuska-Susitna Valley, Alaska. Initiation of bat activity in the spring varied among years and was affected by minimum nightly temperatures in late April and, to a lesser extent, precipitation. Cessation of bat activity in the autumn was consistent among years, with a weak association with early-October minimum temperature. During summer, bat activity was highest on warm, clear nights, but was reduced by wind or rain. Bat activity was positively related to open water and forest cover and negatively related to human development. Most bat activity occurred between sunset and sunrise, even during very short nights in mid-summer. Although there was some activity prior to sunset, bat activity after sunrise was very rare. Pre-sunset bat activity was almost exclusively at sites with high forest cover. After sunset, moderately forested sites were also used, but sites with little forest cover were rarely used before or after sunset.

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