Abstract

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 software MaxEnt. Modelling was carried out on a selection of 418 data centre roost records from the Lake District National Park, UK. Target group pseudoabsences were selected to reduce the impact of sampling bias. Multi-scale models, combining variables measured at their best performing spatial scales, were used to predict roosting habitat suitability, yielding models with useful predictive abilities. Small areas of deciduous woodland consistently increased roosting habitat suitability, but other habitat associations varied between species and scales. Pipistrellus were positively related to built environments at small scales, and depended on large-scale woodland availability. The other, more specialist, species were highly sensitive to human-altered landscapes, avoiding even small rural towns. The strength of many relationships at large scales suggests that bats are sensitive to habitat modifications far from the roost itself. The fine resolution, large extent maps will aid targeted decision-making by conservationists and planners. We have made available an ArcGIS toolbox that automates the production of multi-scale variables, to facilitate the application of our methods to other taxa and locations. Habitat suitability modelling has the potential to become a standard tool for supporting landscape-scale decision-making as relevant data and open source, user-friendly, and peer-reviewed software become widely available.

Highlights

  • Urban expansion, transport development and the intensification of agricultural, industrial and forestry practices continue to change the landscape

  • Habitat Suitability Modelling (HSM, or Species Distribution Modelling, SDM) enables species distributions to be predicted over large areas from environmental data and species occurrence records

  • We investigated whether the HSM approach could be used to accurately predict roosting habitat suitability for eight species of bat (P. pipistrellus, P. pygmaeus, P. auritus, M. daubentonii, M. nattereri, M. brandtii, M. mystacinus, and N. noctula) at a fine resolution across the Lake District National Park, NW England, using record centre data

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Summary

Introduction

Transport development and the intensification of agricultural, industrial and forestry practices continue to change the landscape. With ‘natural’ areas reduced to small and isolated fragments in an increasingly hostile matrix, protection must involve maintaining these fragments, and increasing the ecological connectivity between them and improving the landscape mosaic in which they sit [3]. This need for a ‘landscape scale’ conservation strategy is universally acknowledged [4]. Habitat Suitability Modelling (HSM, or Species Distribution Modelling, SDM) enables species distributions to be predicted over large areas from environmental data and species occurrence records. It has been usefully applied using few presence-only data (e.g. [5]), giving it considerable potential in practical conservation, since large presence/absence datasets are frequently unavailable or unreliable and species records are becoming increasingly accessible from record centres and online data portals

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