Abstract

Simple SummaryOn weekends, people do things differently from weekdays, such as dining at a restaurant, going to a night club, attending a concert or a sporting event, or simply staying up late. These leisure activities in the city can change the environment people live in and can hurt wildlife that also lives in the same city. We recorded bats in the city center and in the city periphery and compared how active bats were. We found that in the city center, bats were less active on weekends than weekdays. The opposite pattern was found in the city periphery. It is possible that bats moved from the city center to the city periphery on weekends. Thus, continuous greenways are important to facilitate bat movements and avoid human–wildlife conflict. City planners can add new parks and/or preserve old-growth vegetation to form the center-to-periphery greenways.In the urban environment, wildlife faces novel human disturbances in unique temporal patterns. The weekend effect describes that human activities on weekends trigger changes in the environment and impact wildlife negatively. Reduced occurrence, altered behaviors, and/or reduced fitness have been found in birds, ungulates, and meso-carnivores due to the weekend effect. We aimed to investigate if urban bat activity would differ on weekends from weekdays. We analyzed year-round bat acoustic monitoring data collected from two sites near the city center and two sites in the residential area/park complex in the city periphery. We constructed generalized linear models and found that bat activity was significantly lower on weekends as compared to weekdays during spring and summer at the site in the open space near the city center. In contrast, during the same seasons, the sites in the city periphery showed increased bat activity on weekends. Hourly bat activity overnight suggested that bats might move from the city center to the periphery on weekends. We demonstrated the behavioral adaptability in urban wildlife for co-existing with human. We recommend that urban planning should implement practices such as adding new greenspaces and/or preserving old-growth vegetation to form continuous greenways from the city center to the city periphery as corridors to facilitate bat movements and reduce possible human-wildlife conflict.

Highlights

  • More than half of the world’s people live in urban areas currently [1]

  • Summer had the highest number of bat passes at all sites except for the University of North Carolina Greensboro (UNCG) woods site, where spring had the highest number of bat passes (Tables 1 and 2)

  • In contrast to sites at Greensboro Science Center (GSC), we found a significant decrease of total bat activity at the UNCG open activity plot showed that the decrease of bat activity occurred throughout the night for both spring and site on Friday and Saturday nights in spring and summer

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Summary

Introduction

More than half of the world’s people live in urban areas currently [1]. It is estimated that urban land cover may triple from 2000 to 2030 globally [2]. Wildlife faces novelties of urban ecosystems that would not be encountered in wildlands. One of the novelties is human disturbances with increased intensity or unique temporal patterns [7,8]. In urban areas human disturbances can be the presence of human (with or without direct interaction with wildlife) or environmental changes caused by human activities [9,10]. Wildlife species that are successful in synurbanization usually have a high tolerance to human disturbances by changing their behaviors [6]. Studies documented behavioral changes reflecting synurbanization such as increased aggression, boldness, and vigilance towards humans and other animals in mammals (e.g., [11,12,13,14]) and reduced singing in response to ambient noise in birds (e.g., [15,16])

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