Abstract

AbstractForest composition, structural attributes and the availability of foraging resources strongly determine the duration of roosting and survival of fruit bat species. The quantitative vegetation inventory was applied to examine the quality of two bat species’ [(Cynopterus sphix (in Habitat 1) and Pteropus giganteus (in Habitat 2))] habitats in Northeast India. Five 500 × 10 m (0.5 ha) transects were laid out for each bat species to record and measure all plants with a ≥10 cm girth. The obtained results showed that the dominant plant families in the habitats studied were Fabaceae, Moraceae, Euphorbiaceae and not Myrtaceae, Moraceae, Sapotaceae as potential tropical bat-favoured plant families. We recorded six roosting, 25 foraging trees out of 110 species in Habitat 1 and 10 roosting, 27 foraging trees out of 93 species in Habitat 2. Woody plant density and the basal area significantly differed between the habitats. The arrangement of stems density-girth and density-height classes suggested that matur...

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