Data from: Differences in seasonal survival suggest species-specific reactions to climate change in two sympatric bat species
Long-lived animals with a low annual reproductive output need a long time to recover from population crashes and are, thus, likely to face high extinction risk, if the current global environmental change will increase mortality rates. To aid conservation of those species, knowledge on the variabilit...
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Zusammenfassung: | Long-lived animals with a low annual reproductive output need a long time
to recover from population crashes and are, thus, likely to face high
extinction risk, if the current global environmental change will increase
mortality rates. To aid conservation of those species, knowledge on the
variability of mortality rates is essential. Unfortunately, however,
individual-based multi-year data sets that are required for that have only
rarely been collected for free-ranging long-lived mammals. Here, we used a
five-year data set comprising activity data of 1445 RFID-tagged
individuals of two long-lived temperate zone bat species, Natterer’s bats
(Myotis nattereri) and Daubenton’s bats (Myotis daubentonii), at their
joint hibernaculum. Both species are listed as being of high conservation
interest by the European Habitats Directive. Applying mixed-effects
logistic regression, we explored seasonal survival differences in these
two species which differ in foraging strategy and phenology. In both
species, survival over the first-winter of an individual’s life was much
lower than survival over subsequent winters. Focussing on adults only,
seasonal survival patterns were largely consistent with higher winter and
lower summer survival but varied in its level across years in both
species. Our analyses, furthermore, highlight the importance of
species-specific time periods for survival. Daubenton’s bats showed a much
stronger difference in survival between the two seasons than Natterer’s
bats. In one exceptional winter, the population of Natterer’s bats
crashed, while the survival of Daubenton’s bats declined only moderately.
While, our results confirm the general seasonal survival pattern typical
for hibernating mammals with higher winter than summer survival, they also
show that this pattern can be reversed under particular conditions.
Overall, our study points towards a high importance of specific time
periods for population dynamics and suggests species-, population- and age
class-specific responses to global climate change. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.b107q48 |