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首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution >Tree Cover Mediates the Effect of Artificial Light on Urban Bats
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Tree Cover Mediates the Effect of Artificial Light on Urban Bats

机译:树木覆盖物介导人造光对城市蝙蝠的影响

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With urban areas growing worldwide, so does artificial light at night (ALAN) which negatively affects many nocturnal animals, including bats. The response of bats to ALAN ranges from some opportunistic species taking advantage of insect aggregations around street lamps, particularly those emitting ultraviolet (UV) light, to others avoiding lit areas at all. Tree cover has been suggested to mitigate the negative effects of ALAN on bats by shielding areas against light scatter. Here, we investigated the effect of tree cover on the relationship between ALAN and bats in Berlin, Germany. In particular, we asked if this interaction varies with the UV light spectrum of street lamps and also across urban bat species. We expected trees next to street lamps to block ALAN, making the adjacent habitat more suitable for all species, irrespective of the wavelength spectrum of the light source. Additionally, we expected UV emitting lights next to trees to attract insects and thus, opportunistic bats. In summer 2017, we recorded bat activity at 22 green open spaces in Berlin using automated ultrasonic detectors. We analyzed bat activity patterns and landscape variables (number of street lamps with and without UV light emission, an estimate of light pollution and tree cover density around each recording site within different spatial scales) using generalized linear mixed-effects models with a negative binomial distribution. We found a species-specific response of bats to street lamps with and without UV light, providing a more detailed picture of ALAN impacts than simply total light radiance. Moreover, we found that dense tree cover dampened the negative effect of street lamps without UV for open-space foraging bats of the genera Nyctalus, Eptesicus and Vespertilio, yet it amplified the already existing negative or positive effect of street lamps with or without UV on Pipistrellus pipistrellus, P. pygmaeus and Myotis spp.. Our study underpins the importance of minimizing artificial light at night close to vegetation, particularly for bats adapted to spatial complexity in the environment (i.e. clutter-adapted species), and to increase dense vegetation in urban landscape to provide, besides roosting opportunities, protection against ALAN for open-space foraging bats in city landscapes.
机译:随着世界范围内城市面积的增长,夜间人造光(ALAN)的数量也在增加,这对包括蝙蝠在内的许多夜间活动动物产生了负面影响。蝙蝠对ALAN的反应范围从利用机会昆虫聚集在路灯周围的一些机会性物种,特别是那些发出紫外线(UV)的昆虫到完全避开照明区域的其他物种。已经提出通过遮盖区域以防止光散射来减轻树木的覆盖,从而减轻ALAN对蝙蝠的负面影响。在这里,我们研究了树木覆盖对德国柏林ALAN与蝙蝠之间关系的影响。特别是,我们询问这种相互作用是否会随着路灯的紫外线光谱以及城市蝙蝠物种的紫外线光谱而变化。我们预计路灯旁的树木会阻挡ALAN,从而使邻近的栖息地更适合所有物种,而与光源的波长光谱无关。此外,我们预计树木旁的紫外线会吸引昆虫,从而吸引机会性蝙蝠。在2017年夏天,我们使用自动超声波探测器记录了柏林22个绿色开放空间中的蝙蝠活动。我们使用具有负二项式分布的广义线性混合效应模型分析了蝙蝠的活动模式和景观变量(带有和不带有紫外线发光的路灯数量,每个记录站点周围不同空间范围内的光污染和树木覆盖密度的估计) 。我们发现蝙蝠对有或没有紫外光的路灯都有特定的物种响应,从而提供了对ALAN影响的更详细的描述,而不仅仅是总的光辐射。此外,我们发现茂密的树木遮盖物减轻了Nyctalus,Eptesicus和Vespertilio属空地觅食蝙蝠的无紫外线路灯的负面影响,但它放大了已经存在的有紫外线或无紫外线路灯的负面或正面影响。 Pipistrellus pipistrellus,P。pygmaeus和Myotis spp.。我们的研究强调了在接近植被的夜晚最大程度地减少人造光的重要性,特别是对于适应环境中空间复杂性的蝙蝠(即适应杂波的物种),并增加茂密的植被。除了栖身的机会外,城市景观还提供了针对ALAN的保护,以防止城市景观中的空地觅食蝙蝠。

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