Ramos-H Daniel, Marín Ganesh, Cafaggi Daniela, Sierra-Durán Cárol, Romero-Ruíz Aarón, Medellín Rodrigo A
Laboratorio de Ecología y Conservación de Vertebrados Terrestres, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Coyoacán, Mexico City 04510, Mexico.
School of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85719, United States.
J Mammal. 2024 May 3;105(4):823-837. doi: 10.1093/jmammal/gyae027. eCollection 2024 Aug.
Although Mexico holds the southernmost hibernating bats in North America, information on winter behavior and hibernacula microclimate use of temperate Mexican bats is limited. We studied hibernating bats at high altitudes (>1,000 m a.s.l.) in northern and central Mexico during 5 consecutive winters. Our aims were to document and describe the hibernacula, winter behavior (such as abundance and roost pattern), and microclimates (estimated as adjacent substrate temperature) of cave-hibernating bats in Mexico. We found 78 hibernacula and 6,089 torpid bats of 10 vespertilionid species, increasing by over 50% the number of cave-hibernating bat species and quadrupling the number of hibernacula for Mexico. Hibernacula were at altitudes between 1,049 and 3,633 m a.s.l., located in 3 mountain ranges, mainly in oak and conifer forests. was the most common species, followed by and . We recorded the adjacent substrate temperatures from 9 species totaling 1,106 torpid bats and found differences in microclimate use among the 3 most common species. In general, abundance of torpid bats in our region of study was similar to those in the western United States, with aggregations of tens to a few hundred individuals per cave, and was lower than in the eastern United States where a cave may hold thousands of individuals. Knowledge of bat hibernation is crucial for developing conservation and management strategies on current conditions while accommodating environmental changes and other threats such as emerging diseases.
尽管墨西哥拥有北美最南端的冬眠蝙蝠,但关于墨西哥温带蝙蝠冬季行为和冬眠场所小气候利用的信息却很有限。我们在连续5个冬季对墨西哥北部和中部高海拔地区(海拔>1000米)的冬眠蝙蝠进行了研究。我们的目的是记录和描述墨西哥洞穴冬眠蝙蝠的冬眠场所、冬季行为(如数量和栖息模式)以及小气候(以相邻基质温度估算)。我们发现了78个冬眠场所和10种夜蛾科蝙蝠的6089只蛰伏蝙蝠,使墨西哥洞穴冬眠蝙蝠的种类增加了50%以上,冬眠场所的数量增加了两倍。冬眠场所位于海拔1049至3633米之间,分布在3个山脉,主要在橡树林和针叶林中。 是最常见的物种,其次是 和 。我们记录了9种共1106只蛰伏蝙蝠的相邻基质温度,发现3种最常见物种在小气候利用上存在差异。总体而言,我们研究区域内蛰伏蝙蝠的数量与美国西部相似,每个洞穴有数十到数百只个体聚集,低于美国东部,那里一个洞穴可能容纳数千只个体。了解蝙蝠冬眠对于根据当前状况制定保护和管理策略至关重要,同时要适应环境变化和其他威胁,如新兴疾病。