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Effects of habitat fragmentation on the bats of Kakamega Forest, western Kenya

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dc.contributor.author Paul W. Webala
dc.contributor.author Jeremiah Mwaura
dc.contributor.author Joseph M. Mware
dc.contributor.author George G. Ndiritu
dc.contributor.author Bruce D. Patterson
dc.date.accessioned 2019-08-20T12:18:51Z
dc.date.available 2019-08-20T12:18:51Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/8944
dc.description.abstract Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to biodiversity worldwide, and little is known about their effects on bats in Africa. We investigated effects of forest fragmentation on bat assemblages at Kakamega Forest, western Kenya, examining captures at edge and interior locations in three forest fragments (Buyangu, 3950 ha; Kisere, 400 ha; and Malava, 100 ha) varying in forest area and human-use regimes. Basal area, canopy cover, tree density and intensity of human use were used as predictors of bat abundance and species richness. A total of 3456 mistnet hours and 3168 harp-trap hours resulted in the capture of 4983 bats representing 26 species, eight families and four foraging ensembles (frugivores, forest-interior insectivores, forest-edge insectivores and open-space insectivores). Frugivores were frequently captured at the edges of the larger, better-protected forests, but also in the interior of the smaller, more open fragment. Forest-interior insectivores and narrow-space foragers predominated in the interiors of larger fragments but avoided the smallest one. Forest specialists showed positive associations with forest variables (canopy cover, basal area and tree density), whereas frugivores responded positively to the human-use indicators. On these bases, specialist species appear to be especially vulnerable to forest fragmentation. en_US
dc.title Effects of habitat fragmentation on the bats of Kakamega Forest, western Kenya en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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