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urban bat flyway

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Book Chapter
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2011
10.7882/FS.2011.046
EISBN: 978-0-9803272-4-3
... Bat surveys were conducted during 2006 and 2007 in the Willoughby Local Government Area (LGA) in the northern suburbs of Sydney to determine the occurrence and movement of microbats. Based on the frequency of bat detections and the direction of bat movements, two major and five minor bat flyways...
Journal Articles
Journal Articles
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2014) 30 (3): 300–309.
Published: 17 March 2014
... woodland: clavpan/saltmarsh and disturbed habitat. The survey utilized direct and indirect sampling techniques including live-mammal trapping, hair-tubing, spotlighting ultrasonic bat detection, bird census, active searching and predator scat collection. A total of 129 terrestrial vertebrate species (Seven...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2024) 43 (4): 526–544.
Published: 04 October 2024
... sensitivity as a metric for commonly recorded species, as is the case for some bat species (Law et al. 2015), activity was used as an alternative metric for selected bat species and presented at the subplot-level to assess variability among landscape elements (i.e., tracks ( flyways offtracks (riparian...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2022) 42 (4): 985–1013.
Published: 11 November 2022
... at Budderoo National Park on the south coast of New South Wales. Report prepared for NSW NPWS. Hoye, G.A. and Spence, J. 2004. The Large Bent-wing Bat Miniopterus schreibersii in Urban Environments: a survivor? P138-147 in Urban Wildlife: more than meets the eye, edited by Daniel Lunney and Shelley Burgin...
Book
Book Cover Image
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2011
10.7882/9780980327243
EISBN: 978-0-9803272-4-3
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2021) 41 (2): fmi–fmcliv.
Published: 09 April 2021
...). Apart from the exhaustive efforts involved in attending to affected sites, volunteer flying-fox carers simultaneously faced the challenge of rehabilitating large numbers of injured bats (Fig. 1). In NSW alone, there was a minimum estimate of 1,600 flying-foxes taken into care between December 2019...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2024) 43 (4): 1–675.
Published: 04 October 2024
... management and the impacts on urban bird and bat assemblages. Landscape and Urban Planning 153: 28-39. doi: httpsdoi.org/10.1016/j. landurbplan.2016.04.011. Tzoulas, K., Korpela, K., Venn, S., Yli-Pelkonen, V., Ka mierczak, A., Niemela, J. and James, P. 2007. Promoting ecosystem and human health in urban...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2023) 42 (4): 1–1062.
Published: 03 April 2023
... at Budderoo National Park on the south coast of New South Wales. Report prepared for NSW NPWS. Hoye, G.A. and Spence, J. 2004. The Large Bent-wing Bat Miniopterus schreibersii in Urban Environments: a survivor? P138-147 in Urban Wildlife: more than meets the eye, edited by Daniel Lunney and Shelley Burgin...
Journal Articles
Australian Zoologist (2011) 35 (3): 655–678.
Published: 20 October 2011
... for 1 hr/day at 3m deep pool in creek. 5 hours Predator scat searches (non-volant mammals) Collection of mammalian predator scats from across study area. Analysis by scat specialist Barbara Triggs. 104 predator scats Harp-trapping (microchiropteran bats) Harp-trap set across likely flyway for 2...
Book
Book Cover Image
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2012
10.7882/9780980327250
EISBN: 978-0-9803272-6-7
Book
Book Cover Image
Series: Other RZS NSW Publications
Publisher: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Published: 01 January 2004
10.7882/9780958608589
EISBN: 978-0-9586085-8-9