Skip to main content

Supplemental Results from: Using mobile acoustic monitoring and false-positive N-mixture models to estimate bat abundance and population trends

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2012-05-01
End Date
2020-08-31

Citation

Udell, B.J., Straw, B.R., Loeb, S.C., Irvine, K.M., Thogmartin, W.E., Lausen, C.L., Reichard, J.D., Coleman, J.T.H., Cryan, P., Frick, W.F., and Reichert, B.E., 2024, Supplemental Results from: Using mobile acoustic monitoring and false-positive N-mixture models to estimate bat abundance and population trends: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9WYSBBN.

Summary

These data contain the supplementary results corresponding with the journal article: Using mobile acoustic monitoring and false-positive N-mixture models to estimate bat abundance and population trends by Udell et al. (2024) in Ecological Monographs. These results contain the findings from the North American Bat Monitoring Program's (NABat) "Summer Abundance Status and Trends" analyses which used mobile transect acoustic data for three species (tricolored bat, little brown bat, and big brown bat). Data from the entire summer season (May 1–Aug 31) were used in the modeling process. Here, tabular data for each species include predictions (with uncertainty) of relative abundance (and trends over time) in the summer maternity season (May1 [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

Grid_totchange_2012_2020_by_species.csv 9.03 MB text/csv
Gridcell_lambda_per_year_EPFU.csv 29.68 MB text/csv
Gridcell_lambda_per_year_MYLU.csv 30.58 MB text/csv
Gridcell_lambda_per_year_PESU.csv 21.46 MB text/csv
Range_lambda_avg_year_by_species.csv 1.76 KB text/csv
Range_trends_by_species.csv 1.82 KB text/csv
Region_lambda_avg_year_by_species.csv 106.57 KB text/csv
Region_trends_by_species.csv 110.02 KB text/csv
Transect_M_per_year_by_species.csv 2.74 MB text/csv

Purpose

NABat status and trend information is intended to inform conservation decision making, leading to the long-term viability of bat populations across the continent. These data were provided to support decision making for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Bat relative abundance is a key measure of species abundance and habitat use in the summer. Some potential uses of these data include: visualizing grid cell level predictions of species relative abundance, or using predictions to determine areas of (relatively) higher population density. These data will also be used to construct interactive dashboards and summary materials. Note these results can be cross-referenced to the geospatial data for the NABat 10km 'knitted' grid, which is available on ScienceBase (see related external resources).

Map

Communities

  • Fort Collins Science Center (FORT)
  • USGS Data Release Products

Tags

Provenance

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9WYSBBN

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...