SUPPLEMENT 5 – CITATIONS FROM THE LITERATURE REVIEW

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SUPPLEMENT 5 – CITATIONS FROM THE LITERATURE REVIEW
These are the papers from which survival estimates (Table S1) or trait information
(Table S2) were extracted
1
Aguiar, L. M. S., Brito, D. & Machado, R. B. 2010 Do current vampire bat (Desmodus
rotundus) population control practices pose a threat to Dekeyser’s nectar bat's (Lonchophylla
dekeyseri) long-term persistence in the Cerrado? Acta Chiropterologica 12, 275–282.
2.
Amengual, B., Bourhy, H., López-Roig, M. & Serra-Cobo, J. 2007 Temporal dynamics of
European bat Lyssavirus type 1 and survival of Myotis myotis bats in natural colonies. PLoS
One 2, e566.
3.
Baker, G. B., Lumsden, L. F., Dettmann, E. B., Schedvin, N. K., Schulz, M., Watkins, D. &
Jansen, L. 2001 The effect of forearm bands on insectivorous bats (Microchiroptera) in
Australia. Wildl. Res. 28, 229–237.
4.
Beer, J. R. 1955 Survival and movements of banded big brown bats. J. Mammal. 36, 242–248.
5.
Bezem, J. J., Sluiter, J. W. & van Heerdt, P. F. 1960 Population statistics of five species of the
bat genus Myotis and one of the genus Rhinolophus hibernating in the caves of South
Limburg. Arch. Néerlandaises Zool. 13, 511–539.
6.
Boyd, I. & Stebbings, R. 1989 Population changes of brown long-eared bats (Plecotus auritus)
in bat boxes at Thetford Forest. J. Appl. Ecol. 26, 101–112.
7.
Boyles, J. G., Walters, B. L., Whitaker, J. O. & Cope, J. B. 2007 A reanalysis of apparent
survival rates of Indiana myotis (Myotis sodalis). Acta Chiropterologica 9, 127–132.
8.
Bradbury, J. W. & Vehrencamp, S. L. 1976 Social organization and foraging in Emballonurid
bats: I. Field studies. Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 1, 337–381.
9.
Davis, R. B., Herreid, C. F. & Short, H. L. 1962 Mexican free-tailed bats in Texas. Ecol.
Monogr. 32, 311–346.
10. Davis, W. 1966 Population dynamics of the bat Pipistrellus subflavus. J. Mammal. 47, 383–
396.
11. Dinale, G. 1968 Studi di chirotteri Italiani: XI. Statistica di una popolazione de Rhinolophus
euryale rinvenuta alla Grotta Pila 71. Not. del Circ. Speleol. Rom. 13, 13–17.
12. Dwyer, P. D. 1966 The population pattern of Miniopteras schreibersii (Chiroptera) in northeastern New South Wales. Aust. J. Zool. 14, 1073–1137.
13. Elder, W. H. & Gunier, W. J. 1981 Dynamics of a gray bat population (Myotis grisescens) in
Missouri. Am. Midl. Nat. 105, 193–195.
14. Ellison, L. E. 2010 A retrospective survival analysis of Townsend’s big-eared bat
(Corynorhinus townsendii) from Washington State. Northwest. Nat. 91, 172–182.
15. Ellison, L. E., O’Shea, T. J., Neubaum, D. J., Neubaum, M. A., Pearce, R. D. & Bowen, R. A.
2007 A comparison of conventional capture versus PIT reader techniques for estimating
survival and capture probabilities of big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus). Acta Chiropterologica
9, 149–160.
16. Fleming, T. H. 1988 The short-tailed fruit bat. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
17. Frick, W. F., Rainey, W. E. & Pierson, E. D. 2007 Potential effects of environmental
contamination on Yuma myotis demography and population growth. Ecol. Appl. 17, 1213–
1222.
18. Frick, W. F., Reynolds, D. S. & Kunz, T. H. 2010 Influence of climate and reproductive
timing on demography of little brown myotis Myotis lucifugus. J. Anim. Ecol. 79, 128–36.
19. Funakoshi, K. & Uchida, T. 1982 Age composition of summer colonies in the Japanese housedwelling Bat, Pipistrellus abramus. J. Fac. Agric. Kyushu Univ. 27, 55–64.
20. Gardner, A. L., Handley Jr, C. O. & Wilson, D. E. 1991 Survival and relative abundance. In
Demography and natural history of the common fruit bat, Artibeus jamaicensis, on Barro
Colorado Island, Panama (eds C. O. Handley Jr D. E. Wilson & A. L. Gardner), Washington,
D. C.: Smithsionian Contributions to Zoology.
21. Gerell, R. & Lundberg, K. 1990 Sexual differences in survival rates of adult pipistrelle bats
(Pipistrellus pipistrellus) in South Sweden. Oecologia 83, 401–404.
22. Goehring, H. H. 1972 Twenty-year study of Eptesicus fuscus in Minnesota. J. Mammal. 53,
201–207.
23. Hitchcock, H., Keen, R. & Kurta, A. 1984 Survival rates of Myotis leibii and Eptesicus fuscus
in southeastern Ontario. J. Mammal. 65, 126–130.
24. Hoyle, S. D., Pople, A. R. & Toop, G. J. 2001 Mark-recapture may reveal more about ecology
than about population trends: Demography of a threatened ghost bat (Macroderma gigas)
population. Austral Ecol. 26, 80–92.
25. Humphrey, S. R. & Cope, J. B. 1970 Population samples of the evening bat, Nycticeius
humeralis. J. Mammal. 51, 399–401.
26. Humphrey, S. R. & Cope, J. B. 1976 Population ecology of the little brown bat, Myotis
lucifugus, in Indiana and north-central Kentucky. Spec. Publ. Am. Soc. Mammal. 4, 1–79.
27. Humphrey, S. R. & Cope, J. B. 1977 Survival rates of the endangered Indiana bat, Myotis
sodalis. J. Mammal. 58, 32–36.
28. Jolly, S. 1990 The biology of the common sheath-tail bat, Taphozous georgianus (Chiroptera,
Emballonuridae), in central Queensland. Aust. J. Zool. 38, 65–77.
29. Keen, R. & Hitchcock, H. B. 1980 Survival and longevity of the little brown bat (Myotis
lucifugus) in southeastern Ontario. J. Mammal. 61, 1–7.
30. Leigh, E. G. J. & Handley Jr, C. O. 1991 Population estimates. In Demography and natural
history of the common fruit bat, Artebius jamaicensis, on Barro Colorado Island, Panama (eds
C. O. Handley Jr D. E. Wilson & A. L. Gardner), Washington, D. C.: Smithsionian
Contributions to Zoology.
31. Mills, R. S., Barrett, G. W. & Farrell, M. P. 1975 Population dynamics of the big brown bat
(Eptesicus fuscus) in southwestern Ohio. J. Mammal. 56, 591–604.
32. Monadjem, A. 2005 Survival and roost-site selection in the African bat Nycteris thebaica
(Chiroptera: Nycteridae) in Swaziland. Belgian J. Zool. 135, 103–107 (supplement).
33. Neubaum, D. J., Neubaum, M. A., Ellison, L. E. & O’Shea, T. J. 2005 Survival and condition
of big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) after radiotagging. J. Mammal. 86, 95–98.
34. O’Donnell, C. F. J. 2002 Timing of breeding, productivity and survival of long-tailed bats
Chalinolobus tuberculatus (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) in cold-temperate rainforest in New
Zealand. J. Zool. 257, 311–323.
35. O’Shea, T. J., Ellison, L. E., Neubaum, D. J., Neubaum, M. A., Reynolds, C. A. & Bowen, R.
A. 2010 Recruitment in a Colorado population of big brown bats: breeding probabilities, litter
size, and first-year survival. J. Mammal. 91, 418–428.
36. O’Shea, T. J., Ellison, L. E. & Stanley, T. R. 2011 Adult survival and population growth rate
in Colorado big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus). J. Mammal. 92, 433–443.
37. Papadatou, E., Butlin, R. K., Pradel, R. & Altringham, J. D. 2009 Sex-specific roost
movements and population dynamics of the vulnerable long-fingered bat, Myotis capaccinii.
Biol. Conserv. 142, 280–289.
38. Papadatou, E., Ibáñez, C., Pradel, R., Juste, J. & Gimenez, O. 2011 Assessing survival in a
multi-population system: a case study on bat populations. Oecologia 165, 925–33.
39. Papadatou, E. et al. 2012 Comparing survival among species with imperfect detection using
multilevel analysis of mark-recapture data: a case study on bats. Ecography (Cop.). 35, 153–
161.
40. Pearce, R. D. & O’Shea, T. J. 2007 Ectoparasites in an urban population of big brown bats
(Eptesicus fuscus) in Colorado. J. Parasitol. 93, 518–530.
41. Pearson, O. P., Koford, M. R. & Pearson, A. K. 1952 Reproduction of the Lump-Nosed Bat
(Corynorhinus rafinesquei) in California. J. Mammal. 33, 273–320.
42. Pryde, M. A., Lettink, M. & O’Donnell, C. F. J. 2006 Survivorship in two populations of longtailed bats (Chalinolobus tuberculatus) in New Zealand. New Zeal. J. Zool. 33, 85–95.
43. Pryde, M. A., O’Donnell, C. F. J. & Barker, R. J. 2005 Factors influencing survival and longterm population viability of New Zealand long-tailed bats (Chalinolobus tuberculatus):
Implications for conservation. Biol. Conserv. 126, 175–185.
44. Ransome, R. D. 1989 Population changes of Greater horseshoe bats studied near Bristol over
the past twenty-six years. Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 38, 71–82.
45. Ransome, R. D. 1995 Earlier breeding shortens life in female Greater horseshoe bats. Philos.
Trans. R. Soc. London. Ser. B Biol. Sci. 350, 153–161.
46. Rice, D. W. 1957 Life history and ecology of Myotis austroriparius in Florida. J. Mammal.
38, 15–32.
47. Rivers, N. M., Butlin, R. K. & Altringham, J. D. 2006 Autumn swarming behaviour of
Natterer’s bats in the UK: Population size, catchment area and dispersal. Biol. Conserv. 127,
215–226.
48. Schaub, M., Gimenez, O., Sierro, A. & Arlettaz, R. 2007 Use of integrated modeling to
enhance estimates of population dynamics obtained from limited data. Conserv. Biol. 21, 945–
955.
49. Schorcht, W., Bontadina, F. & Schaub, M. 2009 Variation of adult survival drives population
dynamics in a migrating forest bat. J. Anim. Ecol. 78, 1182–90.
50. Sendor, T. & Simon, M. 2003 Population dynamics of the pipistrelle bat: effects of sex, age
and winter weather on seasonal survival. J. Anim. Ecol. 72, 308–320.
51. Sidner, R. 1997 Studies of bats in southeastern Arizona with emphasis on aspects of life
history of Antrozous pallidus and Eptesicus fuscus.
52. Sluiter, J. W., Heerdt, P. F. van & Bezem, J. J. 1956 Population statistics of the bat M.
mystacinus, based on the marking-recapture method. Arch. Néerlandaises Zool. 12, 63–88.
53. Sluiter, J. W., van Heerdt, P. F. & Voute, A. M. 1971 Contribution to the population biology
of the pond bat, Myotis dasycneme (Boie, 1825). Decheniana 18, 1–44.
54. Sripathi, K., Raghuram, H., Rajasekar, R., Karuppudurai, T. & Abraham, S. G. 2004
Population size and survival in the Indian false vampire bat Megaderma lyra. Acta
Chiropterologica 6, 145–154.
55. Stebbings, R. E. 1966 A population study of bats of genus Plecotus. J. Zool. 150, 53–75.
56. Stebbings, R. E. 1970 A comparative study of Plecotus auritus and P. austriacus (Chiroptera,
Vespertilionidae). Bijdr. Tot Dierkd. 40, 91–94.
57. Stevenson, D. E. & Tuttle, M. D. 1981 Survivorship in the endangered gray bat (Myotis
grisescens). J. Mammal. 62, 244–257.
58. Thompson, M. J. A. 1987 Longevity and survival of female pipistrelle bats (Pipistrellus
pipistrellus) on the Vale of York, England. J. Zool. 211, 209–214.
59. Zahn, A. 1999 Reproductive success, colony size and roost temperature in attic-dwelling bat
Myotis myotis. J. Zool. 247, 275–280.
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