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15 December 2009 Behavior of Scandinavian Bats during Migration and Foraging at Sea
Ingemar Ahlén, Hans J. Baagøe, Lothar Bach
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Abstract

We studied bats migrating and foraging over the sea by direct observations and automatic acoustic recording. We recorded 11 species (of a community of 18 species) flying over the ocean up to 14 km from the shore. All bats used sonar during migration flights at sea, often with slightly lower frequencies and longer pulse intervals compared to those used over land. The altitude used for migration flight was most often <10 m above sea level. Bats must use other sensory systems for long-distance navigation, but they probably use echoes from the water surface to orient to the immediate surroundings. Both migrant and resident bats foraged over the sea in areas with an abundance of insects in the air and crustaceans in the surface waters. When hunting insects near vertical objects such as lighthouses and wind turbines, bats rapidly changed altitude, for example, to forage around turbine blades. The findings illustrate why and how bats might be exposed to additional mortality by offshore wind power.

Ingemar Ahlén, Hans J. Baagøe, and Lothar Bach "Behavior of Scandinavian Bats during Migration and Foraging at Sea," Journal of Mammalogy 90(6), 1318-1323, (15 December 2009). https://doi.org/10.1644/09-MAMM-S-223R.1
Published: 15 December 2009
KEYWORDS
bats
behavior
Chiroptera
flight altitude
foraging
migration
SEA
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