Monitoring Occupancy of Bats with Acoustic Data: Power and Sample Size Recommendations

Bats are difficult to study due to their nocturnal, cryptic, and highly vagile nature. Ongoing advances in acoustic recording hardware and call classification software have made species detection and activity monitoring more feasible. Our objectives were to determine the effort necessary to monitor bat assemblages using an occupancy framework and acoustic data and to provide guidelines for researchers interested in developing similar monitoring programs.

Citation

related PUBLICATIONS

Importance of Private Lands in ESA Implementation: 50 Years of Reflection and Conservation

June 2, 2025
Peer-Reviewed

Understanding the Diet of an Unmanaged Population of Coyotes in Southern Texas

May 22, 2025
Peer-Reviewed

Enabling Endangered Species Conservation on Private Land: A Case Study of the Ocelot in Texas

May 19, 2025
Peer-Reviewed

Temporal Relationships of Breeding Landbirds and Productivity on a Working Landscape

February 17, 2025
Peer-Reviewed

Perspectives on Agricultural Research Organizations: A New Tool for Agricultural Research and Land Stewardship

January 29, 2025
Peer-Reviewed

Determining the Age Classes of Free-ranging Female Nilgai in Southern Texas, USA

December 21, 2024
Peer-Reviewed

Contact Our Education Team

Complete the form below and our team will reach out shortly.