The importance of Acacia trees for insectivorous bats and arthropods in the Arava desert.

Anthropogenic habitat modification often has a profound negative impact on the flora and fauna of an ecosystem. In parts of the Middle East, ephemeral rivers (wadis) are characterised by stands of acacia trees. Green, flourishing assemblages of these trees are in decline in several countries, most l...

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Main Authors: Talya D Hackett, Carmi Korine, Marc W Holderied
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0052999&type=printable
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author Talya D Hackett
Carmi Korine
Marc W Holderied
author_facet Talya D Hackett
Carmi Korine
Marc W Holderied
author_sort Talya D Hackett
collection DOAJ
description Anthropogenic habitat modification often has a profound negative impact on the flora and fauna of an ecosystem. In parts of the Middle East, ephemeral rivers (wadis) are characterised by stands of acacia trees. Green, flourishing assemblages of these trees are in decline in several countries, most likely due to human-induced water stress and habitat changes. We examined the importance of healthy acacia stands for bats and their arthropod prey in comparison to other natural and artificial habitats available in the Arava desert of Israel. We assessed bat activity and species richness through acoustic monitoring for entire nights and concurrently collected arthropods using light and pit traps. Dense green stands of acacia trees were the most important natural desert habitat for insectivorous bats. Irrigated gardens and parks in villages and fields of date palms had high arthropod levels but only village sites rivalled acacia trees in bat activity level. We confirmed up to 13 bat species around a single patch of acacia trees; one of the richest sites in any natural desert habitat in Israel. Some bat species utilised artificial sites; others were found almost exclusively in natural habitats. Two rare species (Barbastella leucomelas and Nycteris thebaica) were identified solely around acacia trees. We provide strong evidence that acacia trees are of unique importance to the community of insectivorous desert-dwelling bats, and that the health of the trees is crucial to their value as a foraging resource. Consequently, conservation efforts for acacia habitats, and in particular for the green more densely packed stands of trees, need to increase to protect this vital habitat for an entire community of protected bats.
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spelling doaj-art-ac945e4613b344afa9fba4a5e2dc648b2025-08-20T02:30:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0182e5299910.1371/journal.pone.0052999The importance of Acacia trees for insectivorous bats and arthropods in the Arava desert.Talya D HackettCarmi KorineMarc W HolderiedAnthropogenic habitat modification often has a profound negative impact on the flora and fauna of an ecosystem. In parts of the Middle East, ephemeral rivers (wadis) are characterised by stands of acacia trees. Green, flourishing assemblages of these trees are in decline in several countries, most likely due to human-induced water stress and habitat changes. We examined the importance of healthy acacia stands for bats and their arthropod prey in comparison to other natural and artificial habitats available in the Arava desert of Israel. We assessed bat activity and species richness through acoustic monitoring for entire nights and concurrently collected arthropods using light and pit traps. Dense green stands of acacia trees were the most important natural desert habitat for insectivorous bats. Irrigated gardens and parks in villages and fields of date palms had high arthropod levels but only village sites rivalled acacia trees in bat activity level. We confirmed up to 13 bat species around a single patch of acacia trees; one of the richest sites in any natural desert habitat in Israel. Some bat species utilised artificial sites; others were found almost exclusively in natural habitats. Two rare species (Barbastella leucomelas and Nycteris thebaica) were identified solely around acacia trees. We provide strong evidence that acacia trees are of unique importance to the community of insectivorous desert-dwelling bats, and that the health of the trees is crucial to their value as a foraging resource. Consequently, conservation efforts for acacia habitats, and in particular for the green more densely packed stands of trees, need to increase to protect this vital habitat for an entire community of protected bats.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0052999&type=printable
spellingShingle Talya D Hackett
Carmi Korine
Marc W Holderied
The importance of Acacia trees for insectivorous bats and arthropods in the Arava desert.
PLoS ONE
title The importance of Acacia trees for insectivorous bats and arthropods in the Arava desert.
title_full The importance of Acacia trees for insectivorous bats and arthropods in the Arava desert.
title_fullStr The importance of Acacia trees for insectivorous bats and arthropods in the Arava desert.
title_full_unstemmed The importance of Acacia trees for insectivorous bats and arthropods in the Arava desert.
title_short The importance of Acacia trees for insectivorous bats and arthropods in the Arava desert.
title_sort importance of acacia trees for insectivorous bats and arthropods in the arava desert
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0052999&type=printable
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