Journal article
Functional responses of insectivorous bats to increasing housing density support 'land-sparing' rather than 'land-sharing' urban growth strategies
FM Caryl, LF Lumsden, R van der Ree, BA Wintle
Journal of Applied Ecology | WILEY | Published : 2016
Abstract
Debates about 'land-sparing' and 'land-sharing' strategies for conserving biodiversity in cities provide an overly simplistic characterization of alternate planning options. Increased urbanization manifests in a number of ways and sophisticated analyses of how species respond to urban environments are required before generalizations about the relative merits of either planning strategy should be made. We investigated how insectivorous bats respond to housing density (a measure of urbanization intensity) and a range of habitat variables by modelling the occupancy and activity of 12 species in Melbourne, Australia. In addition to species-level analyses, species were grouped into guilds ('matri..
View full abstractRelated Projects (2)
Grants
Awarded by ARC
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
The research was funded by ARC linkage grant LP0990359, the National Environmental Research Program Environmental Decisions Hub and The Baker Foundation. BW was supported by an ARC Future Fellowship (FT100100819).