Sampling flying bats with thermal and near-infrared imaging and ultrasound recording: hardware and workflow for bat point counts

F1000Res. 2021 Mar 8:10:189. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.51195.2. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Bat communities can usually only be comprehensively monitored by combining ultrasound recording and trapping techniques. Here, we propose bat point counts, a novel, single method to sample all flying bats. We designed a sampling rig that combines a thermal scope to detect flying bats and their flight patterns, an ultrasound recorder to identify echolocating bat calls, and a near-infrared camera and LED illuminator to photograph bat morphology. We evaluated the usefulness of the flight pattern information, echolocation call recordings, and near-infrared photographs produced by our sampling rig to determine a workflow to process these heterogenous data types. We present a conservative workflow to enable taxonomic discrimination and identification of bat detections. Our sampling rig and workflow allowed us to detect both echolocating and non-echolocating bats and we could assign 84% of the detections to a guild. Subsequent identification can be carried out with established methods such as taxonomic keys and call libraries, based on the visible morphological features and echolocation calls. Currently, a higher near-infrared picture quality is required to resolve more detailed diagnostic morphology, but there is considerable potential to extract more information with higher-intensity illumination. This is the first proof-of-concept for bat point counts, a method that can passively sample all flying bats in their natural environment.

Keywords: bat; ecoacoustics; ecology; near-infrared; night vision; point count; thermal imaging.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Chiroptera*
  • Echolocation*
  • Flight, Animal
  • Ultrasonography
  • Workflow

Grants and funding

This study was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [192626868–SFB 990] in the framework of the collaborative German-Indonesian research project CRC990.