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Papers by Laura Ellison

Research paper thumbnail of Existing data on colonies of bats in the United States: summary and analysis of the U. S. Geological Survey's Bat Population Database

Research paper thumbnail of Avian surveys for NAS Alameda for the bird-aircraft strike hazard (BASH) program

Research paper thumbnail of A study design to provide information for the bird-aircraft strike hazard programs

Research paper thumbnail of A plan for the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat)

The purpose of the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat) is to create a continent-wide pr... more The purpose of the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat) is to create a continent-wide program to monitor bats at local to rangewide scales that will provide reliable data to promote effective conservation decisionmaking and the long-term viability of bat populations across the continent. This is an international, multiagency program. Four approaches will be used to gather monitoring data to assess changes in bat distributions and abundances: winter hibernaculum counts, maternity colony counts, mobile acoustic surveys along road transects, and acoustic surveys at stationary points. These monitoring approaches are described along with methods for identifying species recorded by acoustic detectors. Other chapters describe the sampling design, the database management system (Bat Population Database), and statistical approaches that can be used to analyze data collected through this program.

Research paper thumbnail of Loebetal 2015 USFS-GTR-SRS-208 NABatPlan

Research paper thumbnail of Southwestern willow flycatcher declines in Grand Canyon National Park

Research paper thumbnail of Estimating Sample Size for Landscape-Scale Mark-Recapture Studies of North American Migratory Tree Bats

Acta Chiropterologica, 2014

ABSTRACT Concern for migratory tree-roosting bats in North America has grown because of possible ... more ABSTRACT Concern for migratory tree-roosting bats in North America has grown because of possible population declines from wind energy development. This concern has driven interest in estimating population-level changes. Mark-recapture methodology is one possible analytical framework for assessing bat population changes, but sample size requirements to produce reliable estimates have not been estimated. To illustrate the sample sizes necessary for a mark-recapture-based monitoring program we conducted power analyses using a statistical model that allows reencounters of live and dead marked individuals. We ran 1,000 simulations for each of five broad sample size categories in a Burnham joint model, and then compared the proportion of simulations in which 95% confidence intervals overlapped between and among years for a 4-year study. Additionally, we conducted sensitivity analyses of sample size to various capture probabilities and recovery probabilities. More than 50,000 individuals per year would need to be captured and released to accurately determine 10% and 15% declines in annual survival. To detect more dramatic declines of 33% or 50% survival over four years, then sample sizes of 25,000 or 10,000 per year, respectively, would be sufficient. Sensitivity analyses reveal that increasing recovery of dead marked individuals may be more valuable than increasing capture probability of marked individuals. Because of the extraordinary effort that would be required, we advise caution should such a mark-recapture effort be initiated because of the difficulty in attaining reliable estimates. We make recommendations for what techniques show the most promise for mark-recapture studies of bats because some techniques violate the assumptions of mark-recapture methodology when used to mark bats.

Research paper thumbnail of Bats of Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado: Composition, Reproduction, and Roosting Habits

Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of Symposium on the Ecology of Plague and its Effects on Wildlife: A Model for Translational Research

Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, 2010

Research paper thumbnail of EXAMINING PATTERNS OF BAT ACTIVITY IN BANDELIER NATIONAL MONUMENT, NEW MEXICO, BY USING WALKING POINT TRANSECTS

The Southwestern Naturalist, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of ANESTHESIA AND BLOOD SAMPLING OF WILD BIG BROWN BATS (EPTESICUS FUSCUS) WITH AN ASSESSMENT OF IMPACTS ON SURVIVAL

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Sampling Blood from Big Brown Bats (Eptesicus fuscus) in the Field with and without Anesthesia: Impacts on Survival

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Recruitment in a Colorado population of big brown bats: breeding probabilities, litter size, and first-year survival

Journal of Mammalogy, 2010

Research paper thumbnail of SURVIVAL AND CONDITION OF BIG BROWN BATS (EPTESICUS FUSCUS) AFTER RADIOTAGGING

Journal of Mammalogy, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Adult survival and population growth rate in Colorado big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus)

Journal of Mammalogy, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of FACTORS INFLUENCING MOVEMENT PROBABILITIES OF BIG BROWN BATS ( EPTESICUS FUSCUS ) IN BUILDINGS

Ecological Applications, 2007

Research paper thumbnail of Cyclodiene Insecticide, DDE, DDT, Arsenic, and Mercury Contamination of Big Brown Bats ( Eptesicus fuscus ) Foraging at a Colorado Superfund Site

Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 2001

Research paper thumbnail of Diversity and conservation of bats in North America

Research paper thumbnail of Survival estimation in bats: historical overview, critical appraisal, and suggestions for new approaches

Research paper thumbnail of Bat use of a high-plains urban wildlife refuge

Research paper thumbnail of Existing data on colonies of bats in the United States: summary and analysis of the U. S. Geological Survey's Bat Population Database

Research paper thumbnail of Avian surveys for NAS Alameda for the bird-aircraft strike hazard (BASH) program

Research paper thumbnail of A study design to provide information for the bird-aircraft strike hazard programs

Research paper thumbnail of A plan for the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat)

The purpose of the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat) is to create a continent-wide pr... more The purpose of the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat) is to create a continent-wide program to monitor bats at local to rangewide scales that will provide reliable data to promote effective conservation decisionmaking and the long-term viability of bat populations across the continent. This is an international, multiagency program. Four approaches will be used to gather monitoring data to assess changes in bat distributions and abundances: winter hibernaculum counts, maternity colony counts, mobile acoustic surveys along road transects, and acoustic surveys at stationary points. These monitoring approaches are described along with methods for identifying species recorded by acoustic detectors. Other chapters describe the sampling design, the database management system (Bat Population Database), and statistical approaches that can be used to analyze data collected through this program.

Research paper thumbnail of Loebetal 2015 USFS-GTR-SRS-208 NABatPlan

Research paper thumbnail of Southwestern willow flycatcher declines in Grand Canyon National Park

Research paper thumbnail of Estimating Sample Size for Landscape-Scale Mark-Recapture Studies of North American Migratory Tree Bats

Acta Chiropterologica, 2014

ABSTRACT Concern for migratory tree-roosting bats in North America has grown because of possible ... more ABSTRACT Concern for migratory tree-roosting bats in North America has grown because of possible population declines from wind energy development. This concern has driven interest in estimating population-level changes. Mark-recapture methodology is one possible analytical framework for assessing bat population changes, but sample size requirements to produce reliable estimates have not been estimated. To illustrate the sample sizes necessary for a mark-recapture-based monitoring program we conducted power analyses using a statistical model that allows reencounters of live and dead marked individuals. We ran 1,000 simulations for each of five broad sample size categories in a Burnham joint model, and then compared the proportion of simulations in which 95% confidence intervals overlapped between and among years for a 4-year study. Additionally, we conducted sensitivity analyses of sample size to various capture probabilities and recovery probabilities. More than 50,000 individuals per year would need to be captured and released to accurately determine 10% and 15% declines in annual survival. To detect more dramatic declines of 33% or 50% survival over four years, then sample sizes of 25,000 or 10,000 per year, respectively, would be sufficient. Sensitivity analyses reveal that increasing recovery of dead marked individuals may be more valuable than increasing capture probability of marked individuals. Because of the extraordinary effort that would be required, we advise caution should such a mark-recapture effort be initiated because of the difficulty in attaining reliable estimates. We make recommendations for what techniques show the most promise for mark-recapture studies of bats because some techniques violate the assumptions of mark-recapture methodology when used to mark bats.

Research paper thumbnail of Bats of Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado: Composition, Reproduction, and Roosting Habits

Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of Symposium on the Ecology of Plague and its Effects on Wildlife: A Model for Translational Research

Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, 2010

Research paper thumbnail of EXAMINING PATTERNS OF BAT ACTIVITY IN BANDELIER NATIONAL MONUMENT, NEW MEXICO, BY USING WALKING POINT TRANSECTS

The Southwestern Naturalist, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of ANESTHESIA AND BLOOD SAMPLING OF WILD BIG BROWN BATS (EPTESICUS FUSCUS) WITH AN ASSESSMENT OF IMPACTS ON SURVIVAL

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Sampling Blood from Big Brown Bats (Eptesicus fuscus) in the Field with and without Anesthesia: Impacts on Survival

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Recruitment in a Colorado population of big brown bats: breeding probabilities, litter size, and first-year survival

Journal of Mammalogy, 2010

Research paper thumbnail of SURVIVAL AND CONDITION OF BIG BROWN BATS (EPTESICUS FUSCUS) AFTER RADIOTAGGING

Journal of Mammalogy, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Adult survival and population growth rate in Colorado big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus)

Journal of Mammalogy, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of FACTORS INFLUENCING MOVEMENT PROBABILITIES OF BIG BROWN BATS ( EPTESICUS FUSCUS ) IN BUILDINGS

Ecological Applications, 2007

Research paper thumbnail of Cyclodiene Insecticide, DDE, DDT, Arsenic, and Mercury Contamination of Big Brown Bats ( Eptesicus fuscus ) Foraging at a Colorado Superfund Site

Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 2001

Research paper thumbnail of Diversity and conservation of bats in North America

Research paper thumbnail of Survival estimation in bats: historical overview, critical appraisal, and suggestions for new approaches

Research paper thumbnail of Bat use of a high-plains urban wildlife refuge

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