Systematic Review of Crop Pests in the Diets of Four Bat Species Found as Wind Turbine Fatalities

© 2008 Deon Reynolds

Systematic Review of Crop Pests in the Diets of Four Bat Species Found as Wind Turbine Fatalities investigates crop pest consumption by bats in order to potentially help efforts at reducing bat fatalities at wind turbines in agricultural fields.

Wind energy facilities are commonly located in agriculture fields, and bats have been shown to prey upon insects on and near wind turbine towers. Studies have shown a positive association between insect abundance and bat activity, including in agricultural systems. We conducted a systematic review of bat diets for four common bat species in the Midwest and northern Great Plains to synthesize existing knowledge across species, assess the extent to which these bat focal species consume crop pests, and evaluate the potential for crop pest emergence models to predict temporal and spatial patterns of bat fatalities in this region. Big brown bats and eastern red bats consumed a variety of crop pests, including some for which emergence models may be available. In contrast, there were few studies for hoary bats or silver-haired bats, and the dietary evidence available has insufficient taxonomic resolution to conclude that crop pests were consumed. To augment existing data and illuminate relationships, we recommend that genetic diet analyses for bats, specifically hoary and silver-haired, be conducted in the late summer and autumn in this region. The results of these studies may provide additional candidate insect models to evaluate for predicting bat fatalities at wind turbines and clarify if the superabundant insect emergence hypothesis warrants further investigation.

This study was supported by the Renewable Energy Wildlife Research Fund (REWRF, the Fund).

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REWRF-B30-Results-Summary-fact-sheet