veut vous informer des projets de recherche en cours sur le comportement migratoire de la Pipistrelle de Nathusius et autres espèces migratrices en Europe. Nathusius’ pipistrelle has been identified to be at high risk of mortality from wind turbines in Europe.
La pipipistrelle de Nathusius est à l’honneur pour 2015. The groups of three boxes were erected on separate trees.
Sander Lagerveld reported a Nathusius’ Pipistrelle alighting on a boat in the North Sea 100 km north of Den Helder, Netherlands in … The NNPP was launched to improve our understanding of this elusive species by finding out more about it’s migratory routes and resident & breeding status of this bat in the UK. Nathusius’ Pipistrelle distribution and migration The tiny Nathusius’ Pipistrelle, weighing only 6–10 grams, travels almost 2000 km from its breeding grounds in north-eastern Europe to its main hibernation areas in south-west Europe.
Nyctalus leisleri, Nathusius’ pipistrelle and the parti-coloured bat Vespertilio murinus4 (Hutterer et al., 2006), with typical migration distances in both spring and autumn thought to be 250 km to 1,000 km. Populations in Russia are thought to … In 2013, a single bat ringed in the UK was found 600 km away in the Netherlands. A small breeding British population is resident all year, probably topped-up by winter migrants from the Continent. This site has been developed by Jon Russ. The first bat to cross the sea from the UK to Europe has been recorded, according to experts. Because Nathusius’ pipistrelle is a migratory species, wind turbines have the potential to impact upon bat populations at a range of geographical scales. Due to its migratory habits Nathusius’ populations may be especially vulnerable to badly sited wind turbines. Nathusius’ pipistrelle is a priority species under theEUROBATSAgreement and we welcome more research into its distribution in the UK.
This was the first record of a Nathusius’ pipistrelle flying across the North Sea from the UK to mainland Europe. Recently, it has been suggested that some Nathusius' pipistrelle populations may remain resident in the U.K. throughout the years (Russ et … The Nathusius' pipistrelle undertakes a seasonal long-distance migration, usually from northeast to southwest Europe, along the coast or river valleys. The mean average distances for male and female migratory Nathusius’ pipistrelles is between 1100 km and 1400 km. Nathusius’ pipistrelle is a migratory species and in mainland Europe, individuals fly many hundreds of kilometres in late autumn and spring. On 8 and 9 November 2019, the Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ), the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (RBINS) and the Bats Working Group of Natuurpunt Study organize a two-day symposium on bats migration. The tiny Nathusius' pipistrelle bat was first ringed in Blagdon, near Bristol, and was discovered nearly 600km away in the Netherlands. In 2008, the use of bat boxes of two models (standard and flat) by Nathusius' pipistrelle (Pipistrellus Nathusii) bats was investigated in eight protected territories in southeastern Lithuania. Not all ship-borne arrivals of Nathusius’ Pipistrelle may have joined ship in continental ports.
Dans ce contexte, l’association fédérale pour le travail sur les chauves-souris en Allemagne (Bundesverband für Fledermauskunde Deutschland e.V.) Migration patterns of Nathusius’ pipistrelle are relatively well known in mainland Europe but the movements of bats in and out of the UK and their migration routes and origins are not known.