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Research ArticleGermplasm Release

Growing hickories (Carya spp.) for roost trees: A Method to Support Conservation of Declining Bat Populations

Tara Luna, Daniel L Lindner and R Kasten Dumroese
Native Plants Journal, March 2014, 15 (1) 66-74; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/npj.15.1.66
Tara Luna
, Botanist, PO Box 447, East Glacier Park, MT 59434
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Daniel L Lindner
Research Plant Pathologist, USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station One Gifford Pinchot Drive, Madison, WI 53726,
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R Kasten Dumroese
Research Plant Physiologist / National Nursery Specialist USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station 1221 South Main Street, Moscow, ID 83843,
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Abstract

Bats (Vespertilionidae and Phyllostomidae) are a critically important component of North American ecosystems. These insectivorous mammals provide largely unrecognized ecosystem services to agriculture and forest health and sustain bat-dependent native plant populations. The decline of North American bat populations reflects the recent emergence of the fungal disease white nose syndrome (WNS); susceptibility to pollutants; and rapid changes occurring in the North American landscape, such as energy development and associated forest fragmentation and loss. Hickories (Carya L. spp. [Juglandaceae]) are an important roost tree for bats in the eastern US, and we describe how to propagate them in bareroot nurseries.

TLunaDLLindnerRKDumroese 2014.

Growing hickories (Carya spp.) for roost trees: a method to support conservation of declining bat populations

. Native Plants Journal 15( 1): 66- 74.

  • bat conservation
  • Juglandaceae
  • propagation
  • bareroot
  • white nose syndrome
  • Vespertilionidae
  • Phyllostomidae
NOMENCLATURE:
  • Bats and plants: ITIS (2013)
  • Fungus: Minnis and Lindner (2013)
  • © 2014 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System

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Native Plants Journal: 15 (1)
Native Plants Journal
Vol. 15, Issue 1
20 Mar 2014
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Growing hickories (Carya spp.) for roost trees: A Method to Support Conservation of Declining Bat Populations
Tara Luna, Daniel L Lindner, R Kasten Dumroese
Native Plants Journal Mar 2014, 15 (1) 66-74; DOI: 10.3368/npj.15.1.66

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Growing hickories (Carya spp.) for roost trees: A Method to Support Conservation of Declining Bat Populations
Tara Luna, Daniel L Lindner, R Kasten Dumroese
Native Plants Journal Mar 2014, 15 (1) 66-74; DOI: 10.3368/npj.15.1.66
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Keywords

  • bat conservation
  • Juglandaceae
  • propagation
  • bareroot
  • white nose syndrome
  • Vespertilionidae
  • Phyllostomidae
  • Bats and plants: ITIS (2013)
  • Fungus: Minnis and Lindner (2013)
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