Two Special
Areas of Conservation for horseshoe bats have been designated on
Mendip. These are the Mells Valley SAC and the North Somerset and
Mendip SAC. The former was selected on the basis of its exceptional
greater horseshoe maternity roost, which comprises approximately
12%
of the national population. Selection of the North Somerset and Mendip
SAC was made primarily because of the presence of caves that offer
highly suitable hibernation sites for large numbers of both greater
and lesser horseshoe bats.
The UK Biodiversity Action Plan recognises that horseshoe bats have
undergone a significant decline in their range, and that fragmentation
of foraging habitat may have contributed to this. Recently it has
been possible to measure the patterns of habitat use and landscape
features that are selected by foraging and commuting horseshoe bats,
and also reveal their nightly activity patterns, through a method
called radio-tracking. This involves attaching a small electronic
transmitter to the back of the bat with a skinbond that allows the
bat to be tracked for approximately two weeks before the bond becomes
weak and the transmitter falls off. Radio-tracking studies of greater
horseshoe bats by researchers at the University of Bristol have been
instrumental in the development of mechanisms of landscape improvement
around maternity roosts funded through Countryside Stewardship schemes.
It is likely that such schemes have contributed towards a 58% increase
in the number of greater horseshoe bats at maternity sites in Devon
since 1995. |
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English
Nature sponsored two major radio-tracking studies of greater horseshoe
bats in the Mendip Hills; at Mells Valley in 2000, and at Cheddar
in 1999. Both studies found that the bats foraged primarily along
tall overgrown hedgerows and scrub, and in and around woodland. Caves,
mines, tunnels and barns were used as night-roosts by the bats to
feed and rest before resuming foraging or commuting. The radio-tracking
studies revealed the importance of high overgrown hedgerows adjacent
to meadows and grazed pasture as a key foraging habitat for greater
horseshoes. It is thought likely that the lesser horseshoe bat also
favours such habitats. Many of the farms on Mendip are not intensively
managed and offer such foraging resources to bats, which together
with the abundance of caves and mines offering hibernation sites
and farm complexes supplying summer roosts, partly explains the high
numbers of both species within the area.
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