Reference call of insectivorous bats in Taiwan

Occurrence
Dernière version Publié par Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit le oct. 2, 2020 Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit

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Description

Bat occurrence data from Taiwan collected by the Department of Forestry and Nature Resource Management of the National Chiayi University.

Enregistrements de données

Les données de cette ressource occurrence ont été publiées sous forme d'une Archive Darwin Core (Darwin Core Archive ou DwC-A), le format standard pour partager des données de biodiversité en tant qu'ensemble d'un ou plusieurs tableurs de données. Le tableur de données du cœur de standard (core) contient 100 enregistrements.

Cet IPT archive les données et sert donc de dépôt de données. Les données et métadonnées de la ressource sont disponibles pour téléchargement dans la section téléchargements. Le tableau des versions liste les autres versions de chaque ressource rendues disponibles de façon publique et permet de tracer les modifications apportées à la ressource au fil du temps.

Versions

Le tableau ci-dessous n'affiche que les versions publiées de la ressource accessibles publiquement.

Comment citer

Les chercheurs doivent citer cette ressource comme suit:

Kuo M T, Lou W W, Chen W J, Liu J N (2020): Reference call of insectivorous bats in Taiwan. v1.5. Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit. Dataset/Occurrence. https://cloud.gbif.org/bifa/resource?r=bifa04-24-12&v=1.5

Droits

Les chercheurs doivent respecter la déclaration de droits suivante:

L’éditeur et détenteur des droits de cette ressource est Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit. Ce travail est sous licence Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY-NC) 4.0.

Enregistrement GBIF

Cette ressource a été enregistrée sur le portail GBIF, et possède l'UUID GBIF suivante : 7d4b8ea4-b40f-4382-8b90-6b305a8ca220.  Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit publie cette ressource, et est enregistré dans le GBIF comme éditeur de données avec l'approbation du U.S. Geological Survey.

Mots-clé

Occurrence; Observation; Occurrence

Contacts

Mei Ting Kuo
  • Créateur
Research assistant
Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, National Chiayi University
TW
Wen Wen Lou
  • Créateur
Graduate student
Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, National Chiayi University
TW
Wei Jung Chen
  • Créateur
Student
Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, National Chiayi University
TW
Jian Nan Liu
  • Fournisseur Des Métadonnées
  • Créateur
  • Personne De Contact
Assistant professor
Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, National Chiayi University
TW
Joe Chun Chia Huang
  • Personne De Contact
Visiting scholar
School of Environmental and Natural Resource Sciences, Faculty of Science and Technology, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
Tigga Kingston
  • Personne De Contact
Chair
Southeast Asian Bat Conservation and Research Unit
US
Tamás Görföl
  • Personne De Contact
Mammal Curator
Hungarian Natural History Museum
Budapest
HU
Joe Chun-Chia Huang
  • Chercheur Principal
Visiting scholar
School of Environmental and Natural Resource Sciences, Faculty of Science and Technology, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
Gábor Csorba
  • Vérificateur
Deputy Director
Hungarian Natural History Museum
Budapest
HU

Couverture géographique

8 counties in the southern Taiwan

Enveloppe géographique Sud Ouest [21,957, 120,038], Nord Est [24,374, 121,493]

Couverture taxonomique

All bats were identified to species. 17 species belonging to 12 genera of 4 families of bats (Mammalia: order Chiroptera) are reported. However, there are a few with identification uncertainty due to the restriction of taxonomy dilemma in the study area

Couverture temporelle

Epoque de formation 2017-2020

Données sur le projet

With 380 species, bats make up nearly 40% of Southeast Asia’s mammal species but have received limited attention in biodiversity studies. To redress this, Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit (SEABCRU, www.seabcru.org/) developed a database for bat locality data across SE Asia. The database is a full implementation and designed to push new records to GBIF. The database has c. 40K records including cleaned and manually georeferenced GBIF records, data from literature, museums and field notes. Our prior research shows that SE Asian bat data in open-source resources are strongly biased taxonomically, spatially, and ecologically with consequences for models that underpin conservation policy. Of note is the lack of data for open-space insectivorous species that forage in non-forested habitats. Despite comprising over 30% of SE Asian bat diversity, these species are hard to record using conventional methods. However, occurrence data for these bats can be generated through acoustic sampling, but this requires a dedicated call database. In our review, call descriptions from over 40% of the 270 echolocating species have been reported in literature, but none of the recordings are accessible and many of the species occurrences attached are not published. The Hungarian Natural History Museum (HNHM, www.nhmus.hu) has recently received government support to develop the Asian Bat Call Database (ABCD). To fill current gaps in bat diversity in GBIF, we will (1) integrate the occurrence and acoustic databases to capture species occurrence data represented by acoustic recordings, (2) train researchers to assemble and format existing data following the Darwin Core standard through workshops, webinars and development of tools, (3) publish completed datasets to GBIF. We are confident that with additional support from GBIF, we could properly address the issues listed through the proposed activities and elevate the impact of GBIF network to biodiversity research in Southeast Asia

Titre Implementation of acoustics to fill the gaps of bat biodiversity information for Southeast Asia
Identifiant BIFA04_24
Financement GBIF-BIFA
Description du domaine d'étude / de recherche This data set is one of data assembled through the BIFA04-24 Project, which covered primarily SE Asia and nearby countries. This particular data is focused on the central and southern parts of Taiwan

Les personnes impliquées dans le projet:

Joe Chun Chia Huang
Jin Nan Liu
  • Fournisseur De Contenu

Méthodes d'échantillonnage

Bats were captured using harp traps and hand nets, then released after reference calls were taken using a digital audio recorder.

Etendue de l'étude This data set is one of data assembled through the BIFA04-24 Project, which covered primarily SE Asia and nearby countries, e.g. Taiwan. This particular data is focused on the central and southern parts of Taiwan
Contrôle qualité The data were first assembled in a standard form designed for the Asian Bat Call Database (ABCD).The contributor(s) has been trained via a workshop fund by a GBIF-BIFA grant to use controlled language for data entry. The contents and format have been reviewed by the BIFA04-24 project investigator, Dr. Joe Chun-Chia Huang, and the ABCD manager, Dr. Tamas Golfol, under the supervision of Dr. Gabor Csorba from Hungarian Natural History Museum and Dr. Tigga Kingston from Southeast Asian Bat Conservation and Research Unit. The taxonomy of the species records has been carefully reviewed by Dr. Gabor Csorba which is very experienced of bat taxonomy in Asia. After all reviews and data cleaning, the data is migrated and reformatted using Darwin Core with support from the help desk (Miss Melissa Liu) of Taibif.

Description des étapes de la méthode:

  1. Species data were either extracted from sound files recorded from captured animals or/and capture records in the field note.

Citations bibliographiques

  1. Kao, M.T., Liu, J.N., Cheng, H.C. and Nakazawa, T., 2019. Social signatures in echolocation calls of a leaf-roosting bat, Kerivoula furva. Bioacoustics, pp.1-20. DOI:10.1080/09524622.2019.1616617

Métadonnées additionnelles

Identifiants alternatifs 7d4b8ea4-b40f-4382-8b90-6b305a8ca220
https://cloud.gbif.org/bifa/resource?r=bifa04-24-12