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47th Annual Symposium
North American Society for Bat Research
Knoxville, TN, USAOctober 18-21, 2017
Local Hosts Gary McCracken & Emma Willcox
Program Directors
Gary Kwiecinski, Frank Bonaccorso, Shahroukh Mistry, Riley Bernard and Luis Viquez-R.
In the service of bat research since 1983.
www.batsound.com
High performance full-spectrum bat detectors
and software - with a comprehensive range of products to meet every demand.
D1000X - Professional
lab quality instrument
for fieldwork
M500 USB microphone with
BatSound Touch software
M500-384 USB microphone with
Android phone/Bat Recorder app
D500X - Easy-to-use, high-quality
full spectrum recorder
SaturdayCarriage
Registration Opens / Breakfast / M
entor BreakfastKirstin E. Fagan
Dave S. JohnstonJessica M
arie DreyerRoxanne D. Pourshoushtari
Loren K. Amm
erman
Christopher W. N
icolayN
athan A. Schwab
Jill M. Carpenter
Coffee Break
Allison PudloVanessa G. RojasLaura N
. Kloepper
Business Meeting II
(Medallion)
Lunch / Mentor LunchTim
othy J. DivollClarissa A. Starbuck
Kristen M. Lear
Victoria J. Bennett
Charles M. Francis
Mark A. Hayes
Katherine Caldwell
Cocktail Social (5:30)Banquet (6:30)
Awards &
Silent Auction (7:30)M
usic & Contra Dancing (8:30)
Roost DynamicsEcho-location
Conservation & Management
Medallion
Anna R. Willoughby
Catherine G. HaaseLisa A. Beltz
Riley F. BernardN
icole A.S.-Y DorvilleCraig K. R. W
illisM
aarten J. VonhofTrevor M
. Moore
Christina M. Davy
Meredith L. M
cClureKatherine D. Teets
Amy L. Russell
Tara A. PelletierAriadna E. M
orales
Melina Del Real-M
onroy
Kathryn M. W
omack
Winifred F. Frick
Disease & MicrobiologyGenetics & Population Biology
Program at a G
lanceFriday
CarriageRegistration O
pens / Breakfast / Diversity BreakfastJennifer J. KrauelAaron J. CorcoranPatricia E. Brow
nBryan C. CarstensDaniel A. R. Taylor
Kevin A. ParkerRodrigo A. M
edellin
Coffee Break
Macy A. M
addenCarol L. Cham
bersYa-Fu Lee
Sharlene E. SantanaGerald G. Carter
Burton K. LimRicardo B. M
achado
Lunch / Mentor Lunch
Paul A. FaureAbigail A. Curtis
Brandon P. HedrickHope C. Ball
Daniela M. Rossoni
Alyson F. Brokaw
Gregory L. Mutum
i
Coffee Break
Tracy C. Bazelman
Han LiM
. Kalcounis-Rueppell
Poster Session II(Tennessee)
Migration & Climate ChangeTropical EcologyMorphology &
NeurobiologyUrban
Ecology
Medallion
Tigga KingstonTyrone H. LaveryM
ichael PennayFrank Bonaccorso
Tamm
y Mildenstein
Susan M. Tsang
David L. Waldien
Justin G. BoylesLiam
P. McGuire
Nathan W
. FullerKendra L. PhelpsLucas J. Greville
Lisa Noelle Cooper
Andrew K. Habrich
Paul R. Moosm
anLisa E. Pow
ersAm
anda M. Schm
ittJulia E. Put
Amy K. W
ray
Joseph M. Szew
czak
E. C. Braun de Torrez
Anouk Simard
Brooke Maslo
Adam S. W
illcoxM
aria Sagot
Conservation of Island BatsEcophysiologyEcology & Behavior
ThursdayCarriage
Registration Opens / Breakfast / M
entor BreakfastW
elcome
Spallanzani Award - Ludm
illa AguillarVilla Aw
ard - Stephanie Ortega-García (8:35)
Coffee Break (8:50 - 9:45)
Melissa R. Ingala
Ulalum
e Hernández-ArcigaRoberto Valdizon-Rodriguez
Ana M. Breit
Danny Haelewaters
Brett R. Andersen
Rochelle M. Kelly
Grace M. Carpenter
Lunch / Mentor Lunch
Julie Faure-LacroixAshley K. W
ilsonM
ichael D. Whitby
Kaitlyn E. TorreyAudrey Lauzon
Lauren Moretto
Charlie L. CoteRebecca T. Trubitt
Coffee Break
Business Meeting I
(Medallion)
Poster Session I(Tennessee)
Student Social
Student Honors 2Student Honors 4
Medallion
Amie S. Som
mers
Zachary M. Cravens
Cody R. FoutsChristopher D. W
isniewski
Melquisedec Gam
ba-RiosS. Piper Kim
pelJohn F. Grider
Caitlin J. Campbell
Zachary A. Warren
Emm
a L. KunkelM
akenzie B. DuncanDiana D. M
oreno-SantillánPallavi Sirajuddin
Nicole K. Besler
Jamin G. W
ieringaM
elissa E. Rodriguez
Student Honors 1Student Honors 37:008:008:158:308:459:009:159:309:45
10:0010:1510:3010:4511:0011:1511:3011:4512:0012:301:301:452:002:152:302:453:003:153:303:454:004:154:305:005:306:006:307:00
In the service of bat research since 1983.
www.batsound.com
High performance full-spectrum bat detectors
and software - with a comprehensive range of products to meet every demand.
D1000X - Professional
lab quality instrument
for fieldwork
M500 USB microphone with
BatSound Touch software
M500-384 USB microphone with
Android phone/Bat Recorder app
D500X - Easy-to-use, high-quality
full spectrum recorder
NASBR appreciates the support itreceives from its sponsors.
For information on sponsoring a future conference
please contact the NASBR Board of Directorsor visit
www.nasbr.org
Conference Sponsors
Student Award Sponsors
Diamond
Bronze
Silver
Supporter
Tue. - Wed.
Pre-conference Events
TuesdayHike to Mount LeConte 8:00 am - 5:00 pm
Meet in the Hotel Lobby 7:30 am
WednesdayNext Generation DNA Sequence Workshop 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
Meet in the Hotel Lobby at 8:30 am
Eastern Small-footed Bat Workshop 10:00 am - 3:00 pmMeet in the Hotel Lobby at 9:30 am
Spallanzani Southern Curling Fundraiser 11:30 am - 3:00 pmMeet in the Hotel Lobby at 11:00 am
Board of Directors Meeting 1:00 - 6:00 pmDining Room, Holiday Inn
Registration 2:00 to 6:00 pm Park View Lobby
Exhibitor Setup 7:00 pm onwardsGrand Pavillion Pre-function & North Park View Lobby
Welcome Reception 6:30 - 9:00 pmSponsored by Wildlife Acoustics Hors d’Oeuvres & Drinks
Knoxville Museum of Art, 1050 World’s Fair Park
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN6
Thu
rsda
y7:00 am - 8:00 am
Breakfast & Breakfast with a Mentor Tennessee
Spallanzani Award
Dr. Ludmilla Aguiar is a Professor and Head of the Department of Zoology at the University of Brasilia in Brasilia, Brazil. Dr. Aguiar’s research focuses on the conservation and ecology of neotropical bats. In recent years, Dr. Aguiar and her students have examined the impacts of global climate change, fire, wind energy and habitat disturbance on bats of the cerrado ecosystem in Brazil. She has received funding for her work from a variety of national and international agencies, and is involved with outreach efforts to educate local communities about the importance of bats in Brazilian ecosystems. Dr. Aguiar is the creator and editor of the journal, Chiroptera Neotropical, founder of the Brazilian Society for the Study of Bats and a co-founder of RELCOM, the Latin American Network for the Conservation of Bats.
7:00 am - 5:00 pm Registration Park View Lobby
10:00 am - 7:00pm
Poster Session I - Available for Viewing Tennessee Reception Sponsored by Pettersson Elektronik
Medallion & Carriage8:00 Welcome Gary McCracken & Emma Willcox8:15 Spallanzani Award Bat Diversity and Conservation in Brazil Ludmilla M.S. Aguiar NASBR Intellectual Property Statement
NASBR considers the information contained in presentations to be the property of the authors. To limit potential distractions during presentations and unauthorized dissemination of others’ work, the Board of Directors requests registrants to refrain from taking photographs or video of oral or poster presentations at the annual conference. We encourage audience members to contact the author to request further information about his / her presentation.
8:35 Villa Award The Evolution of Thermal Niches in Neotropical Nectar-feeding Bats Stephanie Ortega-Garcia8:50 Coffee Break Pre-function
Medallion CarriageStudent Honors Session 1 Chairs: Joy O’Keefe, Jorge Ortega Student Honors Session 2 Chairs: Allen Kurta, Burton Lim9:45 Phenotypic Flexibility and Energetic Demand: Insectivorous Bats During the Summer Active Period
Amie S. Sommers9:45 To Kill or Not to Kill? Comparison of Common Sampling Techniques in Bat Microbiome Research
Melissa R. Ingala10:00 Illuminating Diet Shifts in an Insectivorous Bat Community
Zachary M. Cravens10:00 Changes in Redox State in Different Tissues After Interruption of Hibernation in Myotis velifer
Ulalume Hernández-Arciga10:15 Individual Dietary Niche Variation in Female Little Brown Bats on the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland
Cody R. Fouts10:15 Frequency Tuning of Synaptic Inhibition in Duration-tuned Neurons of the Mammalian Inferior Colliculus
Roberto Valdizon-Rodriguez10:30 Conserving Connecticut’s Natural History: Surviving Bat Communities and Habitat Use Post-white-nose Syndrome
Christopher D. Wisniewski10:30 Roosting Energetics and Pathogen Transmission in Myotis lucifugus
Ana M. Breit10:45 Predator Cues Recognition by Bats: The Effect on Social Communication
Melquisedec Gamba-Rios10:45 Bats, Bat Flies, and Laboulbeniales Fungi from the Chucantí Nature Reserve in Eastern Panama
Danny Haelewaters11:00 Roost Selection of Southeastern Myotis in an Old-Growth Bottomland Hardwood Forest
S. Piper Kimpel11:00 On the Move: Westward Expansion of the Evening Bat across the Great Plains
Brett R. Andersen11:15 Diurnal Roost Selection of Myotis septentrionalis in Georgia
John F. Grider11:15 Diversity and Distribution of Bats in the San Juan Archipelago
Rochelle M. Kelly11:30 Range-Wide Migratory Patterns of North American Tree-Roosting Bats
Caitlin J. Campbell11:30 Roost Selection by Male Tri-colored Bats in The Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Grace M. Carpenter11:45-1:30
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk
11:45-1:30
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk
Student Honors Session 3 Chairs: Carol Chambers, Rick Adams Student Honors Session 4 Chairs: Gary Kwiecinski, Loren Ammerman1:30 Looking Back to Move Forward: A Quantitative Meta-analysis of Myotis septentrionalis Roost Selection
Zachary A. Warren
1:30 Decadal Changes Suggest Relaxation of Niche Partitioning After White-nose Syndrome and Climatic Responses in Bat Activity
Julie Faure-Lacroix1:45 Free Falling or Free Flying? Activity Thermoregulatory Substitution During Rewarming from Torpor in Migratory Bats
Emma L. Kunkel1:45 Boulders, Bats, and Biodiversity: The Influence of Rock Climbing on Cliff-face Ecosystems
Ashley K. Wilson2:00 The Microbiology of Fresh, Surface, and Deep Bat Guano Samples, Including Detection of Possible Pathogens
Makenzie B. Duncan2:00 Discerning Migratory Patterns of Bats in Nebraska
Michael D. Whitby2:15 De Novo Transcriptome Assembly and Functional Annotation of Immune Response Genes in Five Species of Bats
Diana Daniela Moreno-Santillán2:15 Interactions Between Imperiled Bat Species and a Fire-dependent Ecosystem in the Southern Appalachians
Kaitlyn E. Torrey2:30 Torpor Patterns and Hibernacula Conditions of Perimyotis subflavus in White-nose Syndrome Positive and Negative
SitesPallavi Sirajuddin
2:30 Long-term Effects of Forest Harvesting on Habitat Use by Insect Eating Bats
Audrey Lauzon2:45 Torpor Use Among Female Myotis lucifugus in Bat Boxes in Newfoundland, Canada
Nicole K. Besler2:45 At What Landscape Extent is Habitat Amount Most Relevant to Bats in Urban Environments?
Lauren Moretto
North American Society for Bat Research 7
7:00 am - 8:00 am
Breakfast & Breakfast with a Mentor Tennessee
Spallanzani Award
Dr. Ludmilla Aguiar is a Professor and Head of the Department of Zoology at the University of Brasilia in Brasilia, Brazil. Dr. Aguiar’s research focuses on the conservation and ecology of neotropical bats. In recent years, Dr. Aguiar and her students have examined the impacts of global climate change, fire, wind energy and habitat disturbance on bats of the cerrado ecosystem in Brazil. She has received funding for her work from a variety of national and international agencies, and is involved with outreach efforts to educate local communities about the importance of bats in Brazilian ecosystems. Dr. Aguiar is the creator and editor of the journal, Chiroptera Neotropical, founder of the Brazilian Society for the Study of Bats and a co-founder of RELCOM, the Latin American Network for the Conservation of Bats.
7:00 am - 5:00 pm Registration Park View Lobby
10:00 am - 7:00pm
Poster Session I - Available for Viewing Tennessee Reception Sponsored by Pettersson Elektronik
Medallion & Carriage8:00 Welcome Gary McCracken & Emma Willcox8:15 Spallanzani Award Bat Diversity and Conservation in Brazil Ludmilla M.S. Aguiar NASBR Intellectual Property Statement
NASBR considers the information contained in presentations to be the property of the authors. To limit potential distractions during presentations and unauthorized dissemination of others’ work, the Board of Directors requests registrants to refrain from taking photographs or video of oral or poster presentations at the annual conference. We encourage audience members to contact the author to request further information about his / her presentation.
8:35 Villa Award The Evolution of Thermal Niches in Neotropical Nectar-feeding Bats Stephanie Ortega-Garcia8:50 Coffee Break Pre-function
Medallion CarriageStudent Honors Session 1 Chairs: Joy O’Keefe, Jorge Ortega Student Honors Session 2 Chairs: Allen Kurta, Burton Lim9:45 Phenotypic Flexibility and Energetic Demand: Insectivorous Bats During the Summer Active Period
Amie S. Sommers9:45 To Kill or Not to Kill? Comparison of Common Sampling Techniques in Bat Microbiome Research
Melissa R. Ingala10:00 Illuminating Diet Shifts in an Insectivorous Bat Community
Zachary M. Cravens10:00 Changes in Redox State in Different Tissues After Interruption of Hibernation in Myotis velifer
Ulalume Hernández-Arciga10:15 Individual Dietary Niche Variation in Female Little Brown Bats on the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland
Cody R. Fouts10:15 Frequency Tuning of Synaptic Inhibition in Duration-tuned Neurons of the Mammalian Inferior Colliculus
Roberto Valdizon-Rodriguez10:30 Conserving Connecticut’s Natural History: Surviving Bat Communities and Habitat Use Post-white-nose Syndrome
Christopher D. Wisniewski10:30 Roosting Energetics and Pathogen Transmission in Myotis lucifugus
Ana M. Breit10:45 Predator Cues Recognition by Bats: The Effect on Social Communication
Melquisedec Gamba-Rios10:45 Bats, Bat Flies, and Laboulbeniales Fungi from the Chucantí Nature Reserve in Eastern Panama
Danny Haelewaters11:00 Roost Selection of Southeastern Myotis in an Old-Growth Bottomland Hardwood Forest
S. Piper Kimpel11:00 On the Move: Westward Expansion of the Evening Bat across the Great Plains
Brett R. Andersen11:15 Diurnal Roost Selection of Myotis septentrionalis in Georgia
John F. Grider11:15 Diversity and Distribution of Bats in the San Juan Archipelago
Rochelle M. Kelly11:30 Range-Wide Migratory Patterns of North American Tree-Roosting Bats
Caitlin J. Campbell11:30 Roost Selection by Male Tri-colored Bats in The Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Grace M. Carpenter11:45-1:30
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk
11:45-1:30
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk
Student Honors Session 3 Chairs: Carol Chambers, Rick Adams Student Honors Session 4 Chairs: Gary Kwiecinski, Loren Ammerman1:30 Looking Back to Move Forward: A Quantitative Meta-analysis of Myotis septentrionalis Roost Selection
Zachary A. Warren
1:30 Decadal Changes Suggest Relaxation of Niche Partitioning After White-nose Syndrome and Climatic Responses in Bat Activity
Julie Faure-Lacroix1:45 Free Falling or Free Flying? Activity Thermoregulatory Substitution During Rewarming from Torpor in Migratory Bats
Emma L. Kunkel1:45 Boulders, Bats, and Biodiversity: The Influence of Rock Climbing on Cliff-face Ecosystems
Ashley K. Wilson2:00 The Microbiology of Fresh, Surface, and Deep Bat Guano Samples, Including Detection of Possible Pathogens
Makenzie B. Duncan2:00 Discerning Migratory Patterns of Bats in Nebraska
Michael D. Whitby2:15 De Novo Transcriptome Assembly and Functional Annotation of Immune Response Genes in Five Species of Bats
Diana Daniela Moreno-Santillán2:15 Interactions Between Imperiled Bat Species and a Fire-dependent Ecosystem in the Southern Appalachians
Kaitlyn E. Torrey2:30 Torpor Patterns and Hibernacula Conditions of Perimyotis subflavus in White-nose Syndrome Positive and Negative
SitesPallavi Sirajuddin
2:30 Long-term Effects of Forest Harvesting on Habitat Use by Insect Eating Bats
Audrey Lauzon2:45 Torpor Use Among Female Myotis lucifugus in Bat Boxes in Newfoundland, Canada
Nicole K. Besler2:45 At What Landscape Extent is Habitat Amount Most Relevant to Bats in Urban Environments?
Lauren Moretto
Thursday
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN8
Thu
rsda
yMedallion Carriage
Student Honors Session 3 (cont.) Chairs: Carol Chambers, Scott Pedersen Student Honors Session 4 (cont.) Chairs: Gary Kwiecinski, Loren Ammerman3:00 Trace Elements as a Method for Sourcing Migratory Tree Bats
Jamin G. Wieringa3:00 Torpor in Neotropical Frugivorous Bats
Charlie L. Cote3:15 Genetic Diversity of Artibeus jamaicensis (Phyllostomidae) in Forest Fragments Surrounded by Agricultural Matrix in
El SalvadorMelissa E. Rodriguez
3:15 Proximate and Landscape Level Resource Use by Rangeland Bats
Rebecca T. Trubitt3:30 Coffee Break Pre-function 3:30 Coffee Break Pre-function
3:45- 4:45
Business Meeting I MedallionAll attendes are encouraged to attend
3:45- 4:45
Business Meeting I MedallionAll attendes are encouraged to attend
5:00 - 7:00
Poster Session I Tennessee
Reception with Hors d’Oeuvres and Cash Bar Sponsored by Pettersson Elektronik5:00 - 7:00
Poster Session I Tennessee
Reception with Hors d’Oeuvres and Cash Bar Sponsored by Pettersson ElektronikStudent Honors Posters
H1 Bat Community Change in Northeastern Iowa
Meagan J. Albon
H16 Identifying Important Habitat Characteristics Associated with Eastern Red Bat (Lasiurus borealis) Reproduction in Southeast Ohio
Maria MonarchinoH2 Effects of Prescribed Fires on Bat Foraging Behavior and Occupancy in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas
Cristina M. BlancoH17 Thermoregulation of Brachyphylla cavernarum
Natalie A. NievesH3 Impacts of Sex and Reproductive Condition on Personality in Bats: A Pilot Study
Rebecca L. BradleyH18 Bats and the City
Shannon PedersonH4 Taxonomy of Large Anoura and a Reassessment of the Distribution of A. latidens
Camilo A. Calderon-Acevedo
H19 Inventory, Abundance, and Habitat Selection of Chiropterans at Felsenthal National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) in Southeast Arkansas
Tyler J PorterH5 Summer Roosting Ecology of Myotis septentrionalis at Cape Cod National Seashore
R. Bronson CurryH20 Insectivorous Bat Activity in Cerrado, a Neotropical Savanna
Daniel F. RamalhoH6 Determining the Effectiveness of an Aerial Acoustic Bat Detection Technology for Monitoring Bat Populations
Adrienne M. DykstraH21 Bat Research and Conservation in the National Parks and how it is Changing Public Perception
Jessica M. RosadoH7 Indiana Bat Occupancy Estimates of Buffalo National River Using a Multi-state Occupancy Model
James W. GoreH22 Behavioral Responses Associated to Acoustic Roles in Spix’s Disc-winged Bats
Cayla Turner & Tenaja Smith-ButlerH8 Examining the Effect of Torpor and Emergence Behavior on the Susceptibility of Four Bat Species to
Pseudogymnoascus destructansReilly T. Jackson
H23 Southeastern Myotis and Rafinesque’s Big-eared Bats Make Seasonal Switches in Their Roosting Habits in Arkansas Bottomlands
Stacy J. SchermanH9 Basal Hollow Maternity Roosts of Southeastern Myotis in Alabama
Mattea A. LewisH24 Addressing the Research Needs of a State: Implementing the North American Bat Monitoring Program in Nebraska
Baxter H. SeguinH10 Do Bats Alter Nightly Foraging Activity in Response to Auditory Predation Cues?
Carson E. McNamaraH25 Metagenomics Indicates Increased Arthropod Consumption in Long-nosed Bats in New Mexico
Scarlet L. SellersH11 Putting Eocene Fossils into the Bat Family Tree
Edward D. MedeirosH26 What Bugs Bat Bugs? Factors Influencing the Parasite Communities of Puerto Rican Bats
Emily Louise StanfordH12 Baseline Data on Overwintering Bats and Hibernacula in Texas
Melissa B. MeierhoferH27 Foraging Ecology of Perimyotis subflavus in Middle Tennessee
Dustin B. ThamesH13 Wildlife Use of Livestock Water Troughs in Several States East of the Mississippi River
Russell L. MilamH28 Long-term Fission-Fusion Dynamics of a Myotis sodalis Colony
Francis E. Tillman, Jr.H14 Morphological Diversity in the Sensory System of Phyllostomid Bats and Implications for Acoustic and Dietary Ecology
Leith Leiser-MillerH29 From the Shadows of the Southeast: The Population Genetics and Phylogeography of Myotis austroriparius
Faith L. UreelH15 Skin Microbiota Potential in White-nose Syndrome Resistance of Hibernating Eptesicus fuscus
Virginie Lemieux-LabontéH30 Impact of Urbanization on Bats in Eastern Iowa
Audri J. Woessner7:00 Student Social Barley’s 200 East Jackson Avenue
Light food, cash bar and great company. All students are welcome. Trivia starts at 7:307:00 Student Social Barley’s 200 East Jackson Avenue
Light food, cash bar and great company. All students are welcome. Trivia starts at 7:30
North American Society for Bat Research 9
Thursday
Medallion CarriageStudent Honors Session 3 (cont.) Chairs: Carol Chambers, Scott Pedersen Student Honors Session 4 (cont.) Chairs: Gary Kwiecinski, Loren Ammerman3:00 Trace Elements as a Method for Sourcing Migratory Tree Bats
Jamin G. Wieringa3:00 Torpor in Neotropical Frugivorous Bats
Charlie L. Cote3:15 Genetic Diversity of Artibeus jamaicensis (Phyllostomidae) in Forest Fragments Surrounded by Agricultural Matrix in
El SalvadorMelissa E. Rodriguez
3:15 Proximate and Landscape Level Resource Use by Rangeland Bats
Rebecca T. Trubitt3:30 Coffee Break Pre-function 3:30 Coffee Break Pre-function
3:45- 4:45
Business Meeting I MedallionAll attendes are encouraged to attend
3:45- 4:45
Business Meeting I MedallionAll attendes are encouraged to attend
5:00 - 7:00
Poster Session I Tennessee
Reception with Hors d’Oeuvres and Cash Bar Sponsored by Pettersson Elektronik5:00 - 7:00
Poster Session I Tennessee
Reception with Hors d’Oeuvres and Cash Bar Sponsored by Pettersson ElektronikStudent Honors Posters
H1 Bat Community Change in Northeastern Iowa
Meagan J. Albon
H16 Identifying Important Habitat Characteristics Associated with Eastern Red Bat (Lasiurus borealis) Reproduction in Southeast Ohio
Maria MonarchinoH2 Effects of Prescribed Fires on Bat Foraging Behavior and Occupancy in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas
Cristina M. BlancoH17 Thermoregulation of Brachyphylla cavernarum
Natalie A. NievesH3 Impacts of Sex and Reproductive Condition on Personality in Bats: A Pilot Study
Rebecca L. BradleyH18 Bats and the City
Shannon PedersonH4 Taxonomy of Large Anoura and a Reassessment of the Distribution of A. latidens
Camilo A. Calderon-Acevedo
H19 Inventory, Abundance, and Habitat Selection of Chiropterans at Felsenthal National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) in Southeast Arkansas
Tyler J PorterH5 Summer Roosting Ecology of Myotis septentrionalis at Cape Cod National Seashore
R. Bronson CurryH20 Insectivorous Bat Activity in Cerrado, a Neotropical Savanna
Daniel F. RamalhoH6 Determining the Effectiveness of an Aerial Acoustic Bat Detection Technology for Monitoring Bat Populations
Adrienne M. DykstraH21 Bat Research and Conservation in the National Parks and how it is Changing Public Perception
Jessica M. RosadoH7 Indiana Bat Occupancy Estimates of Buffalo National River Using a Multi-state Occupancy Model
James W. GoreH22 Behavioral Responses Associated to Acoustic Roles in Spix’s Disc-winged Bats
Cayla Turner & Tenaja Smith-ButlerH8 Examining the Effect of Torpor and Emergence Behavior on the Susceptibility of Four Bat Species to
Pseudogymnoascus destructansReilly T. Jackson
H23 Southeastern Myotis and Rafinesque’s Big-eared Bats Make Seasonal Switches in Their Roosting Habits in Arkansas Bottomlands
Stacy J. SchermanH9 Basal Hollow Maternity Roosts of Southeastern Myotis in Alabama
Mattea A. LewisH24 Addressing the Research Needs of a State: Implementing the North American Bat Monitoring Program in Nebraska
Baxter H. SeguinH10 Do Bats Alter Nightly Foraging Activity in Response to Auditory Predation Cues?
Carson E. McNamaraH25 Metagenomics Indicates Increased Arthropod Consumption in Long-nosed Bats in New Mexico
Scarlet L. SellersH11 Putting Eocene Fossils into the Bat Family Tree
Edward D. MedeirosH26 What Bugs Bat Bugs? Factors Influencing the Parasite Communities of Puerto Rican Bats
Emily Louise StanfordH12 Baseline Data on Overwintering Bats and Hibernacula in Texas
Melissa B. MeierhoferH27 Foraging Ecology of Perimyotis subflavus in Middle Tennessee
Dustin B. ThamesH13 Wildlife Use of Livestock Water Troughs in Several States East of the Mississippi River
Russell L. MilamH28 Long-term Fission-Fusion Dynamics of a Myotis sodalis Colony
Francis E. Tillman, Jr.H14 Morphological Diversity in the Sensory System of Phyllostomid Bats and Implications for Acoustic and Dietary Ecology
Leith Leiser-MillerH29 From the Shadows of the Southeast: The Population Genetics and Phylogeography of Myotis austroriparius
Faith L. UreelH15 Skin Microbiota Potential in White-nose Syndrome Resistance of Hibernating Eptesicus fuscus
Virginie Lemieux-LabontéH30 Impact of Urbanization on Bats in Eastern Iowa
Audri J. Woessner7:00 Student Social Barley’s 200 East Jackson Avenue
Light food, cash bar and great company. All students are welcome. Trivia starts at 7:307:00 Student Social Barley’s 200 East Jackson Avenue
Light food, cash bar and great company. All students are welcome. Trivia starts at 7:30
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN10
Frid
ay
7:00 am - 8:00 am
Breakfast Tennessee
Diversity in Science Breakfast Crystal
For the past 3 years, NASBR participants have enjoyed discussing Women in Science issues together over breakfast in a constructive and supportive professional environment. This year, we've broadened the breakfast to Diversity in Science to widen the scope of topics we discuss. The Diversity in Science breakfast is a great opportunity to explore and discuss issues that involve all of us in a friendly open forum. Our goal is to promote conversation and actions to help us achieve an inclusive, diverse, and supportive culture in STEM, both within our own NASBR society and at our home institutions.
Villa Award
Stephanie Ortega-García obtained her undergraduate and Master’s degrees in Science at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), where she graduated with honors. She did several research stays in international institutions including the Institute of Ecology and Systematics in Havana, Cuba, Trinity University in Texas, and the University of Kansas. Her research interests focus on climate change, macroecology and conservation physiology, with particular reference to small mammals. She is the head of the outreach chapter of a Mexican civil association dedicated to biological conservation. Among her contributions to science, she has published four peer-reviewed papers and has been part of organizing committees of different events and activities within scientific meetings. She is currently a PhD candidate at UNAM, working on her dissertation titled Physiological bases and ecological effects of thermal niches on neotropical nectarivorous bats.
7:00 am - 5:00 pm Registration Park View Lobby
10:00 am - 7:00pm
Poster Session II - Available for Viewing Tennessee Reception Supported by Titley Scientific
Medallion CarriageConservation Biology of Indo-Pacific Island Bats Chairs: Dave Waldien, Frank Bonaccorso Migration, Movement & Climate Change Chairs: Jennifer Krauel, Jordi Segers8:00 Cracks in Island Keystones as Threat Synergies and Feedback Loops Push Island Pteropus to the Brink
Tigga Kingston8:00 Bat Diet Reveals Richness in Pest Consumption and High-altitude Insect Migration
Jennifer J. Krauel8:15 Threats to Monkey-faced Bats and Flying Foxes in Solomon Islands
Tyrone H. Lavery 8:15 Hoary Bats (Lasiurus cinereus) Use Nearly Undetectable Echolocation in Autumn and May Fly in Silence
Aaron J. Corcoran8:30 Documenting Bat Echolocation Calls from Solomon Islands and Bougainville
Michael Pennay
8:30 Nocturnal Airplane and Ground Telemetry Employed to Determine Foraging Range and Habitat of Townsend’s Big-eared Bats
Patricia E. Brown8:45 Rapid Assessment of Bats on Bougainville Island: Searching for Monkey-faced Fruit Bats and Spare Tires
Frank Bonaccorso
8:45 Do Organismal Traits or Species Range Attributes Offer the Best Predictions of How Species Respond to Climate Change?
Bryan C. Carstens9:00 Density as Indicator of Threat Level and Conservation Needs of Fruit Bats on Islands
Tammy Mildenstein9:00 Presence-only Modelling Reveals Future Shifts in Suitable Climate Niches for Bats in Western North America
Daniel A. R. Taylor9:15 Improving Geographic Range Estimates for Island Endemics
Susan M. Tsang9:15 Species-specific Probability of Winter Activity Across a Temperature Gradient in Bats
Kevin A. Parker
9:30 Filipinos for Flying Foxes: A Model for Integrating Research and ConservationDavid L. Waldien
9:30 Save Our Bats, Save Our Tequila: Industry and Science Working for PollinatorsRodrigo A. Medellin
9:45 Coffee Break Pre-function 9:45 Coffee Break Pre-function
Ecophysiology Chairs: Justin Boyles, Liam McGuire Tropical Ecology Chairs: Gerry Carter, Luis Viquez-R.10:15 Disturbances Affect Hibernating Bats: We Don’t Know How or How Much It Matters
Justin G. Boyles10:15 No Bats in Bat-Baobab Pollination System of South Africa: What Are the Consequences?
Macy A. Madden10:30 Stop Using Body Condition Index
Liam P. McGuire10:30 Species from Feces Goes Diet: Nicaraguan Bats Reveal All
Carol L. Chambers10:45 The Other End of the Hibernation Phenotype Spectrum: Myotis velifer and Hibernation in
Mild EnvironmentsNathan W. Fuller
10:45 Foraging Dispersion and Resource Use of Ryukyu Flying-foxes and Relationships with Fig Abundance on Iriomote Island
Ya-Fu Lee11:00 Environmental and Biological Context Modulates the Physiological Stress Response of Bats to Human Disturbance
Kendra L. Phelps11:00 Bats Navigating the Plant Bouquet: Links Between Bat Diet and Fruit Scent Diversity
Sharlene E. Santana11:15 Quantifying Steroid Transfer and Urinary Steroids in Female Big Brown Bats
Lucas J. Greville11:15 ‘Social Bet-hedging’ Reduces Risk in the Snuggle for Survival
Gerald G. Carter11:30 Efficacy of Fecal Metabolomics as a Non-Invasive Tool for Age-Determination in Bats with Exceptional Longevity
Lisa Noelle Cooper11:30 Establishing Baseline Data from Bat Monitoring Surveys in Guyana
Burton K. Lim11:45 The Influence of Energetic and Time Constraints on Home-range Size in Female Myotis lucifugus
Andrew K. Habrich11:45 Are We Underestimating the Threatened Status of the South American Bats?
Ricardo B. Machado
North American Society for Bat Research 11
Friday
7:00 am - 8:00 am
Breakfast Tennessee
Diversity in Science Breakfast Crystal
For the past 3 years, NASBR participants have enjoyed discussing Women in Science issues together over breakfast in a constructive and supportive professional environment. This year, we've broadened the breakfast to Diversity in Science to widen the scope of topics we discuss. The Diversity in Science breakfast is a great opportunity to explore and discuss issues that involve all of us in a friendly open forum. Our goal is to promote conversation and actions to help us achieve an inclusive, diverse, and supportive culture in STEM, both within our own NASBR society and at our home institutions.
Villa Award
Stephanie Ortega-García obtained her undergraduate and Master’s degrees in Science at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), where she graduated with honors. She did several research stays in international institutions including the Institute of Ecology and Systematics in Havana, Cuba, Trinity University in Texas, and the University of Kansas. Her research interests focus on climate change, macroecology and conservation physiology, with particular reference to small mammals. She is the head of the outreach chapter of a Mexican civil association dedicated to biological conservation. Among her contributions to science, she has published four peer-reviewed papers and has been part of organizing committees of different events and activities within scientific meetings. She is currently a PhD candidate at UNAM, working on her dissertation titled Physiological bases and ecological effects of thermal niches on neotropical nectarivorous bats.
7:00 am - 5:00 pm Registration Park View Lobby
10:00 am - 7:00pm
Poster Session II - Available for Viewing Tennessee Reception Supported by Titley Scientific
Medallion CarriageConservation Biology of Indo-Pacific Island Bats Chairs: Dave Waldien, Frank Bonaccorso Migration, Movement & Climate Change Chairs: Jennifer Krauel, Jordi Segers8:00 Cracks in Island Keystones as Threat Synergies and Feedback Loops Push Island Pteropus to the Brink
Tigga Kingston8:00 Bat Diet Reveals Richness in Pest Consumption and High-altitude Insect Migration
Jennifer J. Krauel8:15 Threats to Monkey-faced Bats and Flying Foxes in Solomon Islands
Tyrone H. Lavery 8:15 Hoary Bats (Lasiurus cinereus) Use Nearly Undetectable Echolocation in Autumn and May Fly in Silence
Aaron J. Corcoran8:30 Documenting Bat Echolocation Calls from Solomon Islands and Bougainville
Michael Pennay
8:30 Nocturnal Airplane and Ground Telemetry Employed to Determine Foraging Range and Habitat of Townsend’s Big-eared Bats
Patricia E. Brown8:45 Rapid Assessment of Bats on Bougainville Island: Searching for Monkey-faced Fruit Bats and Spare Tires
Frank Bonaccorso
8:45 Do Organismal Traits or Species Range Attributes Offer the Best Predictions of How Species Respond to Climate Change?
Bryan C. Carstens9:00 Density as Indicator of Threat Level and Conservation Needs of Fruit Bats on Islands
Tammy Mildenstein9:00 Presence-only Modelling Reveals Future Shifts in Suitable Climate Niches for Bats in Western North America
Daniel A. R. Taylor9:15 Improving Geographic Range Estimates for Island Endemics
Susan M. Tsang9:15 Species-specific Probability of Winter Activity Across a Temperature Gradient in Bats
Kevin A. Parker
9:30 Filipinos for Flying Foxes: A Model for Integrating Research and ConservationDavid L. Waldien
9:30 Save Our Bats, Save Our Tequila: Industry and Science Working for PollinatorsRodrigo A. Medellin
9:45 Coffee Break Pre-function 9:45 Coffee Break Pre-function
Ecophysiology Chairs: Justin Boyles, Liam McGuire Tropical Ecology Chairs: Gerry Carter, Luis Viquez-R.10:15 Disturbances Affect Hibernating Bats: We Don’t Know How or How Much It Matters
Justin G. Boyles10:15 No Bats in Bat-Baobab Pollination System of South Africa: What Are the Consequences?
Macy A. Madden10:30 Stop Using Body Condition Index
Liam P. McGuire10:30 Species from Feces Goes Diet: Nicaraguan Bats Reveal All
Carol L. Chambers10:45 The Other End of the Hibernation Phenotype Spectrum: Myotis velifer and Hibernation in
Mild EnvironmentsNathan W. Fuller
10:45 Foraging Dispersion and Resource Use of Ryukyu Flying-foxes and Relationships with Fig Abundance on Iriomote Island
Ya-Fu Lee11:00 Environmental and Biological Context Modulates the Physiological Stress Response of Bats to Human Disturbance
Kendra L. Phelps11:00 Bats Navigating the Plant Bouquet: Links Between Bat Diet and Fruit Scent Diversity
Sharlene E. Santana11:15 Quantifying Steroid Transfer and Urinary Steroids in Female Big Brown Bats
Lucas J. Greville11:15 ‘Social Bet-hedging’ Reduces Risk in the Snuggle for Survival
Gerald G. Carter11:30 Efficacy of Fecal Metabolomics as a Non-Invasive Tool for Age-Determination in Bats with Exceptional Longevity
Lisa Noelle Cooper11:30 Establishing Baseline Data from Bat Monitoring Surveys in Guyana
Burton K. Lim11:45 The Influence of Energetic and Time Constraints on Home-range Size in Female Myotis lucifugus
Andrew K. Habrich11:45 Are We Underestimating the Threatened Status of the South American Bats?
Ricardo B. Machado
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN12
Frid
ay12:00-1:30
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk
12:00-1:30
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk
Medallion CarriageEcology & Behavior Chairs: Paul Moosman, Joe Szewczak Functional Morphology & Neurobiology Chairs: Bill Schutt, Paul Faure1:30 Time for Alternative Monitoring Approaches? A Case Study on Eastern Small-footed Bats in Virginia
Paul R. Moosman1:30 Factors Influencing Flight Membrane Wound Healing in Big Brown Bats
Paul A. Faure1:45 Effects of Forest Thinning on Bat Foraging Activity in the Northeastern United States
Lisa E. Powers1:45 Jaw-Dropping: Functional Variation in Digastric Muscle Morphology in Noctilionoid Bats
Abigail A. Curtis2:00 Impacts of Social Group Composition on Personality in Eptesicus fuscus
Amanda M. Schmitt2:00 Putting the Leaf-nosed Bats in Context: A Geometric Morphometric Analysis of the Three Largest Bat Families
Brandon P. Hedrick2:15 Higher Bat Activity at Organic than Conventional Soybean Fields
Julia E. Put2:15 Tissue-level and Whole-bone Biomechanics of the Wing Bones of Bats Compared to Terrestrial Mammals
Hope C. Ball2:30 Livin’ on a Prair(ie): Bat Foraging in a Mixed Agricultural Landscape
Amy K. Wray2:30 Cranial Modularity and its Evolutionary Consequences in the New World Leaf-nosed Bats
Daniela M. Rossoni2:45 Trophic Position and Reliance on Aquatic Production of Bats along Two Rivers in Yosemite National Park
Joseph M. Szewczak2:45 Does the Nose Know? The Link Between Olfactory Tracking Capabilities and Nose Morphology in Bats
Alyson F. Brokaw3:00 Bats and Fire: Endangered Florida Bonneted Bats Respond Positively to Prescribed Burns
Elizabeth C. Braun de Torrez3:00 Skull Shape Diversity among Phyllostomids in Relation to Immediate Outgroups: Phylogeny or Function
Gregory L. Mutumi3:15 Coffee Break Pre-function 3:15 Coffee Break Pre-function
Ecology & Behavior (cont.) Chairs: Paul Moosman, Joe Szewczak Urban Ecology Chairs: Matina Kalkounis-Rueppell, Deanna Byrnes3:45 “The Neighbourhood Bat Watch”, a Canadian Bat Colony Monitoring Network: How It Started and How It’s Going
Anouk Simard3:45 Effects of Urbanization on Bat Habitat Use in Phoenix, Arizona: A Multi-Scale Landscape Analysis
Tracy C. Bazelman4:00 Predicting Susceptibility of Western Bat Species to White-nose Syndrome
Brooke Maslo4:00 Threshold Patterns in the Effect of Residential Urbanization on Bat Diversity
Han Li4:15 Visitor Attitudes Toward Bats in Buildings of Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Adam S. Willcox4:15 Separating the Effects of Water Quality and Urbanization on Temperate Insectivorous Bats at the Landscape Scale
Matina C. Kalcounis-Rueppell4:30 The Importance of Group Phenotypic Composition in Roost Finding Efficiency
Maria Sagot4:30
North American Society for Bat Research 13
Friday12:00-1:30
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk
12:00-1:30
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk
Medallion CarriageEcology & Behavior Chairs: Paul Moosman, Joe Szewczak Functional Morphology & Neurobiology Chairs: Bill Schutt, Paul Faure1:30 Time for Alternative Monitoring Approaches? A Case Study on Eastern Small-footed Bats in Virginia
Paul R. Moosman1:30 Factors Influencing Flight Membrane Wound Healing in Big Brown Bats
Paul A. Faure1:45 Effects of Forest Thinning on Bat Foraging Activity in the Northeastern United States
Lisa E. Powers1:45 Jaw-Dropping: Functional Variation in Digastric Muscle Morphology in Noctilionoid Bats
Abigail A. Curtis2:00 Impacts of Social Group Composition on Personality in Eptesicus fuscus
Amanda M. Schmitt2:00 Putting the Leaf-nosed Bats in Context: A Geometric Morphometric Analysis of the Three Largest Bat Families
Brandon P. Hedrick2:15 Higher Bat Activity at Organic than Conventional Soybean Fields
Julia E. Put2:15 Tissue-level and Whole-bone Biomechanics of the Wing Bones of Bats Compared to Terrestrial Mammals
Hope C. Ball2:30 Livin’ on a Prair(ie): Bat Foraging in a Mixed Agricultural Landscape
Amy K. Wray2:30 Cranial Modularity and its Evolutionary Consequences in the New World Leaf-nosed Bats
Daniela M. Rossoni2:45 Trophic Position and Reliance on Aquatic Production of Bats along Two Rivers in Yosemite National Park
Joseph M. Szewczak2:45 Does the Nose Know? The Link Between Olfactory Tracking Capabilities and Nose Morphology in Bats
Alyson F. Brokaw3:00 Bats and Fire: Endangered Florida Bonneted Bats Respond Positively to Prescribed Burns
Elizabeth C. Braun de Torrez3:00 Skull Shape Diversity among Phyllostomids in Relation to Immediate Outgroups: Phylogeny or Function
Gregory L. Mutumi3:15 Coffee Break Pre-function 3:15 Coffee Break Pre-function
Ecology & Behavior (cont.) Chairs: Paul Moosman, Joe Szewczak Urban Ecology Chairs: Matina Kalkounis-Rueppell, Deanna Byrnes3:45 “The Neighbourhood Bat Watch”, a Canadian Bat Colony Monitoring Network: How It Started and How It’s Going
Anouk Simard3:45 Effects of Urbanization on Bat Habitat Use in Phoenix, Arizona: A Multi-Scale Landscape Analysis
Tracy C. Bazelman4:00 Predicting Susceptibility of Western Bat Species to White-nose Syndrome
Brooke Maslo4:00 Threshold Patterns in the Effect of Residential Urbanization on Bat Diversity
Han Li4:15 Visitor Attitudes Toward Bats in Buildings of Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Adam S. Willcox4:15 Separating the Effects of Water Quality and Urbanization on Temperate Insectivorous Bats at the Landscape Scale
Matina C. Kalcounis-Rueppell4:30 The Importance of Group Phenotypic Composition in Roost Finding Efficiency
Maria Sagot4:30
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN14
Frid
ay5:00 - 7:00
Poster Session II Tennessee (Reception with Hors d’Oeuvres and Cash Bar)
Supported by Titley Scientific
5:00 - 7:00
Poster Session II Tennessee (Reception with Hors d’Oeuvres and Cash Bar)
Supported by Titley ScientificGeneral Posters General Posters P1 New Records of Bats from the Southern Kalahari Desert, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, South Africa
Rick A. AdamsP19 Effect of Omnidirectional Microphone Height and Distance from Edge on Call Quality
Susan C. LoebP2 A Comparison of Body Condition Scoring Systems Validated by DXA and Deuterium Oxide in Eptesicus fuscus
Sybill K. AmelonP20 The Morphological Variation of the Nose Leaf in the Family Phyllostomidae
Luisa S. A. MachadoP3 Bat Use of Great Smoky Mountains National Park at Multiple Spatial Scales
Elizabeth A. BeilkeP21 Summer Activity of Bat Species at Dyess Air Force Base
Stephanie G. MartinezP4 Does the Framework of Citizen Science Projects Affect Participants’ Attitudes Towards Conservation?
Amanda BevanP22 Sanctuary: US DOE Oak Ridge Reservation
Mary K. McCrackenP5 Foraging Behavior of Myotis lucifugus During Summer at High Latitudes
Christopher A. C. BrooksP23 Temporal Acoustic Detection of Bats in the Piedmont of Paulding County, Georgia
Thomas McElroyP6 Community Composition of Ectoparasitic Bat Flies (Diptera: Streblidae and Nycteribiidae) from Neotropical Bats of
Belize and BrazilAlexis M. Brown
P24 Acoustic Analysis of Bat Diversity and Seasonal Activity in Northern California
Shahroukh MistryP7 Winter Activity Patterns of Bats on the Cumberland Plateau in Relation to Habitat and Environmental Conditions
Leanne K. BurnsP25 Survival and Recruitment of a Persisting Colony of Little Brown Myotis in Southern Ontario
Derek MorningstarP8 Tracheobronchial Tree Reinforcement Due to Flight in Two Species of Phyllostomid Bat
Richard T. CarterP26 Effects of Forest Management Techniques on Bat Habitat Use at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania
Carolyn P. PaulP9 New Geographic and Seasonal Records of Bats in Iowa
Austin ChippsP27 Bats of St. Lucia and Species Curves in the Lesser Antilles
Scott C. PedersenP10 Respiratory Rate as an Indicator of Response to Smoke during Torpor
Anna C. DotyP28 Occupancy Modeling of Foraging Bats in Managed Forests within the Piedmont Region of Georgia
Linda PurvisP11 Relating Bat and Insect Communities in the Context of White-nose Syndrome and Prescribed Fire
Shelby A. FultonP29 A Spatial Look at Little Brown Myotis Roost Conditions and Reproductive Success Across Alaska
Jesika P. ReimerP12 The Use of Mist-netting Survey Data to Assess Changes in Bat Community Composition
Christopher L. HauerP30 Roost Use by Corynorhinus rafinesquii in an Upland Forest of South Carolina
Jacob A. RogersP13 Comparison of Relative Capture Rates Among Years at a Swarming Site in Eastern Ontario
Lauren A. HootonP31 Range-wide Variation in the Summer Habitat of the Eastern Small-footed Myotis
Laura M. ScottP14 Urinalysis Indicates Differences in Health between Two Flying Fox Species
Devin N. JonesP32 Diversity and Species Richness of Forest Interior Insectivorous Bats along Elevational Gradients in Nigeria
Iroro TanshiP15 Evaluating Resource Partitioning Among Post-white-nose Syndrome Bat Communities Using Next Generation
Sequencing TechnologiesMacy J. Kailing
P33 Bats in the City – Science Based Conservation of Bats in the Greater Toronto Area
Toby J. ThorneP16 Bats as Reservoirs for Neorickettsia risticii (Potomac Horse Fever) in Tennessee
Janetta R. Kelly
P34 Evaluating Bat Community Structure in Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park Post-white-nose Syndrome
Kristen M. Van NesteP17 Overwintering by Silver-haired Bats in the Lake Michigan Basin
Allen KurtaP35 The Threat of Invasive Species to Bats
Jessica Nicole WelchP18 Long-eared Bat Taxonomy: Nuclear Genetic Evidence Eliminates the Species Status of Keen’s Myotis
Cori L LausenP36 Stopover, Swarm, or Lek? Does Intra- and Inter-annual Site Fidelity Explain Autumn Behavior in Hoary Bats?
Theodore J Weller
North American Society for Bat Research 15
Friday5:00 - 7:00
Poster Session II Tennessee (Reception with Hors d’Oeuvres and Cash Bar)
Supported by Titley Scientific
5:00 - 7:00
Poster Session II Tennessee (Reception with Hors d’Oeuvres and Cash Bar)
Supported by Titley ScientificGeneral Posters General Posters P1 New Records of Bats from the Southern Kalahari Desert, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, South Africa
Rick A. AdamsP19 Effect of Omnidirectional Microphone Height and Distance from Edge on Call Quality
Susan C. LoebP2 A Comparison of Body Condition Scoring Systems Validated by DXA and Deuterium Oxide in Eptesicus fuscus
Sybill K. AmelonP20 The Morphological Variation of the Nose Leaf in the Family Phyllostomidae
Luisa S. A. MachadoP3 Bat Use of Great Smoky Mountains National Park at Multiple Spatial Scales
Elizabeth A. BeilkeP21 Summer Activity of Bat Species at Dyess Air Force Base
Stephanie G. MartinezP4 Does the Framework of Citizen Science Projects Affect Participants’ Attitudes Towards Conservation?
Amanda BevanP22 Sanctuary: US DOE Oak Ridge Reservation
Mary K. McCrackenP5 Foraging Behavior of Myotis lucifugus During Summer at High Latitudes
Christopher A. C. BrooksP23 Temporal Acoustic Detection of Bats in the Piedmont of Paulding County, Georgia
Thomas McElroyP6 Community Composition of Ectoparasitic Bat Flies (Diptera: Streblidae and Nycteribiidae) from Neotropical Bats of
Belize and BrazilAlexis M. Brown
P24 Acoustic Analysis of Bat Diversity and Seasonal Activity in Northern California
Shahroukh MistryP7 Winter Activity Patterns of Bats on the Cumberland Plateau in Relation to Habitat and Environmental Conditions
Leanne K. BurnsP25 Survival and Recruitment of a Persisting Colony of Little Brown Myotis in Southern Ontario
Derek MorningstarP8 Tracheobronchial Tree Reinforcement Due to Flight in Two Species of Phyllostomid Bat
Richard T. CarterP26 Effects of Forest Management Techniques on Bat Habitat Use at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania
Carolyn P. PaulP9 New Geographic and Seasonal Records of Bats in Iowa
Austin ChippsP27 Bats of St. Lucia and Species Curves in the Lesser Antilles
Scott C. PedersenP10 Respiratory Rate as an Indicator of Response to Smoke during Torpor
Anna C. DotyP28 Occupancy Modeling of Foraging Bats in Managed Forests within the Piedmont Region of Georgia
Linda PurvisP11 Relating Bat and Insect Communities in the Context of White-nose Syndrome and Prescribed Fire
Shelby A. FultonP29 A Spatial Look at Little Brown Myotis Roost Conditions and Reproductive Success Across Alaska
Jesika P. ReimerP12 The Use of Mist-netting Survey Data to Assess Changes in Bat Community Composition
Christopher L. HauerP30 Roost Use by Corynorhinus rafinesquii in an Upland Forest of South Carolina
Jacob A. RogersP13 Comparison of Relative Capture Rates Among Years at a Swarming Site in Eastern Ontario
Lauren A. HootonP31 Range-wide Variation in the Summer Habitat of the Eastern Small-footed Myotis
Laura M. ScottP14 Urinalysis Indicates Differences in Health between Two Flying Fox Species
Devin N. JonesP32 Diversity and Species Richness of Forest Interior Insectivorous Bats along Elevational Gradients in Nigeria
Iroro TanshiP15 Evaluating Resource Partitioning Among Post-white-nose Syndrome Bat Communities Using Next Generation
Sequencing TechnologiesMacy J. Kailing
P33 Bats in the City – Science Based Conservation of Bats in the Greater Toronto Area
Toby J. ThorneP16 Bats as Reservoirs for Neorickettsia risticii (Potomac Horse Fever) in Tennessee
Janetta R. Kelly
P34 Evaluating Bat Community Structure in Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park Post-white-nose Syndrome
Kristen M. Van NesteP17 Overwintering by Silver-haired Bats in the Lake Michigan Basin
Allen KurtaP35 The Threat of Invasive Species to Bats
Jessica Nicole WelchP18 Long-eared Bat Taxonomy: Nuclear Genetic Evidence Eliminates the Species Status of Keen’s Myotis
Cori L LausenP36 Stopover, Swarm, or Lek? Does Intra- and Inter-annual Site Fidelity Explain Autumn Behavior in Hoary Bats?
Theodore J Weller
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN16
Satu
rday
7:00 am - 8:00 am
Breakfast & Breakfast with a Mentor Tennessee
NASBR Teacher WorkshopJoin Veronica Brown, Rob Mies, Riley Bernard and others as they discuss hands-on learning opportunities for educators to promote bat conservation. Topics include information about bats in Tennessee, connecting with students through virtual learning, immersive activities for all ages and how to engage with urban communities. All NASBR registrants are welcome. If you cannot make it during the workshop, stop by the Crystal Ballroom to pick up copies of handouts and browse hands-on activities and resources.
7:45 am - 4:00 pm Registration Lobby
7:45 am - 2:00 pm NASBR Teacher Workshop Crystal
Medallion CarriageDisease & Microbiology Chairs: Emma Willcox, Riley Bernard Roost Dynamics Chairs: John Hermanson, Terry Zinn8:00 A Comparative Analysis of Viral Richness and Viral Sharing in Cave-roosting Bats
Anna R. Willoughby8:00 Roost Selection by Bats in Buildings of Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Kirstin E. Fagan8:15 Modelling the Influence of Evaporative Water Loss on Hibernation Energetics and Implications for White-nose
SyndromeCatherine G. Haase
8:15 Mitigating for Noise Near Roosts Based on Noise Frequency and Species of Bats
Dave S. Johnston8:30 Apicomplexan Parasites of Bats: The Utility of a Bat-Microbe Database
Lisa A. Beltz8:30 Preferential Nursing in Brazilian Free-tailed Bats
Jessica Marie Dreyer8:45 Being an Honest Broker: Bridging the ‘Knowledge-Action’ Divide to Inform Disease Management Decisions
Riley F. Bernard8:45 Monitoring Site Fidelity and Seasonal Activity of Mexican Long-nosed Bats at Emory Cave Using PIT Tags
Roxanne D. Pourshoushtari9:00 Testing Two Potential Treatments for White-nose Syndrome in Myotis lucifugus
Nicole A.S.-Y Dorville9:00 Fluctuations in Colony Size over the Past Decade of the Endangered Mexican Long-nosed Bat in Texas
Loren K. Ammerman9:15 A Hope or a Sprayer? Modeling Implications of Alternative Management Approaches for White-nose Syndrome
Craig K. R. Willis9:15 Behavior and Aggression in a Roost of Eptesicus fuscus
Christopher W. Nicolay9:30 Testing the Efficacy of Chitosan as a Potential Treatment for White-nose Syndrome
Maarten J. Vonhof9:30 Bat Activity Patterns and Fall Roost Use in Montana Managed Forests
Nathan A. Schwab9:45 Thermoregulatory Energetics of Myotis lucifugus Recovering from White-nose Syndrome
Trevor M. Moore9:45 Location, Location: Where Bat Roosts Are Installed Can Be an Important Factor in Mitigating Transportation Projects
Jill M. Carpenter10:00 Coffee Break Pre-function 10:00 Coffee Break Pre-function
Disease & Microbiology II Chairs: Winifred Frick, Craig Willis Echolocation Chairs: Cori Lausen, Kristina Montoya-Aiona10:30 Context-dependent Interactions Between Bats and the Causative Agent of White-nose Syndrome
Christina M. Davy10:30 Does Re-entry Flight Behavior Affect the FM Calls of Tadarida brasiliensis?
Allison Pudlo10:45 Western Bat Distributions Before and After Exposure to White-nose Syndrome: A Hybrid Correlative-Mechanistic
Modeling ApproachMeredith L. McClure
10:45 Applying Mobile Acoustic Surveys to Discern Bat Activity by Land Use Types
Vanessa G. Rojas11:00 The Effects of White-nose Syndrome on Bat Community Structure in South Carolina
Katherine D. Teets11:00 Hawks, Ziplines and Drones: New Methods for Recording Echolocation of Bats in Large Groups
Laura N. Kloepper11:20- 12:30
Business Meeting II in Medallion All attendes are encouraged to attend
11:20- 12:30
Business Meeting II in Medallion All attendes are encouraged to attend
12:30-2:00
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk----------------------------------------------
Board Meeting - HI Dining Room
12:30-2:00
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk----------------------------------------------
Board Meeting - HI Dining Room1:30- 2:00
Teacher Workshop Drop-in Stop by the Teacher Workshop in the Crystal Ballroom to pick up copies of handouts
and browse hands-on activities and resources.
1:30- 2:00
Teacher Workshop Drop-in Stop by the Teacher Workshop in the Crystal Ballroom to pick up copies of handouts
and browse hands-on activities and resources.
North American Society for Bat Research 17
SaturdaySaturdaySaturday
7:00 am - 8:00 am
Breakfast & Breakfast with a Mentor Tennessee
NASBR Teacher WorkshopJoin Veronica Brown, Rob Mies, Riley Bernard and others as they discuss hands-on learning opportunities for educators to promote bat conservation. Topics include information about bats in Tennessee, connecting with students through virtual learning, immersive activities for all ages and how to engage with urban communities. All NASBR registrants are welcome. If you cannot make it during the workshop, stop by the Crystal Ballroom to pick up copies of handouts and browse hands-on activities and resources.
7:45 am - 4:00 pm Registration Lobby
7:45 am - 2:00 pm NASBR Teacher Workshop Crystal
Medallion CarriageDisease & Microbiology Chairs: Emma Willcox, Riley Bernard Roost Dynamics Chairs: John Hermanson, Terry Zinn8:00 A Comparative Analysis of Viral Richness and Viral Sharing in Cave-roosting Bats
Anna R. Willoughby8:00 Roost Selection by Bats in Buildings of Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Kirstin E. Fagan8:15 Modelling the Influence of Evaporative Water Loss on Hibernation Energetics and Implications for White-nose
SyndromeCatherine G. Haase
8:15 Mitigating for Noise Near Roosts Based on Noise Frequency and Species of Bats
Dave S. Johnston8:30 Apicomplexan Parasites of Bats: The Utility of a Bat-Microbe Database
Lisa A. Beltz8:30 Preferential Nursing in Brazilian Free-tailed Bats
Jessica Marie Dreyer8:45 Being an Honest Broker: Bridging the ‘Knowledge-Action’ Divide to Inform Disease Management Decisions
Riley F. Bernard8:45 Monitoring Site Fidelity and Seasonal Activity of Mexican Long-nosed Bats at Emory Cave Using PIT Tags
Roxanne D. Pourshoushtari9:00 Testing Two Potential Treatments for White-nose Syndrome in Myotis lucifugus
Nicole A.S.-Y Dorville9:00 Fluctuations in Colony Size over the Past Decade of the Endangered Mexican Long-nosed Bat in Texas
Loren K. Ammerman9:15 A Hope or a Sprayer? Modeling Implications of Alternative Management Approaches for White-nose Syndrome
Craig K. R. Willis9:15 Behavior and Aggression in a Roost of Eptesicus fuscus
Christopher W. Nicolay9:30 Testing the Efficacy of Chitosan as a Potential Treatment for White-nose Syndrome
Maarten J. Vonhof9:30 Bat Activity Patterns and Fall Roost Use in Montana Managed Forests
Nathan A. Schwab9:45 Thermoregulatory Energetics of Myotis lucifugus Recovering from White-nose Syndrome
Trevor M. Moore9:45 Location, Location: Where Bat Roosts Are Installed Can Be an Important Factor in Mitigating Transportation Projects
Jill M. Carpenter10:00 Coffee Break Pre-function 10:00 Coffee Break Pre-function
Disease & Microbiology II Chairs: Winifred Frick, Craig Willis Echolocation Chairs: Cori Lausen, Kristina Montoya-Aiona10:30 Context-dependent Interactions Between Bats and the Causative Agent of White-nose Syndrome
Christina M. Davy10:30 Does Re-entry Flight Behavior Affect the FM Calls of Tadarida brasiliensis?
Allison Pudlo10:45 Western Bat Distributions Before and After Exposure to White-nose Syndrome: A Hybrid Correlative-Mechanistic
Modeling ApproachMeredith L. McClure
10:45 Applying Mobile Acoustic Surveys to Discern Bat Activity by Land Use Types
Vanessa G. Rojas11:00 The Effects of White-nose Syndrome on Bat Community Structure in South Carolina
Katherine D. Teets11:00 Hawks, Ziplines and Drones: New Methods for Recording Echolocation of Bats in Large Groups
Laura N. Kloepper11:20- 12:30
Business Meeting II in Medallion All attendes are encouraged to attend
11:20- 12:30
Business Meeting II in Medallion All attendes are encouraged to attend
12:30-2:00
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk----------------------------------------------
Board Meeting - HI Dining Room
12:30-2:00
Lunch----------------------------------------------
Lunch with a Mentor - Meet at NASBR Registration Desk----------------------------------------------
Board Meeting - HI Dining Room1:30- 2:00
Teacher Workshop Drop-in Stop by the Teacher Workshop in the Crystal Ballroom to pick up copies of handouts
and browse hands-on activities and resources.
1:30- 2:00
Teacher Workshop Drop-in Stop by the Teacher Workshop in the Crystal Ballroom to pick up copies of handouts
and browse hands-on activities and resources.
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN18
Satu
rday
Medallion CarriageGenetics & Population Biology Chairs: Amy Russell, Maria Sagot Conservation & Management Chairs: Susan Tsang, Tigga Kingston2:00 Population Genetics of Myotis in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, Alaska
Amy L. Russell2:00 Timber Management has Neutral or Positive Effects on Foraging Behaviors of Endangered Myotis
Timothy J. Divoll2:15 Barcoding Genes Reveal High Numbers of Cryptic Species in Bats
Tara A. Pelletier2:15 Morphology Predicts Bat Activity at Multiple Scales in a Post-wildfire Landscape
Clarissa A. Starbuck2:30 Genomic Evidence That Myotis lucifugus ‘Subspecies’ Are Five Non-sister Species, Despite Gene Flow
Ariadna E. Morales
2:30 Conserving an Endangered Pollinator: Insights for Engaging Communities in “Bat-friendly” Agave Management in Northeast Mexico
Kristen M. Lear2:45 Positive Selection in the Antigen Binding Site of the MHC-DRB Gene of Artibeus jamaicensis
Melina Del Real-Monroy2:45 Bat Behavior in Response to Ultrasonic Signals: Implications for Reducing Mortality at Wind Turbines
Victoria J. Bennett3:00 Performance of Hierarchical Abundance Models on Simulated Bat Capture Data
Kathryn M. Womack3:00 Promoting Actions to Conserve Bats - batconservationalliance.wikidot.com
Charles M. Francis3:15 Spatial Variation in Population Impacts from White-nose Syndrome
Winifred F. Frick3:15 Simulated Bat Populations Erode when Exposed to Climate Change Projections for Western North America
Mark A. Hayes3:30 3:30 Community Compositional Changes Observed in Bat Field Surveys since White-nose Syndrome Arrived in North
CarolinaKatherine Caldwell
5:30 Cocktail Social - Cash Bar (Open to all) Pre-function 5:30 Cocktail Social - Cash Bar (Open to all) Pre-function6:30 Banquet (Tickets Required) Grand Pavillion 6:30 Banquet (Tickets Required) Grand Pavillion7:30 Awards & Silent Auction (Open to all) Grand Pavillion 7:30 Awards & Silent Auction (Open to all) Grand Pavillion
8:30- Music & Contra Dancing (Open to all) Danny Gammon and the Luv Muffins. Tim Klein, Caller and Sound by Allen Miller Grand Pavillion
8:30- Music & Contra Dancing (Open to all) Danny Gammon and the Luv Muffins. Tim Klein, Caller and Sound by Allen Miller Grand Pavillion
North American Society for Bat Research 19
Medallion CarriageGenetics & Population Biology Chairs: Amy Russell, Maria Sagot Conservation & Management Chairs: Susan Tsang, Tigga Kingston2:00 Population Genetics of Myotis in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, Alaska
Amy L. Russell2:00 Timber Management has Neutral or Positive Effects on Foraging Behaviors of Endangered Myotis
Timothy J. Divoll2:15 Barcoding Genes Reveal High Numbers of Cryptic Species in Bats
Tara A. Pelletier2:15 Morphology Predicts Bat Activity at Multiple Scales in a Post-wildfire Landscape
Clarissa A. Starbuck2:30 Genomic Evidence That Myotis lucifugus ‘Subspecies’ Are Five Non-sister Species, Despite Gene Flow
Ariadna E. Morales
2:30 Conserving an Endangered Pollinator: Insights for Engaging Communities in “Bat-friendly” Agave Management in Northeast Mexico
Kristen M. Lear2:45 Positive Selection in the Antigen Binding Site of the MHC-DRB Gene of Artibeus jamaicensis
Melina Del Real-Monroy2:45 Bat Behavior in Response to Ultrasonic Signals: Implications for Reducing Mortality at Wind Turbines
Victoria J. Bennett3:00 Performance of Hierarchical Abundance Models on Simulated Bat Capture Data
Kathryn M. Womack3:00 Promoting Actions to Conserve Bats - batconservationalliance.wikidot.com
Charles M. Francis3:15 Spatial Variation in Population Impacts from White-nose Syndrome
Winifred F. Frick3:15 Simulated Bat Populations Erode when Exposed to Climate Change Projections for Western North America
Mark A. Hayes3:30 3:30 Community Compositional Changes Observed in Bat Field Surveys since White-nose Syndrome Arrived in North
CarolinaKatherine Caldwell
5:30 Cocktail Social - Cash Bar (Open to all) Pre-function 5:30 Cocktail Social - Cash Bar (Open to all) Pre-function6:30 Banquet (Tickets Required) Grand Pavillion 6:30 Banquet (Tickets Required) Grand Pavillion7:30 Awards & Silent Auction (Open to all) Grand Pavillion 7:30 Awards & Silent Auction (Open to all) Grand Pavillion
8:30- Music & Contra Dancing (Open to all) Danny Gammon and the Luv Muffins. Tim Klein, Caller and Sound by Allen Miller Grand Pavillion
8:30- Music & Contra Dancing (Open to all) Danny Gammon and the Luv Muffins. Tim Klein, Caller and Sound by Allen Miller Grand Pavillion
Saturday
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN20
Bid to Host the 50th Annual SymposiumNorth American Society for Bat Research
Tempe, Arizona, USA
October 21 – 24, 2020Tempe is located in the heart of Metropolitan Phoenix - known for its year-round sun and warm temperatures, outdoor recreation, and natural beauty. Arizona hosted the first NASBR (called the Southwest Symposium on Bat Research), and promises to be an unforgettable location for the 50th Annual NASBR.
Travel● Airport: Phoenix Sky Harbor (PHX); more than 1,200 arrival/departures daily● Valley Metro Light Rail from Airport to Downtown Phoenix, Tempe, and Mesa ($2 single, $4 All-Day), Uber to Tempe: $13● Estimated flight costs: Atlanta ($296), Boston ($339), Chicago ($289), Dallas ($119), Denver ($180), Indianapolis ($344), Mexico City ($728), St. Louis ($301), Los Angeles ($170)
Tempe Amenities● Mill Avenue District – 100+ restaurants, shops, and craft breweries● Outdoors - hike, kayak, paddle board at Hayden Butte, Tempe Beach Park, and Papago Park ● Desert Botanical Garden – 50-acre desert garden showcases a fantastic variety of arid plants● Phoenix Zoo - the largest privately owned, self-supporting zoo in the U.S.● ASU’s Hasbrouck Insect Collection – 750,000+ insect specimens from Arizona and beyond.
Other Attractions● Musical Instrument Museum – 6,500 instruments from around the world ● Arizona Sonora Desert Museum – one of the greatest natural museums in the world ● Sedona – paradise for artists, photographers, hikers, and nature lovers● Kartchner Caverns State Park – stunning limestone cave in Southeastern Arizona● Grand Canyon – one of the Seven Wonders of the World
Pre-Conference Tours: In development
Hotel InformationThe Tempe Mission Palms is a beautiful destination hotel located in the heart of vibrant downtown Tempe. Mission Palms has 303 rooms decorated with the rich, warm colors of the Desert Southwest. ● Only 4 miles from Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport (Airport Shuttle Service)● Walking distance to about 75 restaurants, bars, activities and 2 blocks from Light Rail Station● Rooftop outdoor heated swimming pool, elegant garden courtyard, 303 rooms● Group Rate $189/night
North American Society for Bat Research 21
Bid to Host the 50th Annual SymposiumNorth American Society for Bat Research
Denver, Colorado, USA
October, 2020
Travel● Airport: Denver International Airport● From LaGuardia: $244 round trip● From Los Angeles: $195 round trip● From Mexico City: $346 roundtrip● From Toronto: $436 roundtrip
From Airport● RTD (Bus): $9.00 Round-Trip –DIA to Union to Westin● Super Shuttle: $85 one-way, direct from airport, up to 3 passengers● Taxi: $75.00 One Way ● Uber: $40.00-50.00 One Way ● Private Sedan: $80.00 One Way
Hotel Information● The Westin-Westminster● Room Rates: $189-$209 + 12.5 % tax● Currently Open Dates: 6-10, 13-17, or 20-24 October 2020, 3-7 November 2020
Dining● Onsite: KachinaGrill (#1 Trip Advisor), Starbucks, In-Room dining on-site
Walking distance:● TukTukThai● Bar Louie ● Rock Bottom Brewery ● Bonefish ● Macaroni Grill ● R Taco ● Chuy’sTex-Mex ● Smashburger● MOD Pizza ● Dave and Busters● Caribou Coffee● Thai Bristo● 10+ additional options
Recreation● Legacy and Walnut Creek Golf ● Westminster Promenade and Walnut Creek Shops & Restaurants● Westminster Nature Park ● Butterfly Pavilion ● Downtown Denver is within 15 minutes (Uber/Lyft) ● Downtown Boulder is within 15 minutes (Uber/Lyft)● Rocky Mountain National Park (1 hour)
Parking: Complimentary
High-speed Internet: Complimentary
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN22
NASBR Board NominationsRegular Member (3)
ANGELO SOTO. Assistant Professor at Rutgers University & Research Scientist at American Museum of Natural History studying extinctions in island bats. A member of NASBR since 1999 (Madison, WI) & former Student Repre-sentative of the society in 2012–2013. In the years as student representative I helped formalize documents outlin-ing duties/tasks of student representatives & helped solidify initiatives still in place in the society today. I also have volunteer experience with the organizing committee of NASBR 42 (San Juan, PR) pertaining to conference logistics, pre/post-conference field trip organization & leading, etc. I am well prepared to serve as a member of the board of directors of NASBR in multiple ways: First, I have 13 years of experience in informal education and outreach through my work in Natural History Museums, which makes me uniquely qualified to participate as a member of the Education and Outreach Committee. Second, I have 6 years of experience as editorial board member of two journals, which qualifies me to contribute to the Program and/or Awards Committees. Finally, I fluently speak Span-
ish, Portuguese, and English, which puts me in an excellent position to perform other tasks for the society aimed at the development of a culturally rich and inclusive environment in support of professionals & students from throughout the Americas.
CAROL CHAMBERS. I attended my first NASBR meeting in 2004; NASBR connected me with others working with bats and I also enjoyed the energy of managers, students, and researchers focused on a single taxa. I find the organization valuable to me personally, but more importantly, globally important to conservation and management of bats. I also appreciate the emphasis on student development and inclusion; I believe mentoring students helps organizations such as NASBR grow successfully. I received a PhD in Wildlife Sciences from Oregon State University in 1996 and am in my 21st year as Professor of Wildlife Ecology at Northern Arizona University. My work focuses on habitat relationships and gives me expertise in grant writing, project management, budgeting, publishing, and out-reach. Recently Dr. Faith Walker and I started a bat ecology and genetics lab at NAU (www.nau.edu/batdna), to use
emerging technology in understanding ecology of bats. To date, I served as major professor for 32 completed MS and PhD student proj-ects and published >50 papers in peer-reviewed journals, 16 of which focused on bat research. Prior to returning to graduate school, my jobs with county park systems in Kentucky and Virginia gave me an appreciation for providing information to lay audiences of all ages. I see science outreach as critical to aiding conservation so I combine outreach with research through radio, television, YouTube, publications such as Bats Magazine, and other outlets. I spent two terms (six years) as one of 12 members of the Council (governing board) for The Wildlife Society (TWS), a 10,000-member organization committed to wildlife science, management, and conservation. With TWS, I helped create, organize, and fundraise for a network encouraging women in the wildlife profession that has engaged wom-en in discussion of job and pay equity, mentoring, biases, and positive approaches for improving the workplace for women.
EMMA WILLCOX. I am an Assistant Professor of Wildlife Science in the Department of Forestry, Wildlife and Fisheries at the University of Tennessee (UT), Knoxville. I joined the faculty at UT in 2012 from a wildlife extension position with the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences at the University of Florida. My research program is focused on improving understanding of the ecology, behavior, and management of imperiled bat species. Currently, my lab is working on projects examining the effect of torpor, emergence, and foraging behaviors on susceptibility of bats to white-nose syndrome; habitat needs of white-nose affected bat species during fall swarming, spring, staging and summer maternity periods; ecosystem services provided by and threats to tropical bats; and the use of novel technologies for monitoring bat communities. Aside from bats, my other passion is teaching. I am the instructor for six wildlife- and conservation-related undergraduate courses at UT, mentor approximately 30 undergraduate stu-dents, and am an advisor for the UT Wildlife and Fisheries Society. In addition, my lab provides many opportunities
for both undergraduate and graduate research. I have been actively involved in The Wildlife Society (TWS) for the past 12 years and have served in several capacities at the state, regional, and national level. I am currently President for the Tennessee Chapter of TWS, having also served as Board Member at Large and President Elect. In these positions, I have helped host numerous State TWS meet-ings. Since beginning my position at the University of Tennessee, I have also served as a Board Member for the Tennessee Bat Working Group (TNBWG) and hosted the 2015 Annual TNBWG meeting. I am an active member of the North American Society for Bat Research (NASBR) and am the co-host, with Gary McCracken, for the 2017 NASBR meeting in Knoxville.
North American Society for Bat Research 23
JOY O'KEEFE. I am an Associate Professor of Biology and Director of the Center for Bat Research, Outreach, and Conservation at Indiana State University. I conduct applied research on effects of management actions on forest-dwelling bats, but also direct research on various aspects of bat behavior. During my tenure at ISU, I have directed 6 M.S. students and 2 Ph.D. students to degree completion, and currently have 3 Ph.D. and 2 M.S. stu-dents in my lab. As Director of the "Bat Center", I conduct a fair number of outreach programs for a variety of audi-ences and have co-hosted an annual Indiana bat festival with >1000 attendees since 2011. I also maintain the Bat Center's Facebook and webpage, and frequently correspond with the public on bat issues. As most of my research projects involve endangered bats, I am often consulted by and engaged in conservation planning with USFWS and state agencies. I began working with the Southeastern Bat Diversity Network in 2004, first as a Member and then
Chair of the Bat Blitz Committee. I joined the SBDN Board in 2007, serving first as a Board Member and then as Secretary. In 2011, I started a 6-year term as President-Elect, President, and Past-President (each 2 years, completed in Feb 2017). I co-founded the NC Bat Working Group in 2007 and the Eastern Small-footed Bat Working Group in 2013. I have co-hosted 2 Midwest Bat Working Group meetings at ISU and the Joint Bat Working Group meeting in St. Louis in 2015. The strengths I would bring to the NASBR Board include my experience with outreach, non-profit leadership, and organizing large meetings. Thank you for considering me as a nominee for the NASBR Board of Directors.
JUSTIN BOYLES. I am honored to be nominated to serve on the Board of Directors of NASBR. I am currently an assistant professor at Southern Illinois University, and slightly concerned by the realization that I am old enough to have been in the bat research community for 15 years. NASBR was my first scientific organization, and it is still my favorite. The sense of community in NASBR is unlike any other society with which I am affiliated, and I am proud to be a member of a group that clearly demonstrates that a diverse membership and a close-knit society are not mutually exclusive. I am not so bold as to claim that I would be a more effective board member than the other nominees (except for that one guy, I would clearly be better than him). Instead, I would point out that we, as a society, should be very encouraged to have so many young and incredibly talented researchers willing to serve on
the Board of Directors. The future of our society is strong, regardless of the outcome of this election!
LIAM MCGUIRE. NASBR has been one of the highlights of my year for the past decade and I’m excited for the opportunity to serve the NASBR community as a member of the board. Having started my career in Canada, I am now an assistant professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Texas Tech University. From my very first NASBR experience, I immediately appreciated the community and the opportunities that the society provides. In past meetings, I have served as a session chair, student competition judge, and been a bat biologist to have lunch with. In my research program, I have been working with bats everywhere from Alaska to Australia, studying the ecology and physiology of migration, hibernation, and disease. Many of those opportunities have come together from conversations with colleagues at this meeting! My research is highly collaborative in nature, and the ability to work with a diverse, and sometimes large, group of colleagues to develop ideas, secure funding, and conduct and communicate research will be a very useful skill as a member of the board. I currently serve on several com-
mittees at Texas Tech University, and I’m a member of the advisory committee for the Motus Wildlife Tracking System, an international collaborative network for automated radiotelemetry. The strengths of this society are providing a supportive environment for students, a collegial environment to share ideas among colleagues, and recognizing the lifetime achievements of the fantastic researchers that lead our society. As a member of the board I will work hard to support the society and build on our strengths.
MICHAEL FISHMAN. Michael Fishman is Director of Biological Field Services for ERM, a global environmental consultancy. He specializes in bat field surveys, ESA consultations, environmental impact assessments, environ-mental permitting, as well as conducting ecological research. Michael has worked with bats since 1991, developing photographic survey methods, assisting state and federal agencies with population monitoring, dispersal studies, and WNS surveillance, and conducting his graduate research on Indiana bat habitat characterization in New York. He received the Organization for Bat Conservation Award in 2011 for his poster on post-WNS bat species distribu-tion shifts in NY. In 2012, he collaborated with the National Park Service, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, U.S. Dept. of Energy, and the NYSDEC to establish the Long Island Century Bat Survey, the largest bat survey on Long Island, NY in more than 100 years. Michael has served as Chair and Co-Chair of the Northeast Bat Working Group (NEB-
WG), and was actively involved in incorporating and obtaining non-profit status for that organization. He has also been President and Vice-President of the NY Chapter of The Wildlife Society, and Vice Chair of the Board of Governors of New York State Wetlands Forum. He is currently President-Elect of the Northeast Section of The Wildlife Society. Mr. Fishman’s event organizing experience includes budgeting, theme development, soliciting speakers, menu selection, and facility negotiation. His experience in organizing meetings includes: NASBR Annual Meeting 2014, Albany, NY (conference committee); NEBWG Annual Meetings, 2012, 2013; Annual and Fall Field Meetings for NY Chapter TWS from 2010-2013; Annual Meetings and Fall Field Meetings for NY State Wetlands Forum from 2008-2012. He has also obtained grants from USEPA, The National Parks Foundation, The Edna Bailey Sussman Foundation, and Foundation for Ecological Research in the Northeast.
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN24
NATE FULLER. This year in Knoxville I will be celebrating my tenth NASBR-niversary. Through graduate school, this society provided me valuable opportunities to build collaborations and friendships in the bat world. I would be hon-ored to serve on the Board to repay the debt I feel to the community. Currently, I am a post-doc at Texas Tech Uni-versity where my research focuses on winter bioenergetics of understudied western bat species. While at Boston University, I served as a founding member and chair of the Biology Grad Student Association’s Social Committee. I am especially proud that I helped to transition the graduate student community at BU to a vibrant, collaborative, and friendly atmosphere. My experience outside academia includes work as an environmental consultant with Bat Conservation and Management, where I served as a project leader and Qualified Bat Surveyor. I have been active as an ambassador for bats in the public sector, participating in a number of magazine, radio, and TV interviews, in ad-
dition to several invited talks to local conservation societies in Massachusetts. My goal as a Board Member is to maintain a high-quality conference experience by cultivating student involvement and growing the participation of agency partners, consultants, and vendors. I expect that my passion for outreach, proven leadership experience, and unwavering support for the students of NASBR will serve the society well.
RODRIGO MEDELLIÍN. Rodrigo Medellín has dedicated his life to the study and conservation of mammals in Mexico. He is Senior Professor at the Institute of Ecology, UNAM, and has directed over 50 theses and disser-tations and has produced over 160 publications on bats, jaguars, conservation issues, and more. His H factor is 36 and over the past 5 years he has produced 32 peer-reviewed indexed papers. He has projects or students in 16 countries of five continents. His research contributes and orients policy and decision-making processes in conservation. He was President of the Society for Conservation Biology (2013-2015). He was the first head of the Mexican Wildlife Department in 1995. Rodrigo has been a board member and leader of NASBR off and on over the past 30 years and hosted the society several times. For ten years he represented North America in CITES and has been advisor to the Mexican Federal Government on wildlife issues since 2000, constantly being
official member of the Mexican delegation to CITES meetings. Rodrigo is Co-Chair of the IUCN Bat Specialist Group and created the Latin American Bat Conservation Network (RELCOM). He has been associate editor for multiple journals. Since 2016 he is a member of the Board of Review Editors of Science Magazine. He has received several awards such as Mexico´s National Conservation Award 2004, Rolex Award for Enterprise 2009, the Whitley Gold Award 2012, and others. In 2014 BBC Natural World produced the multi-awarded film The Bat Man of Mexico, covering Rodrigo´s work on bats (narrated by David Attenborough). In 2017 National Geographic produces a new documentary on his work on carnivorous bats.
SHARLENE SANTANA. Sharlene Santana was born and grew up in Venezuela, where she completed an un-dergraduate degree in Biology at the Universidad de Los Andes. In 2005, she joined the graduate program at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. In her Ph.D., she applied integrative and multidisciplinary approaches to investigate the ecomorphology and adaptive radiation of phyllostomid bats. Sharlene finished her Ph.D. in 2010, and started as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the UCLA Institute for Society and Genetics. In Fall 2012, she started as an Assistant professor at the University of Washington and Curator of Mammals at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture. She was granted tenure and promoted to Associate Professor in 2017. The Santana lab studies phenotypic and lineage diversification in mammals, with a strong focus on bats. The long-term goal of Sharlene’s research program is to elucidate the connections among morphology, function, behavior and ecology, and how these factors interact to result in ecological radiations. Sharlene currently leads several federally-funded research projects on bats, including macroevolutionary analyses of cranial morphology and function, and coevolutionary
dynamics between fruit bats and their mutualistic plants in Costa Rica. Her lab includes a diverse group of graduate and undergraduate students, postdocs, international scholars, and collaborators from many disciplines. She is active in equity and inclusion efforts by being part of committees at UW Biology, the Burke Museum, and the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.
SUSAN TSANG. Susan Tsang is a Research Associate of the American Museum of Natural History and the Nation-al Museum of the Philippines. Her research is focused on the evolution and biogeography of flying foxes and she has applied her expertise to collaborations in conservation and disease ecology. By day, Susan is a AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow, hosted by USFWS, and serves as the Program Manager for the Counterwildlife Trafficking Program in Southeast Asia. In this capacity, she oversees a 5-year multi-million dollar program, with responsibilities including implementation, strategic planning, accounting, and evaluation. As a graduate student, she sought and acquired about half a million dollars total in scholarships, fellowships, and grants, and is a technical expert to private and public funding bodies. Susan maintains multiple collaborations in Southeast Asia, particularly in Indonesia and the Philippines, and acts as the mentor and research advisor for multiple SE Asian students. She is on the steering committee of the Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit and a contributing Commission Member of the
IUCN Bat Specialist Group. She and her students utilize creative methods for community outreach, and maintains a strong social media presence for science communication. She firmly believes in taking an active role in promoting inclusive practices to reduce sexual and racial discrimination, and promoting policy to increase access to science for those from disadvantaged socioeconomic backgrounds and promoting talent retention. NASBR has and always will be home for her no matter where her research and career take her, and she is committed to service to the Society as an important aspect of her career as a bat researcher.
North American Society for Bat Research 25
Student Representative (1)ALYSON BROKAW. I am a third-year student in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB) doctoral program at Texas A&M University (TAMU) studying bat behavioral and sensory ecology. As a graduate student, I actively manage my research budget and have successfully supported my research through grants from Bat Conservation International, American Society of Mammalogy, American Museum of Natural History, and the Wildlife Society. At TAMU, I serve as president of the EEB Interdisciplinary Student Organization, where I coordinate an EEB journal club and coordinate social activities for EEB faculty and students. I also serve as student representative to the EEB Executive Committee and am a founding member of the EEB Social Media Committee. Additionally, I am actively involved in community outreach, creating outreach material and organizing events for local schools, Girl Scouts, and the general public. I also engage in science outreach via Twitter (@alyb_batgirl). As student representative, I would have three goals: 1. Collaborate with the Board of Directors to develop a statement of diversity and inclusivi-
ty, which is particularly important given the current political climate. 2. Develop free professional development workshops for students at the annual NASBR meetings. These could include workshops on technical skills (e.g., R, acoustic analysis), soft skills (e.g., creating a winning poster, promoting your science on social media), developing outreach activities and broader impacts, and panels on career options. Graduate students and early career researchers would be especially encouraged to act as instructors of these workshops, promoting peer-peer engagement within the society. 3. Promote NASBR as a society, particularly through the use of social media. My enthusiasm for conducting and promoting bat research and my commitment to engaging students, professionals and academics make me an ideal candidate to serve as Student Representative to the NASBR Board of Directors.
CAMILO CALDERON-ACEVEDO. I am a Ph.D. Candidate at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. My academic background is in collection-based research and general bat taxonomy, and my B.S. research focused on under-standing bat diversity changes due to seasonality in a tropical dry forest in northern Colombia. For my Ph.D., I am elucidating the phylogenetic relationships within the genus Anoura using a combined molecular and morphological approach to understand the species limits within the A. caudifer species complex. Although I consider myself a bat taxonomist, I enjoy many different aspects of bat biology, from ecology and behavior to echolocation. During the past four years I have been an active member of the Biology Graduate Student Association at my university, participating and leading activities such as fundraisers, research seminars with invited speakers, and school-wide symposia; most recently I have taken the position of Secretary for the next academic year. I have been involved with NASBR as a presenter and as a meeting attendee in 2014 and 2015, and I expect to be part of the NASBR community for many years to come. I see NASBR as a great opportunity to share bat research, but most of all, to get to know
and spend time with a wide diversity of bat researchers from around the world. I want to be a student representative for the NASBR board to provide a bridge between Latin American members and NASBR, and to hopefully bring more Latin American students into the association. I will give all my input and enthusiasm if elected for student representative
LYDIA FRIEDLANDER. I am a first year PhD student in Dr. Erin Gillam’s lab at North Dakota State University (NDSU). My research, funded by The North Dakota Department of Agriculture, North Dakota Game and Fish, and North Dakota Department of Transportation, currently focuses on roosting ecology of little brown bats throughout the state of North Dakota. I am also interested in expanding my project to include endocrine studies with the same species to better understand how behaviors respond to hormonal proximate pressures and vice versa. My Masters research focused on the behaviors and communications of captive male vampire bats during reciprocally altruistic interactions and produced two manuscripts, currently in review. I have experience and skills that would translate well to the NASBR Board. I worked in my previous university’s office of Sponsored Programs and Research. There, my duties included helping proofread grant applications as well as handling voucher/disbursement requests, time and activity reports, and travel authorizations. I also worked in that university’s office of International Education
where I was partly responsible for managing faculty-led study abroad programs, assisting faculty in drafting and submitting new pro-gram proposals, creating extensive budgets and itineraries, encumbering and disbursing all program funds, implementing risk manage-ment protocols, and reconciling purchases with the Accounts Payable office. These clerical skills should prove helpful to the NASBR Board. Also, prior to moving to North Dakota, I created and ran a small-scale outreach program, “Explorasaurus Educational Outreach”, in Connecticut. Through this I visited libraries and grade school classrooms and provided interactive learning activities and lessons that focused on basic biology, geology/mineralogy, and conservation with some programs specific to certain animal populations (insects, bats) or ecosystems. Outreach and education are special interests of mine and continue to shape my current research and activities at NDSU.
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN26
2017 NASBR Breakfast/Lunch with a Mentor Thursday, October 19
Breakfast, 7:00 – 8:00, Tennessee Ballroom
Lisa Beltz Malone University (Mentor Type: Academic)I primarily teach medically-related biology courses at a small, private university in Ohio. One of my research projects involves studying which specific microbes (viruses, bacteria, fungi, and protozoans) infect different bat species or families, what disease they cause in bats (if any), and the potential chance of zoonotic transmission to humans. Quite a bit of the research on zoonotic transmission between bats and humans appears to be based on either inappropriate experimental work or is biased. (If you only study bats as potential disease reservoirs, you are likely to overlook other animals that are as good or better microbial reservoirs.)
Maria Brown Stony Brook University (Mentor Type: Academic)I have been a Lecturer at Stony Brook University since 2011 and teach Introduction to GIS. I am a GISP and have been using spatial analytics and GIS visualization since 1996 as a Sr. Environmental Scientist and Restoration Ecologist for 12 years before becoming a full time HS Science Research Teacher and P/T Lecturer at SBU. I use GIS for modeling and am hoping to create a Geospatial User Group within the IUCN Bat Working Group. I hope to share the value of geospatial visualization as a tool to promote better policy and decision making regarding bat habitat conservation efforts.
Heather Fotherby Natural Resource Solutions, Inc. (Mentor Type: Consulting)As a consultant, I manage a variety of research and development focused projects. I am a member of the Ontario Bat Group and have experience with field study design, implementation, and analysis of results from a range of bat-related field investigations, including bat habitat analyses, acoustic monitoring, mist net, harp trap, and visual surveys. Current research is focused on the identification of Myotis leibii maternity roost sites in Ontario. My career has involved both academia and industry related work and I would love to speak to my experiences and hopefully help others with navigating the working world as a mentor.
Burton Lim Royal Ontario Museum (Mentor Type: Government/Museum)I'm an assistant curator of mammalogy at the Royal Ontario Museum. What I love about my job is the ability to combine research with public education and gallery development in museums. My research interests include using molecular systematics to investigate the evolution of bats and analyzing species diversity and relative abundance to compare bat faunal communities. Most of my fieldwork is in tropical areas of South America and Southeast Asia, but more recently in temperate areas closer to home. I want to make students aware of career paths that incorporate science communication of research to the general public.
Lori Pruitt U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Mentor Type: Government)I've been a biologist in the Endangered Species Program with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for 23 years. I work in the Indiana Field Office, which has the national lead for the recovery of the federally-endangered Indiana bat; I serve as the Service's Indiana bat recovery coordinator. I also work on bat/wind issues, including assessing impacts of wind energy development on non-listed bats, particularly migratory tree bats. The goal of those efforts is to promote measures that will reduce fatalities of all species of bats and preclude the need for future listings of species of migratory tree bats.
Lunch, 11:45-1:30, NASBR Registration Desk
Frank Bonaccorso U.S. Geological Survey (Mentor Type: Government)I am a Research wildlife ecologist with the USGS at the Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center in Hawaii. My research on bats has spread across community and behavioral ecology, ecophysiology, and endangered species monitoring/recovery planning. I have worked in tropical and island ecosystems in Central and South America, Africa, New Guinea, and Hawaii and have observed about 400 bat species in the wild. I have taught biological sciences at universities, community colleges, high schools, have served as a museum and zoo curator, and worked 14 years as a researcher in federal government. I have mentored many students as research interns and through graduate degrees.
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Gerald Carter Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (Mentor Type: Academic)I study the social lives of bats. How do vampire bats choose, maintain, and regulate their food-sharing relationships? How do different bat species cooperate, communicate, or compete with conspecifics? I'm currently a postdoc at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (working with Rachel Page) and the Department of Collective Behavior at the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology. I also work with Organization for Bat Conservation in Michigan. See my website for more information: socialbat.org. **I'm recruiting MSc and PhD students for Fall 2018 at my new lab at The Ohio State University.
Rodrigo Medellin Universidad Autónoma de Mexico (Mentor Type: Academic)I am a Senior Professor of Ecology and Conservation. I work on all manners of bat ecology and conservation aspects, from ecosystem services (pest control, pollination, seed dispersal) to modeling populations, designing and implementing conservation strategies, migration ecology, and more. I work also on bighorn sheep, pronghorn antelope, jaguars, and other aspects.
Mike van den Tillaart Lotek Wireless (Mentor Type: Industry)I provide advice to researchers regarding telemetry devices (GPS & VHF tags and receivers) available for bat (and bird) research. I provide technical support for these devices. I attend bat conferences to discuss telemetry devices with interested researchers, to learn about study results and to determine what types of new devices might be needed in the future. I am offering to be a mentor so that some attendees can evaluate another option for potential future employment.
Luis Viquez Ulm University (Mentor Type: Senior PhD Student/Academic)My research focuses on the interaction between ecology and health. One of my main interests is how the ecological and natural history conditions of different species affect their overall resilience and sensitivity to diseases. For my PhD, I am studying how key life history factors such as migration and the inherent diet shifts affect the intestinal microbiome of nectar-feeding bats. I am currently involved in several Acoustic Bat Monitoring Programs in Latin America. The objective of these projects is to build a comprehensive sampling protocol to standardize data collection across seven Latin American countries.
Friday, October 20Lunch, 12:00-1:30, NASBR Registration Desk
Amanda Adams Texas A&M University (Mentor Type: Academic)I am currently a postdoc at Texas A&M University, working with Dr. Michael Smotherman on how bats improve sonar performance when flying in groups. I completed my PhD with Dr. Brock Fenton at Western University, focusing on spatio-temporal patterns in bat activity and how to analyze bat activity data. I have been working with bats for 14 years, studying ecology and bioacoustics. I am enthusiastic about outreach, education, and conservation. I am always seeking new collaborations around the world with opportunities to spend time doing field work.
Han Li University of North Carolina Greensboro (Mentor Type: Academic)I am currently a post-doctoral research associate at the University of North Carolina Greensboro. I serve as the NABat North Carolina coordinator. I manage all NABat related works in North Carolina. Meanwhile, I also manage the research aspects of the Kalcounis-Rueppell lab at UNCG and oversee other projects. My research interests focus on urban wildlife ecology. I use bats as the model to understand how urban ecosystems affect wildlife at multiple scales. Being a foreigner and a minority, I hope my experience can help students in similar situations to thrive and increase diversity in our field.
47th Annual Symposium, Knoxville, TN28
Tammy Mildenstein Cornell College (Mentor Type: Academic)My career has followed a circuitous route, but I am fortunate and grateful for the myriad of experiences I have had. I started studying bats as a Peace Corps volunteer, when I was stationed in the Philippines. Recognizing that large fruit bats are both threatened and also important to local communities, I strategically focused my research and conservation efforts on the two largest species of bats in the world. I now have 20 years of experience studying Old World fruit bats. I have collaborated with many major NGOS and the IUCN, as well as local communities to support bat conservation.
Merlin Tuttle Merlin Tuttle’s Bat Conservation (Mentor Type: NGO)I am the Founder and Executive Director of MTBC (see MerlinTuttle.org).
Saturday, October 21Breakfast, 7:00 – 8:00, Tennessee Ballroom
Liam McGuire Texas Tech University (Mentor Type: Academic)I'm an assistant professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Texas Tech University. My research program focusses on physiological and movement ecology, usually with bats but sometimes with birds. Much of my research looks at migration and hibernation, and recently in the context of wildlife disease.
Piper Roby Copperhead Consulting and University of Kentucky (Mentor Type: Senior PhD Student/Consulting)
I am the Research Director at Copperhead and currently pursuing my PhD at the University of Kentucky. My primary focus at work and at school is Indiana bat migration and the majority of my professional career has centered on Indiana bats.
Jodi Sedlock Lawrence University (Mentor Type: Academic)I am an Associate Professor of Biology and Chair of the Biology Department at Lawrence University, a four-year undergraduate liberal arts college (with a conservatory). Lawrence represents an intermediate career option between an R-1 and a purely teaching college. I have a manageable teaching load and support for research. I've been studying the diversity, ecology and conservation of bats in Southeast Asia for the past 20 years. Recently, my focus has been on bat-insect behavior and interactions in rice paddies, and the influence of local soundscapes on species interactions.
Susan Tsang American Museum of Natural History (Mentor Type: Government/Museum)My primary research interests are in pteropodid evolution and biogeography, particularly in Southeast Asia. As one of the few pteropodid scientists in SE Asia, I have found myself engaged in conservation work on these incredibly important but threatened bats through SEABCRU. I also have existing collaborations with American and Singaporean labs on disease ecology. Outside of research, I am committed to multiple policy endeavors to increase diversity and inclusion in STEM, and for holding institutions and individuals accountable for negligence and abuse. My day-job is as a Program Manager through AAAS STPF at USFWS on counterwildife trafficking in SE Asia.
North American Society for Bat Research 29
Dave Waldien Christopher Newport University (Mentor Type: NGO/Academic)I catalyze sustainable bat conservation through integrating research with applied conservation and awareness initiatives. I focus my efforts on protecting endangered bats and important roost sites, while investing in local capacity and leadership. My network of colleagues in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Oceania provides important partner networks that can provide a strong foundation for students interested in international research. I enjoy working with young professionals in helping them contribute to global conservation priorities even as they develop their vision for their career.
Lunch, 12:30-2:00, NASBR Registration Desk
Pat Brown Brown-Berry Biological Consulting (Mentor Type: Consulting)I consult with government agencies, NGOs and private entities on bat conservation and management issues, especially on bats in abandoned mines, and teach classes on bat natural history and field techniques. I began studying bat echolocation and hearing in 1968 as a graduate student at UCLA, and maintained a research scientist affiliation with UCLA until retirement in 2012. Since 1969, I have banded California leaf-nosed bats for a long-term study of movements and demography. For 40 years, I have conducted telemetry studies on several bat species in several habitats and countries, including tracking bats at night from airplanes.
Cori Lausen Wildlife Conservation Society Canada (Mentor Type: NGO)I am a conservation research biologist. After completing my PhD in bat ecology, I worked as an independent bat biologist. During this time I initiated several research projects, setting a foundation for a western Canada bat conservation program. I have focused largely on understanding what bats do in winter in western Canada. Stemming from a postdoctoral fellowship, I joined forces with Wildlife Conservation Society Canada and have been growing a research and conservation bat program for western Canada through strategic networking. This includes winter bat research, WNS survivorship modelling, WNS treatment research, BatCaver.org, Albertabats.ca, and North American Bat Monitoring Program.
Kelly Rochelle University of Washington (Mentor Type: Senior PhD Student/Academic)I am entering my 5th year as PhD student in the Department of Biology at the University of Washington. For my dissertation I am studying the diversity, distributions, and ecology of bats among the San Juan Islands. My main research interests are conservation biology, applied landscape and community ecology, and agroecology. I am also very interested in teaching and public outreach.
Sharlene Santana University of Washington (Mentor Type: Academic)I'm a recently tenured professor at the Department of Biology, and the Curator of Mammals at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture (both at the University of Washington). My research program investigates the connections among morphology, function and behavior, and how these factors may spur ecological diversification in bats and other mammals. This work involves data collection in the field from free-ranging bats, and lab studies on functional morphology, biomechanics and evolutionary patterns. The NASBR Lunch With a Mentor was a very valuable experience when I was a student, and I feel compelled to pass it forward.
Nancy Simmons American Museum of Natural History (Mentor Type: Academic/Museum)I am Curator at a major natural history museum and a specialist in bat systematics and evolution. I conduct fieldwork in the Neotropics on a yearly basis, and I am interested in everything from bat morphology, taxonomy, and fossils to faunal inventories and conservation biology. I enjoy working with students at all levels and am happy to discuss anything having to do with bats, science, fieldwork, or work/life balance. I always learn a lot from students that I work with, which is why I am always happy to do it!
NASBR Teachers Workshop October 21, 2017
7:45 am - 2:00 pm, Crystal BallroomHoliday Inn, Knoxville, TN
Registered NASBR participants may attend all or part of the Teacher’s Workshop at no chargeGenerous support provided by the following sponsors
Workshop Schedule
7:45 AM Registration
8:00 AM Introductions and Logistics Rob Mies NASBR Teacher Workshop Coordinator, Executive Director, Organization for Bat Conservation
8:10 AM How to Use Bats as an Educational Tool: Resources for Tennessee Teachers Veronica Brown Research Scientist, University of Tennessee
8:30 AM Pseudogymnoascus destructans. A White-nose Syndrome Study of Lasiurus borealis and Myotis Species at Twin Creeks & Soak Ash Creek in the GRSM Alexis Valentine
10th grader at Gatlinburg Pittman High School
8:45 AM Educating, Inspiring & Activating Urban Communities to Save Bats Amanda Bevin Education Specialist and Urban bat project leader, Organization for Bat Conservation
9:10 AM Pocket Bats: Sharing Real Museum Specimens with the Public Using Augmented RealityAbigail Curtis
Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Washington; The Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture
9:35 AM Hands-on Activities Your Students Will Love! Ben HaleResearch Biologist, West Inc.
10:15 AM Bats Aren’t Spooky: The Ecology and Benefits of Bats in Tennessee Riley BernardPostdoctoral Research Scientist, The Pennsylvania State University,
United States Geological Survey, Patuxent Research Center
11:00 AM Break and Visit to Speleobooks (education resources)
11:30 AM Live Bat Encounter Rob MiesNASBR Teacher Workshop Coordinator, Executive Director, Organization for Bat Conservation
12:30 PM Environmental Education in the Digital Age Aja MarcatoConservation Programming Director, Organization for Bat Conservation
1:00 PM Wrap-up
1:30 PM Conference Attendee Drop-in
NASBR thanks the following individuals and organizations for their assistance in hosting the Knoxville conference:
Gary McCracken, Emma Willcox, Jamey Dobbs, Veronica Brown, Melquisedec Gamba-Rios, Jessica Dreyer, Reilly
Jackson, Mallory Tate.
Logo Design by Melissa Lituma
NASBR Board of Directors
Rick Adams Policy & Public Relations
Mylea Bayless 2016 Co-host
Riley Bernard Associate Program Director
Frank Bonaccorso Associate Program Director
Leanne Burns Student Representative 2015-2017
Paul Cryan Policy & Public Relations
Erin Gillam Secretary, Spallanzani Chair
Allen Kurta Chair of the Board
Gary Kwiecinski Program Director
Kristen Lear Student Representative2016-2018
Burton Lim Finance
Gary McCracken 2017 Co-host
Shahroukh Mistry Associate Program Director
Jorge Ortega Reyes Awards; 2018 Host
Rebecca Patterson 2016 Co-host
DeeAnn Reeder Treasurer
Maria Sagot Nominations Chair, Sponsorships Co-chair
Bill Schutt Sponsorships Co-chair, Policy & Public Relations
Luis Viquez Associate Program Director
Emma Willcox 2017 Co-host
Heather York Education & Outreach
The North American Society for Bat Research (NASBR) is a society dedicated to the promotion and development of the scientific study of bats (Chiroptera) in all its branches, including conservation and public education. NASBR is a registered 501(c)3 non-profit organization.
For more information about the society and contact information visit www.nasbr.org
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In 2018,we’re bringing bat researchto a whole new level.
2017 has been a busy year here at Wildlife Acoustics, and at NASBR we’re excited to unveil new, innovative and affordable products,
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Be sure to visit our table and attend our workshops on Friday the 20th, in Parlour Room 2.
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NASBR 2017 Ad FINAL Rev1.pdf 1 9/11/17 2:31 PM
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