LA 90°o) of recorded passes occurred between 19:30-22 30 MDT at all sites Bats of unknown identity were detected at 1 1 sites and undifferentiated Myotis were detected at 10 sites These two categories represented 151 (72 6° o) of 208 total passes recorded The remaining 57 passes were identified as Western Long-eared Myotis (A/, evotis): 8 passes at three sites. Big Brown Bat {Eptesicusfuscus) 1 1 passes at three sites. Silver-haired Bat [Lasionycteris noctivagans) 13 passes at five sites, undifferentiated Big Browa'Silver-haired bat 25 passes at 1 1 sites Four of five sites with the most activity (20 or more passes) were down river from Gibbon Falls, bat activity in the Norris area was relatively widespread but at low intensity Not surprisingly, greatest activity was at water sources Mtst-net Survey Sites Bat activity at the two sites where mist-nets were deployed was low No bats were captured at the first site (*6, see Table 1 ), a small pond near a service road at Gibbon Meadows However, a bat was observed flying along the road corridor nearby at crown height, first at 19 45 with the last often passes at 20 35 (the nets were folded at 21 30) This species was either a Big Brown or Silver-haired bat, based on size and the sound of the converted vocalizations At the second netting site (#19. bank of Gibbon River with a small backwater of calm water below Tuff Cliffs), bats were first detected at 19:52 and continued activity at very low levels nearby until nets were folded (21 30) Thirteen total passes were noted in two hours of netting One Little Brown Myotis (A/, lucifugus) was captured at 20 05 when it came down to drink from the pocket of calm water It was a mature scrotal male (right forearm length = 38 2 mm. weight =8.5g) Bridges Four bridges spanning the Gibbon River in the Norris-Madison Junction road corridor were checked for sign of bat use The first three bridges are built with steel I-beams across stone or concrete pilings, the bridge at Madison Junction is solid concrete A fifth bridge. near \orns Campground, was essentially constructed like bridges B1-B3 An elevated section o\' road on wooden ties and pilings at Beryl Springs was also inspected No bat droppings were noted under the span of the first bridge ( B 1 ) south o\~ Norris. although this bridge appears to offer some suitable roosting sites Scattered bat droppings were noted on stone/concrete pilings and the steel beams of bridges B2 and B3 at the upstream ends Two sizes of droppings were found at bridge B3. indicating that more than one bat species has roosted under this span The concrete span ( B4 ) at Madison Junction offers no roost sites for ll TABLE 1. Sites surveyed for bat activity, 20-25 September 1999 along the Norris-Madison Junction Road corridor in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Primary survey methods used at these sites were bat detectors (D) or mist-nets (N). Site # Site Name Date Method Bats Detected1 (# passes) 1 Tantalus Creek (S of highway) 24 Sept D None 2 Slope above Gray Lakes 24 Sept D MYSP(l) 3 SW end of Elk Park 24 Sept D EPFU/LANO (1) 4 Gibbon River Rapids 24 Sept D None 5 Gibbon Meadows service road 20 Sept D EPFLVLANO(l) 6 Gibbon Meadows service road pond 2 1 Sept N EPFU/LANO (10 distant passes; no captures) 7 Gibbon Meadows. N end on nver 20 Sept D UNKN(2). MYSP(10) 8 Gibbon Meadows. S end cliffs 20 Sept D MYSP (2). LANO ( 1 ). EPFU/LANO (3) 9 Near Bridge B 1 (Gibbon Canyon) ! 2 1 Sept D MYSP ( 1 ). EPFU/LANO ( 1 ) 10 Beryl Springs > 24 Sept D None (equipment malfunction) 11 Near Bridge B2 (Gibbon Canyon) 21 Sept D UNKN ( 1 ). MYSP (2). EPFU/LANO (1) 12 Near Bridge B3 (Gibbon Canyon) 21 Sept D UNKN (14). MYSP (4). EPFU (4). LANO (1) 13 Secret Vallev Creek, near mouth 21 Sept D UNKN(l) 14 N of Gibbon Falls, W side cliff 22 Sept D LANO (9) 15 Gibbon Falls picnic area (W end) 22 Sept D UNKN (4) 16 Gibbon River bottom . at stone wall 23 Sept D UNKN (5). MYSP (29). EPFU/LANO (2) 17 Base of Tuff Cliffs 23 Sept D UNKN (2). MYSP (5). MYEV (1). EPFU/LANO (1) 18 Gibbon River at Tuff Cliffs 22 Sept. D UNKN (15). MYSP ( 14). MYEV (6). EPFU (2). LANO (1). EPFU/LANO (2) 19 Gibbon River at Tuff Cliffs 24 Sept N MYLU (1 male). 12 passes by at least 2 species 20 Terrace Spring 23 Sept. D None 21 Purple Mountain trailhead 22 Sept D UNKN (2). MYEV ( 1 ). EPFU/LANO (2) 22 Madison Junction marshes/ponds 23 Sept. D UNKN (2). MYSP (4). EPFU (5). LANO (1). EPFU/LANO (8) 23 Madison Junction sewage ponds 23 Sept D UNKN (31). EPFU/LANO (3); equip problems 1 UNKN (unknown bat species). MYSP (Myotis species). MYEV (Myotis evotis). MYLU {Myotis lucifugus). EPFU (Eptesicus fuscus). LANO (Lasionyteris noctivagans). EPFU/LANO (either E. fuscus or L. noctivagans). 12 bats, and no sign of bat use was found The largest quantity of bat guano was found under the downstream end of the bridge near Norris Campground No sign was found on or under the wooden road structure at Beryl Springs, a thermal area that passes under the road span Undeveloped thermal areas The Geyser Springs Group of the Norris Geyser Basin is a known maternity site for an undetermined species of Myotis (S Martinez personal communication) This site was visited to search for roosting bats or signs of use under the boulders in the thermal area (where the roost is located) Numerous boulders or exposed rocks imbedded in the area were checked for bats and bat sign Scattered droppings were found beneath 2-3 boulders near the site marked "X" in Fig. 2. Nun is Campground Bat activity in the campground (B Loop and entrance area) was observed during the evening of 23 September The first pass by a bat was noted at 19 40 At least three individuals of two species were observed foraging near treetop and lower crown height (10-13 m): a species of Myotis and the larger Big-Brown or Silver-haired bat Foraging rate was about 3 passes/min from 20: 10-20:43, about 1 pass/min from 20:45-21 00, and about 0.5 pass/min from 21 00-21 15, when observations terminated DISCISSION At least four species of bats were recorded during the survey in the Norns-Madison Junction area Western Long-eared Myotis, Little Brown Myotis, Big Brown Bat. Silver-haired bat Activity levels were relatively low at all sites, but this could be partly a result of the late date of the surveys. Activity in the Norris and Gibbon Meadows area was lower than that recorded at the lower-elevation area below Gibbon Falls to Madison Junction This did not seem to be related entirely to differences in over-night temperatures. Foraging activity by bats at and over thermal features was low. as Martinez (1999) also noted Perhaps thermal areas are not as attractive to the variety and abundance of aerial insects that are fed upon by bats as are some non-thermal sites Nevertheless, maternity colonies of at least two bat species (Townsend's Big-eared Bat. and a species of Myotis) have been documented in thermal areas in YNP (Martinez 1999, personal communication) Similar maternity sites have been reported elsewhere in western North America (eg Nagorsen and Bngham 1993, West and Swain 1999) The thermal areas of YNP could support matermtv colonies of several bat species and merit closer survey effort by qualified biologists and park personnel Bats use a number of man-made structures in YNP for maternity roosts (Bogan and Geluso 1999) Bridges may also be used for this purpose, but are more likely to be used as night roosts Bridges throughout YNP deserve closer monitoring to determine when thev are being used, by bow many individuals and species, and for what purposes Bridges could provide important roosting habitat to some species in areas receiving considerable human impact As bridges are repaired or replaced, they could be designed to be "bat friendly" by providing the undersides with tight or secure spaces for roosting, usually on exposed steel I-beams or where these are secured close to the pilings supporting the bridge The bridge design at Madison Junction is distinctlv unsuitable for bats, and the elevated road span at Beryl Springs is perhaps too low and accessible to predator attack to be very attractive to bats \n is already obvious, more inventory effort is needed in YNP to determine which species of bats are present and when, what habitat features are especially attractive to them, and 13 what human activities within the park are most likely to have the greatest impact on the bat populations present. Sites in most need of identification are maternity roosts and hibernacula, as these are very sensitive to human disturbance. Future systematic inventories should make use of multiple survey techniques (see Thomas and West 1989, O'Farrell and Gannon 1999) to assure the most complete assessment of the bat fauna. LITERATURE CITED Barclay, R. M. R. 1999. Bats are not birds — a cautionary note on using echolocation calls to identify bats: a comment. Journal of Mammalogy 80:290-296. Betts, B. J. 1998. Effects of interindividual variation in echolocation calls on identification of Big Brown and Silver-haired bats. Journal of Wildlife Management 62:1003-1010. Bogan, M. A., and K. Geluso. 1999 Bat roosts and historic structures on National Park Service lands in the Rocky Mountain region. US G S Midcontinent Ecological Science Center, Albuquerque, NM. Unpublished report. 25 pp Clark, T. W., and M. R. Stromberg. 1987. Mammals in Wyoming. University of Kansas Museum of Natural History, Public Education Series No. 10. Lawrence, KS. 3 14 pp Fenton, M. B., H. G Merriam, and G L Holroyd. 1983. Bats of Kootenay, Glacier, and Mount Revelstoke national parks in Canada: identification by echolocation calls, distribution, and biology. Canadian Journal of Zoology 61 :2503-2508 Martinez, S. 1999. Evaluation of selected bat habitat sites along the Mammoth-Norris Grand Loop road corridor, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, 1997-1998. Montana Natural Heritage Program, Helena, MT Unpublished report. 16 pp. Nagorsen, D. W , and R. M. Brigham. 1993. The bats of British Columbia University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, British Columbia. 164 pp. Nesser, J. A., G L. Ford, C. L. Maynard, and D. S. Page-Dumroese. 1997. Ecological units of the Northern Region: subsections. General Technical Report INT-GTR-369. Ogden, UT: USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Research Station. 88 pp. O'Farrell, M. J. 1997. Use of echolocation calls for the identification c e-flying bats Transactions of the Western Section of The Wildlife Society 33. O'Farrell, M. J. 1999. Blind test for ability to discriminate vocal signatures of the Little Brown Bat Myotis lucifugus and the Indiana Bat Myotis sodahs. Bat Research News 40:44-48. O'Farrell, M. J., and W L Gannon 1999. A comparison of acoustic versus capture techniques for the inventory of bats. Journal of Mammalogy 80:24-30. 14 O'Farrell, M J,B VV Miller, and W L Gannon 1999 Qualitative identification of free-flying bats using the Anabat detector Journal of Mammalogy 80 1 1-23 Thomas. D W , and S. D West 1989 Sampling methods for bats Gen Tech Rep PNW- GTR-243 Portland, OR U.S. Dept Agn . Forest Serv , Pacific Northwest Research Station 20 pp (Ruggiero, L F , and A B Carey, tech eds. Wildlife-habitat relationships sampling procedures for Pacific Northwest vertebrates). van Zyll de Jong, C. G. 1985. Handbook of Canadian mammals 2 Bats National Museum of Natural Sciences Ottawa, Ontario 212 pp West. E W . and U. Swain 1999 Surface activity and structure of a hydrothermally-heated maternity colony of the Little Brown Bat, Myotic lucifugus, in Alaska Canadian Field- Naturalist 113 425-429. 15