# Do sheep-grazed pastures support insectivorous bat activity and bat species richness?

**Authors:** Florian Wiesinger, Marcela Suarez-Rubio

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0341356 · PLOS One · 2026-01-23

## TL;DR

This study examines how grazing sheep affect insectivorous bat activity and species richness in Austrian pastures.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into bat responses to sheep grazing, which is less studied compared to cattle grazing.

## Key findings

- Small aerial insectivores showed higher activity in grazed and post-grazed pastures compared to pre-grazed ones.
- Nyctalus noctula activity was significantly higher in post-grazed compared to pre-grazed pastures.
- Overall bat activity and species richness did not differ among grazing phases.

## Abstract

Arable agriculture is usually associated with monoculture and the usage of pesticides, which jeopardize biodiversity and ecosystem processes. Grazing livestock can potentially benefit bats, however, most studies evaluate cattle, and it is unclear whether the results apply to grazing sheep. We assessed the effects of grazing sheep on insectivorous bat activity and species richness in southern Burgenland, Austria. We conducted acoustic surveys during the summer of 2019 on 49 pastures, which were in each case temporally divided into three categories (pre-grazed, grazed, and post-grazed). During the surveys, 20 of Burgenland’s 24 different bat species were detected. The most prevalent species was Pipistrellus pygmaeus. Small aerial insectivores showed significantly higher activity in grazed and post-grazed pastures compared to pre-grazed pastures, with no difference between grazed and post-grazed conditions. Frequent species (those occurring at ≥30% of sampled pastures) were more active in grazed than pre-grazed pastures but showed similar activity between pre-grazed and post-grazed pastures. At the species level, Nyctalus noctula activity was significantly higher in post-grazed compared to pre-grazed pastures. Overall bat activity, infrequent species activity, and species richness did not differ among grazing phases. Our results capture immediate responses during grazing and brief post-grazing resource pulses within days. Thus, comparisons with cattle should be cautious, as many cattle studies span weeks to months on larger, higher-biomass pastures. Apparent differences likely reflect timeframe, pasture size, stocking rate, and dung processes as much as livestock type, highlighting the need to consider livestock and management context when assessing bat responses and designing conservation-oriented grazing strategies.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Pipistrellus pygmaeus (taxon 246814), Nyctalus noctula (taxon 51300)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** bluetongue disease (MESH:D001819), Schmallenberg disease (MESH:D004194)
- **Species:** Pipistrellus nathusii (Nathusius's pipistrelle, species) [taxon 59473], Myotis bechsteinii (Bechstein's bat, species) [taxon 59462], Myotis (genus) [taxon 9434], Chiroptera (bats, order) [taxon 9397], Diptera (flies, order) [taxon 7147], Barbastella barbastellus (western barbastelle, species) [taxon 59449], Myotis oxygnathus (Monticelli's Myotis, species) [taxon 412095], Eptesicus nilsonii [taxon 59451], Hypsugo savii (Savi's pipistrelle, species) [taxon 109485], Ovis aries musimon (mouflon, subspecies) [taxon 9938], Plecotus sp. (species) [taxon 232091], Bos primigenius (aurochs, species) [taxon 9909], Myotis brandtii (Brandt's bat, species) [taxon 109478], Pipistrellus pipistrellus (common pipistrelle, species) [taxon 59474], Pipistrellus kuhlii (Desert pipistrelle, species) [taxon 59472], Plecotus auritus (brown big-eared bat, species) [taxon 61862], Pipistrellus pygmaeus (soprano pipistrelle, species) [taxon 246814], Ovis orientalis (Asiatic mouflon, species) [taxon 469796], Myotis mystacinus (whiskered bat, species) [taxon 109479], Myotis blythii (lesser mouse-eared bat, species) [taxon 109482], Myotis myotis (species) [taxon 51298], Equus ferus (Russian wild horse, species) [taxon 1114792], Nyctalus noctula (noctule, species) [taxon 51300], Nyctalus leisleri (lesser noctule, species) [taxon 59465], Chironomus thummi (midge, species) [taxon 7154], Pangio kuhlii (coolie loach, species) [taxon 127972], Plecotus austriacus (gray big-eared bat, species) [taxon 109483], Equus caballus (domestic horse, species) [taxon 9796], Bacillus sp. AT (species) [taxon 1196779], Pleioblastus variegatus (species) [taxon 591226], Bos taurus (bovine, species) [taxon 9913], Myotis nattereri (Natterer's bat, species) [taxon 109481], Rhinolophus ferrumequinum (greater horseshoe bat, species) [taxon 59479], Ovis aries (domestic sheep, species) [taxon 9940], Vespertilio murinus (particolored bat, species) [taxon 59485]

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12829865/full.md

## References

117 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12829865/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12829865