Register      Login
Pacific Conservation Biology Pacific Conservation Biology Society
A journal dedicated to conservation and wildlife management in the Pacific region.
REVIEW (Open Access)

Conserving the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat: directions for future research and management

Holly S. Bradley https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7937-857X A * , Kyle N. Armstrong B , Robert D. Bullen C , Ryan Ellis D , Chris G. Knuckey D , Kym Ottewell E , Scott Reiffer F , Ruchira Somaweera G , Linette Umbrello E and Stephen van Leeuwen A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A School of Molecular and Life Sciences, Curtin University, Kent Street, Bentley, Perth, WA 6102, Australia.

B School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.

C Bat Call WA, 43 Murray Drive, Hillarys, WA 6025, Australia.

D Biologic Environmental Survey, 24–26 Wickham Street, East Perth, WA 6004, Australia.

E Biodiversity and Conservation Science, Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, Kensington, WA 6152, Australia.

F Rio Tinto, Central Park, Level 24, 152–158 St Georges Terrace, Perth, WA 6000, Australia.

G Stantec, 226 Adelaide Terrace, Perth, WA 6000, Australia.

* Correspondence to: h.bradley@curtin.edu.au

Handling Editor: Harriet Mills

Pacific Conservation Biology 30, PC23031 https://doi.org/10.1071/PC23031
Submitted: 21 June 2023  Accepted: 30 January 2024  Published: 26 February 2024

© 2024 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND)

Abstract

The Pilbara leaf-nosed bat (Rhinonicteris aurantia ‘Pilbara form’) is a threatened insectivorous microbat endemic to the Pilbara region of Western Australia. It is at risk of significant population decline, particularly due to habitat loss from mining. To address its key threats, stakeholders from a range of backgrounds collectively listed and prioritised research actions in 2013. This exercise was repeated in 2022 to evaluate and update progress of the research priorities. We conducted a review of scientific and grey literature (2013–2023) to: (1) identify the work undertaken to date that addressed the research priorities identified in the 2013 stakeholder workshop; (2) identify the current knowledge gaps in Pilbara leaf-nosed bat ecology, conservation, and threatening processes; and (3) highlight how these gaps relate to the newly ranked 2022 priority list for both research and management outcomes. We found that the 2013 research priorities were largely unaddressed, with most publications and unpublished industry reports in the review period primarily reporting presence or monitoring data around areas of interest to the resources sector, with minimal focus on the species’ conservation or management directly. Therefore, the knowledge gaps identified in 2013 were still largely relevant in 2022. Further targeted research is required to meet the 2022 priorities and better understand the habitat characteristics, movement ecology, disturbance buffer requirements, and cumulative impacts of mining on Pilbara leaf-nosed bat colonies. Overall, targeted research beyond traditional mining outputs, changes to regulatory procedure, and collaborative, adaptive management, are key to supporting the long-term persistence of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats.

Keywords: cumulative impacts, ecology, management, microbat, mining, Pilbara, Rhinonicteris aurantia, roosts, threatening processes.

Introduction

The Pilbara leaf-nosed bat (Rhinonicteris aurantia Pilbara form; Yinpterochiroptera: Rhinonycteridae; Armstrong 2006a) is a geographically isolated and divergent population of the orange leaf-nosed bat (R. aurantia) that is separated from the Kimberley and Northern Territory population by the Great Sandy Desert (Armstrong 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006b; Armstrong and Coles 2007). Colonies of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats are scattered across the Pilbara region; however, their distribution is influenced by the availability of suitable roost sites in geological terrains that form relatively deep caves or have been the focus historically of underground mining (i.e. adits) (Armstrong 2001). They have an obligate requirement for roost microclimates that are relatively warm and humid, and their selection of such roost sites is a consequence of their physiological limitations (Churchill et al. 1988; Churchill 1991; Armstrong 2001). The species is unable to enter torpor or regulate their body temperature for extended periods when exposed to relatively cool temperatures and low humidity, and they have one of the highest rates of water loss measured for any mammal species (Kulzer et al. 1970; Baudinette et al. 2000).

Pilbara leaf-nosed bats are considered threatened with local extirpation and are protected under Western Australian State (Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016 (BC Act); Vulnerable) and Commonwealth (Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act); Vulnerable) legislation. The primary threat for the species is the destruction and disturbance of roost habitat, both directly via encroachment on natural caves and historical underground mine adits by open cut mining, and indirectly through deterioration of and flooding within mine adits (Armstrong 2001; Woinarski et al. 2014; Bat Call WA 2021). There is no Recovery Plan or Threat Abatement Plan adopted for this species (Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water 2022), which has contributed to a lack of accountability for stakeholders to engage in active management, although, due to the imposition of some Commonwealth approval conditions, some resource companies have committed to relatively intensive studies; however, these have only had a localised focus on stakeholder project areas (e.g. Bat Call WA 2020; Blast It Global 2020). Limited coordinated effort and communication between neighbouring stakeholders with Pilbara leaf-nosed bat habitat on their tenure also impedes effective conservation (Cramer et al. 2023). If mining activity were to continue without appropriate controls, Woinarski et al. (2014) predicted a population decline of >30% in the next 15 years (from publication date, 2014–2029) and a loss of most roosting sites in the next 30–50 years (from publication date, 2014–2044/2064), which would likely result in an increase of the species’ threatened status.

To address this issue and foster a sense of ownership over the research effort needed to understand the ecological and conservation requirements of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats, the (then) Western Australian Department of Parks and Wildlife initiated a stakeholder consultation workshop in 2013 (Cramer et al. 2016). Attendees represented environmental consultancies, mining companies, research institutions and government agencies responsible for environmental approvals and regulation of mining proposals, and collectively determined and ranked research priorities for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat, summarised in Table 1 (Cramer et al. 2016).

Table 1.Research priorities for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat determined by the 2013 stakeholder workshop (Cramer et al. 2016).

Research prioritySummary
1. Pilbara leaf-nosed bat recordsCollate existing data contained within unpublished environmental surveys.
2. Natural roostsClarify and better characterise the number and distribution of day roosts.
3. Habitat requirementsBetter understand habitat requirements, particularly foraging habitat, and the movement of bats between roosts.
4. Pilbara leaf-nosed bat coloniesProvide more robust estimates of total population and colony size, and improve understanding of social behaviour.
5. Management decisionsInvestigate appropriate buffers in a range of mining contexts and protocols for artificial roost construction.

Subsequently, nearly a decade since the 2013 workshop, a second stakeholder workshop was held in April 2022, following a similar workshop process (Cramer et al. 2016). Attendees discussed the degree to which research priorities from 2013 had been addressed and, via elicitation, identified current research priorities. Research priority themes that emerged at the 2022 workshop were similar to those from 2013; however, their relative priorities differed. In 2022, priorities were consolidated into four themes to better capture the range of key tasks and questions (Table 2). The importance of management was also highlighted at the workshop, with attendees developing and ranking a list of priority management actions.

Table 2.Research priorities for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat determined by the 2022 stakeholder workshop.

Rank

Theme

Research priority

Key tasks/questions

1

Ecology

Dispersal

  • Determine when and how dispersal occurs

  • Determine how breeding-related dispersal occurs

  • Understand how habitat corridors facilitate dispersal

  • Investigate the physical and/or ecological limitations to dispersal

Breeding

  • Define breeding seasons

  • Better understand breeding ecology

Demographics

  • Monitor population size and movements over time

  • Understand social behaviour and demographics

  • Determine the demographic composition of colonies

  • Continue surveying population and colony sizes

  • Better understand and monitor population trends

2

Threatening processes

Mining/infrastructure/other land uses

  • Increase knowledge of appropriate buffer requirements for mining activities

  • Investigate and determine artificial roost protocols

  • Investigate the potential for mortality from wind turbines

  • Better understand secondary impacts of mining

  • Determine their resilience to different types of disturbance

Predators/disease

  • Predator dietary analysis

  • Determine the potential for impact of white-nosed syndrome

Climate change

  • Create population viability models

  • Develop a long-term multidisciplinary research focus

  • Investigate how climate change will impact the viability of roost sites

3

Records/data

Collate data

  • Collate and analyse existing data

  • Develop a genetic database of individual genotypes

  • Include incidental data from non-Pilbara leaf-nosed bat studies in database

  • Increase collaboration and data sharing

  • Develop a standard monitoring methodology

4

Habitat

Roosts

  • Clarify number and distribution of diurnal roosts

  • Characterise the structure and conditions in natural roosts

  • Determine what happens when roosts are deserted

  • Utilisation and movement between (at regional scale)

  • Investigate the fidelity of individuals to roosts

  • Determine the role of a nearby water source in roost site viability

  • Investigate the required roost microclimate conditions

  • Determine the utility of environmental DNA for monitoring

Foraging/critical habitat

  • Characterise and map foraging habitat and its use

  • Understand patterns of movement among roosts and the role of foraging resource availability

To evaluate the level of research progress on the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat that has occurred since 2013, a comprehensive survey was conducted of the literature that included peer-reviewed journals and grey literature (including local magazines and, environmental consultancy and government reports). The aim of the literature review was to: (1) identify the work undertaken to date that addressed the research priorities identified in the 2013 stakeholder workshop; (2) identify the current knowledge gaps in Pilbara leaf-nosed bat ecology, conservation, and threatening processes; and (3) highlight how these gaps relate to the newly ranked 2022 priority list for both research and management outcomes. Through these three aims, we identify the best way forward for a collective effort for the study and long-term protection of the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat.

Materials and methods

Literature was sourced from database searches and provided by members of industry, consultancies, and government agencies. Database searches involved searching for the terms ‘Pilbara leaf-nosed bat’ or ‘R. aurantia’ on Scopus, Web of Science and Google Scholar (until April 2023). Relevant industry and consultant reports and applications were searched for using the Index of Biodiversity Surveys for Assessments website, the Government of Western Australian Environmental Protection Authority Referral website, and the EPBC Act Referrals list Basic Portal. Literature that referred to populations of R. aurantia outside the Pilbara region and those that only used the species name as a referenced example rather than a primary study focus were eliminated from the analysis. Reports were treated as a single document (including reports in the Supplementary material), unless only the report in the Supplementary material was supplied or sourced on its own. Repeat reports (the Biologic Environmental Survey report in the Supplementary material of Stantec 2016a and Stantec 2018b) was not repeated in the analysis of the latter report.

A total of 119 documents relevant to the species published between 2013 and 2023 were collated. Of those, 92% were ‘grey literature’ (n = 110) and the rest (n = 9) comprised of peer-reviewed scientific literature, including one book chapter and eight journal articles. Documents were assigned a binary classification (‘yes’ or ‘no’) as having addressed or considered the five key research questions from the 2013 stakeholder workshop (Table 1). Question 1 (the collation of unpublished data) was considered achieved for documents that published results in a format accessible by the public (book chapter or scientific publication). Question 2 (the distribution of diurnal roosts) was considered in studies that monitored or confirmed the presence of bats at a roost or investigated the presence at a potential roost site. Question 3 (habitat requirements) was addressed if monitoring or surveys mentioned the habitat type used or was potentially used by the species, or if surveys assessed the movement of groups or individuals. Question 4 (population and colony size and social behaviour) was addressed by literature that surveyed or monitored the number of individuals, or discussed or surveyed for social behavioural characteristics. Question 5 (disturbance buffers and artificial roosts) was considered addressed if either disturbance buffer distance or the use of artificial roosts was mentioned in the literature.

Results and discussion

We summarised the state of research addressing each of the research priorities from 2013 (below) and assessed whether research targets had not been met, were partially met or fully met in the literature in intervening years. We found that none of the priority research themes listed in the 2013 stakeholder workshop had been adequately addressed in the literature since 2013 (Fig. 1). Following review of the literature, we articulate the outstanding research gaps and how they relate to 2022 research priorities.

Fig. 1.

The ranked research themes according to stakeholder discussion at the Pilbara Leaf-nosed Bat Workshop in 2013 and 2022. White boxes represent research targets partially met and the black box represents research targets largely unmet between 2013 and 2023. Numbers represent priority ranking.


PC23031_F1.gif

Research priority 1: ecology

Dispersal patterns

The research priority of highest importance identified in the 2022 stakeholder workshop was to better understand the capacity, triggers, and limitations to dispersal for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat (Table 2). This aligns with the third priority listed in the 2013 workshop, which specified the need for a better understanding of bat movements between roosts (Cramer et al. 2016). We found that 31% (37/119) of the literature in the past decade considered or investigated the habitat and movement patterns of the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat (Fig. 2). This is likely because 92% (110/119) of the literature were industry/consultant reports containing surveys assessing/monitoring the use of areas by Pilbara leaf-nosed bats as a compliance requirement for mine approvals. The literature largely noted the presence of bats within different habitat types from ultrasonic recorders, and some literature directly tracked the movements of individual bats; however, data was often limited to few individuals in a non-replicable manner (i.e. inconsistent sampling and tracking techniques or equipment). Thus, the observations documented to date might be unrepresentative generally of their dispersal patterns because of the influence of the local landscape, small sample size, as well as bias from the capture and handling involved in transmitter attachment. Despite this, due to the relatively poor understanding of the species’ dispersal patterns, the collection of any data is considered valuable for informing better management and mitigation measures for the species at a local and/or regional scale.

Fig. 2.

The proportion of literature (years 2013–2023; 119 documents) that considered each of the five research priorities (not mutually exclusive) as listed in the 2013 workshop (Cramer et al. 2016). PLNB, Pilbara leaf-nosed bat.


PC23031_F2.gif

Knowledge of Pilbara leaf-nosed bat movements has improved in the past decade from the targeted use of technology such as ultrasonic recorders, very high frequency (VHF) trackers and radio frequency identification (RFID) transmitters (Biologic Environmental Survey 2019a; Bullen and Reiffer 2020, 2021; Reiffer 2022). RFID tagging has been shown useful to record long-distance dispersal events (Bullen and Reiffer 2020), and smaller scale movements such as nightly, monthly, and seasonal variations in the frequency and timing of foraging bouts (Bullen and Reiffer 2021). However, many studies are still in their infancy or are unpublished, and further studies are recommended to build upon pilot sample sizes in the grey literature. Stakeholders also expressed the importance of further understanding the timescale of colonies returning to abandoned sites (natural and/or disturbed), and the likelihood of such a return. Understanding the species’ movements regionally, and how foraging and roosting habitats and/or disturbance buffers facilitate and/or influence these movements, will assist with appropriate protection of suitable areas to maintain and promote colony persistence and survival.

Breeding and demographics

From a broad perspective, the workshop attendees determined that it is important to: (1) better understand the demography and social behaviour of colonies; (2) better define breeding seasons and behaviour; (3) increase the collective survey and monitoring effort across the region in a consistent manner to determine and monitor population trends; and (4) generate an accurate estimation of the regional population size. These topics align to a key task of Priority 4 from the 2013 workshop: to provide more robust estimates of total population and colony size and improve understanding of social behaviour. Only 12% of the literature (14/119) considered or addressed these factors in the past decade, and largely focused on estimating or monitoring the colony sizes at known roost sites. Two estimates of regional population size have recently been suggested based on recorded colony size estimates and echolocation data (Bat Call WA 2021). In 2016, the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat population was estimated to be approximately 30,000–35,000 individuals (Bullen 2019, cited in Bat Call WA (2021)), but based on recent and ongoing surveys it was suggested that the population has declined to 10,000–15,000 individuals, with speculation involving a bust-cycle period associated with drought or inconsistent annual rainfall (B. Bullen, pers. comm., 2023). However, a more intensive empirical study with modern methods is required to confirm the current population size and any change that might occur, ideally using acoustic bat detector recordings and incorporating video or other approaches so that counts can be properly validated and errors rates estimated.

Overall, the lack of progress towards understanding fundamental aspects of the species’ biology likely reflects the predominance of consultant reports supporting environmental approvals and/or addressing compliance requirements, as opposed to biological research. Thus, it was identified that future research effort should be directed towards understanding the population size and trends, dispersal patterns, and breeding dynamics of the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat, beyond establishing baseline presence/absence, single colony size counts and short-term monitoring at a localised and individual project scale. This will require ongoing, collaborative and focused field studies since establishing patterns and cycles of animal behaviour requires many years of research and significant resources. A comprehensive understanding of population ecology is critical, as effective conservation management generally requires a range of interventions at a population- to ecosystem-level scale (Brussard 1991).

Research priority 2: threatening processes

A key outcome of the 2022 stakeholder workshop was collating and prioritising key threats to Pilbara leaf-nosed bats (Table 3). Identified threats included feral cats, climate change, cumulative impacts, roost disturbance/destruction, habitat degradation and fragmentation, and inadequate implementation of buffer zones on critical habitat (i.e. roosts). Factors contributing to each threat were also discussed by workshop participants (Table 3). Of these factors, mining and infrastructure, cumulative impacts, predation, climate change, and understanding disease were selected as priorities for targeted research.

Table 3.The greatest threats to the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat, as nominated at the 2022 stakeholder workshop.

Priority

Threat

Relevant factors

1a

Feral cat predation

  • Current lack of recognition as a significant threat for management and policy

1b

Climate change

  • Potentially reduced rainfall

2a

Cumulative impacts

  • Hydrological changes: loss of permanent water and reduction in water quality

  • Vehicle strikes

  • Inappropriate fire regimes

  • Diseases

  • Lack of life/ecology knowledge during all life phases

  • Lack of data sharing

  • Future mining of ironstone formations

  • Renewables projects

2b

Disturbance and destruction of roosts

  • Future mining of ironstone formations and old adits

  • Renewables projects

3a

Degradation and fragmentation of foraging habitat

  • Inappropriate fire regimes

  • Wind turbines

  • Future mining of ironstone formations

  • Renewables projects

  • Hydrological changes: loss of permanent water and reduction in water quality

  • Climate change (potentially reduced rainfall)

3b

Inadequate buffers

  • Lack of information about critical habitats and the impacts of nearby activities and the thresholds (e.g. distances and extent) of these

  • Lack of knowledge of life cycle/ecology during breeding phase

Priorities were divided in two (a and b) when the same priority weighting was assigned by workshop participants.

Mining and infrastructure
Disturbance buffers and artificial roosts

One of the major threatening processes identified for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat was mining and associated anthropogenic disturbances, which aligns with Priority 5 from the original workshop, which focused on disturbance buffer requirements and artificial roost construction protocols (Cramer et al. 2016). Since 2013, only 9% (11/119) of the literature directly investigated specific buffer requirements relating to Pilbara leaf-nosed bats and 3% (3/119) of the literature directly trialled or monitored the success of artificial roosts, with some reports repeating discussion of the same roosts (six separate in total; Bat Call WA 2021; Biologic Environmental Survey 2022). Additionally, 3% (3/119) of the literature referenced other documents that specified buffer requirements or stated a buffer distance without providing a rationale, and 2% (2/119) referenced other artificial roost studies or provided mention of an artificial roost with no details. This indicates that the research gap has only been partially addressed in the past 10 years and is still a research priority for ongoing conservation and management. However, a lack of reporting could be due to the need to only investigate buffer requirements once at a location, that studies are ongoing, or else the exclusion of information from public reporting, rather than a lack of consideration. Nonetheless, we advocate for greater transparency in documenting the reasoning for determining buffer distances. Bat Call WA (2021) provides recommendations in relation to disturbances such as noise and ground borne vibration, advising a buffer distance of several hundred metres from the roost entrance; however, further studies are required to assess the suitability of buffer distances in relation to specific impacts. It is also recommended that further evidence be gathered to support this guidance (Bat Call WA 2021). Contextual studies, surveys or calculations are required to understand the surrounding cave geology and susceptibility for structural failure, the particle velocity from vibration, the potential for fly rock, and the appropriate distance or vibration threshold required to prevent disturbance or cave abandonment by Pilbara leaf-nosed bats (Blast It Global 2020). Therefore, selection of buffer distances needs to be calculated on a case-by-case basis, recognising the specific site characteristics. To increase transparency and aid information gathering, specifying the reasoning for determination and implementation of buffer sizes should be provided. Where supporting data is not available or influence of potential impacts are unknown, a precautionary approach should be taken, and increased buffer sizes implemented.

The distinct spatial overlap in concentrated iron ore, gold deposits and Pilbara leaf-nosed bat habitat highlights a direct conflict for land use and management, and a major threat to the species (Armstrong 2010; Bullen and Creese 2014). Due to this conflicting land use, there is a clear need to understand the impacts of mining and the viability of creating artificial roost sites to offset destruction of habitat. Abandoned mining adits effectively represent artificial roost habitat that has provided refuge and a focus for breeding for many decades; however, the collapse and/or flooding of these adits is considered a major threat to Pilbara leaf-nosed bats colonies (Armstrong 2001; Woinarski et al. 2014). This is primarily attributed to their instability (Donnelly and McCann 2000; Gonsalves et al. 2021), and extensions to ore bodies beneath these structures being accessed for further mining that may influence natural water tables. In addition to advocating for the protection of natural roosts, the recommended focus of research into artificial roosts is, therefore, to create viable additional roosting sites with greater longevity and structural stability than abandoned mining adits.

Despite being a research priority since 2013, investigation into the usefulness of specifically designed artificial roosts for Pilbara leaf-nosed bats appears to be only a recent undertaking by mining proponents. Within the past decade of literature, only five reports could be sourced that discussed or referenced concept for the design of artificial roosts, and those that detailed actioned trials were from 2021 or later (Bat Call WA 2021; Biologic Environmental Survey 2022). As installations of these artificial roosts has been only undertaken recently (in 2017, 2018, and 2019) there has not been sufficient time for monitoring to indicate whether these structures provide suitable roosting habitat for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat (Atlas Iron Limited 2021; Bat Call WA 2021). Further monitoring and design trials are required to determine which techniques and materials are the most appropriate for artificial roost construction, if they are used at all or reliably by Pilbara leaf-nosed bats, and if they are an appropriate mitigation tool to reduce colony loss in the event of habitat destruction. Due to the unknown feasibility of artificial roosts for habitat, it must be noted that conservation of the natural roost sites must be the first priority, and artificial roost development should only be planned as an additional management technique when preservation of natural roosts is not achievable.

Cumulative impacts of mining

The importance of understanding cumulative impacts of mining and the resilience of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats to these changes (Table 2) is important because multiple stressors can interact to cause nonlinear impacts to the environment (Segner et al. 2014). Impacts from mining can occur at multiple trophic levels and cascading effects throughout ecological networks can produce disproportionate consequences to certain species (Segner et al. 2014). Threatened species are at particular risk from multiple threatening processes acting together. For example, the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat occurs throughout the tenure of numerous proponents, meaning they are not protected or managed by a single proponent, and the regulatory framework can be ambiguous in assigning responsibility (Vanderduys et al. 2016). The current national legislation in Australia has limitations to regulate the collective number of impacts that might be insignificant on an individual basis but represent a cumulative impact on Matter of National Environmental Significance (MNES) (Dales 2011). Biodiversity impact assessments under threatened species legislation regularly only consider a development/disturbance proposal in the context of a single location and a single species (Whitehead et al. 2017), which fails to recognise the combined and concurrent consequences of numerous approved developments. Therefore, the cumulative effect of multiple mining operations and anthropogenic disturbances across the Pilbara risks local extirpations of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats due to ‘death by a thousand cuts’ (Dales 2011; Tulloch et al. 2016). As a result of the potential pressure from the cumulative impacts of mining on the threatened status of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats, stakeholders at the 2022 workshop determined this to be a new research priority. Specifically, important areas of focus identified were: (1) the threatening processes associated with mining and other threats and how they might interact; (2) how the cumulative impacts of mining might directly influence (i) roosting habitat and (ii) foraging habitat; and (3) the proportions/combination of disturbance to each of these habitats might impact colony viability, leading to reduced population resilience. Detailed studies on the ecological requirements of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats, such as home range size, the landscape characteristics required to support long-distance movements, and the area and quality of foraging habitat required to support a colony, are crucial to inform how the cumulative impacts of mining may influence population resilience.

As Australia has committed to a net zero carbon emissions target by 2050 to reduce climate change impacts (Foerster et al. 2017; DCCEEW 2021), research into the cumulative impacts of renewable energy generation and associated infrastructure (i.e. wind turbines or solar farms) will also be key to ensuring persistence of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats. Bat mortality from wind energy infrastructure has been investigated extensively in northern hemisphere systems (e.g. Kunz et al. 2007; Hein and Schirmacher 2016; Richardson et al. 2021). Research questions such as the flight height of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats, movement routes through the landscape (for avoidance), and potential deterrents or warning systems to bats, might help to significantly reduce the likelihood of bat mortality from this infrastructure. Additionally, other renewable energy sources such as solar farms may also be of consideration. The influence of solar farms on bat activity, particularly in relation to large scale clearing of foraging habitats, is also gaining increased interest from researchers (Szabadi et al. 2023; Tinsley et al. 2023). Overall, there is an imperative to better understand the cumulative impacts on Pilbara leaf-nosed bats, including factors such as mining, infrastructure development, and pastoralism. In addition, how these factors interact spatially across the Pilbara and across both roosting and foraging habitat, and how this impacts Pilbara leaf-nosed bat resilience to local extirpation, will be key to ensuring their long-term conservation.

Predators, disease and climate change

The impact of predation and disease, and how this may be amplified with climate change, was a key research task highlighted by the 2022 stakeholder workshop. While predation by native predators such as northern quolls (Dasyurus hallucatus) and ghost bats (Macroderma gigas) were previously known (Dunlop et al. 2017; Start et al. 2019), the 2022 stakeholder workshop recognised that feral cats (Felis catus) can impose significant predation pressure on some Pilbara leaf-nosed bat roosts (D’Rozario 2022; Moyses et al. 2022). Further understanding of the impact of feral cats, and their influence on local extirpations or colony declines of the species, will be important for ensuring appropriate management and mitigation measures can be implemented.

The 2022 stakeholder workshop also considered the potential for impact of fungal disease similar to the white-nose syndrome caused by the Pseudogymnoascus destructans fungus (Lorch et al. 2011; Minnis and Lindner 2013) on Pilbara leaf-nosed bats. However, studies have suggested that Pilbara leaf-nosed bats, and the region more generally, are unlikely to be impacted by this fungus due to the species’ behaviour and less favourable environmental factors such as temperature and humidity in the Pilbara region (Verant et al. 2012; Holz et al. 2019). Further investigation into predicted temperature and climate variation with climate change will be important to determine if there is a future risk from fungal infection to colonies. Modelling the cumulative impacts of climate change will also be important to understand the predicted impacts to roost suitability (through any changes to temperature, rainfall, and/or humidity), impacts to foraging habitat and prey populations, and other extreme events (i.e. fire) which might influence predator behaviour and Pilbara leaf-nosed bat breeding and colony persistence in parts of the Pilbara.

Research priority 3: records and data

The sharing and collation of data was listed as a priority both in the 2013 and 2022 stakeholder workshops. Review of the literature found a gradual increase in the number of occurrence records since listing at federal level of the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat as Vulnerable under the EPBC Act in 2001 (Fig. 3). The highest numbers of occurrence records were produced after 2013 when the first stakeholder workshop was held, and when there was the first call to action for the increased publication and dissemination of information as a research priority (Fig. 3). The general trend of increased occurrence records over time was also likely influenced by the increased sampling and survey effort following the listing of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats as a MNES, meaning that if disturbance is likely to have a significant impact on the species, such as through mining activity, a referral is required to be assessed and approved at the national level by the Australian Government Environment Minister (Department of the Environment 2013). The slight decrease in occurrence records since 2017 (Fig. 3) may not be a true reflection of a reduced level of reporting, as delays from the approval process can setback the timing of formal submission or public release of reporting, making these documents unavailable to the repositories used to source the grey literature for this review.

Fig. 3.

The number of reported occurrence records between 2000 and 2022, as sourced from Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attraction records. The 16 records from 1925–2000 were excluded for ease of graph interpretation.


PC23031_F3.gif

A significant number of the recent occurrence records for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat come from the grey literature that is largely composed of mining and consulting reports. These reports are not commonly publicly available; therefore, it is possible that additional records have been missed. Further, these reports are predominantly written in the context of meeting environmental compliance for a single site, or specific to an environmental approval, rather than for the purpose of broadscale and/or systematic species survey suggesting that spatial gaps in distributional records are likely present. For this reason, despite substantial progress on this priority since 2013, we consider that this research priority has only been partially met. In future, it is essential that survey records from consultants, researchers and mining companies are added to appropriate publicly accessible state and national biodiversity databases and data repositories (e.g. Dandjoo Biodiversity Data Repository, which is managed by the Western Australian Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions; and Atlas of Living Australia, which is hosted by the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) that are accessible to inform further research and survey effort. Records may consist of observations (e.g. echolocation sound recordings, infra-red video, scats, visual observations) as well as capture records. Development of standardised survey and monitoring protocols through a ‘standard operating procedure’ could assist in ensuring that data is comparable and treated consistently over the Pilbara region, such as the recommended survey approach detailed in Bat Call WA (2021), although the development of such a procedure will need to be based on a broad level of input. Due to limited conservation funds and time, an improvement in collaboration, communication and data sharing will help fast-track the address of key knowledge gaps currently limiting the effective management and conservation of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats.

Research priority 4: habitat

Roosts and foraging habitat

A better understanding of habitat requirements was listed as a priority at both stakeholder workshops (Cramer et al. 2016). Our review of the literature found that 31% (37/119) of documents considered or mentioned habitat, at least through presence/absence records in certain habitat types or habitat features. In addition to presence records, VHF tagging of individuals can help analyse the time spent in different habitat types, distances travelled, and potential uses of different habitat and roost sites (Biologic Environmental Survey 2019a). For example, VHF tracking of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats using fixed towers in a 2018 pilot study used detection events to determine that the preferred foraging habitat of tagged bats was along drainage lines and ephemeral watercourses, highlighting the likely significance of surface water (Biologic Environmental Survey 2019a). The importance of water sources was also highlighted in other studies that directly tracked individuals (Biologic Environmental Survey 2019b, 2020), and 86% of the literature that mentioned habitat had survey results that supported (62%, n = 23/37) or mentioned (24%, n = 9/37) the importance of water or riparian habitat for foraging.

A more detailed comment on the importance/use of habitat types, and the activity levels of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats in habitat types, was recently summarised in Bat Call WA (2021), based on extensive echolocation monitoring data. It was found that the bats forage in almost all productive and semi-productive habitat types, with a preference for sites with permanent or semi-permanent water courses and complex vegetation structure (Bat Call WA 2021). This assessment helps to substantially address the knowledge gap discussed at both the 2013 and 2022 workshops. The omission of natural roost characterisation from the 2022 workshop (Priority 2 in the 2013 workshop; to further expand previous research of Armstrong (2000, 2001) also indicates that there has been a progression towards building a greater understanding of the components of a suitable roost such as humidity and temperature parameters, although there are still factors requiring further investigation, such as causes of humidity fluctuation in cave structure (Bat Call WA 2021; D’Rozario 2022).

Management directions

The 2022 stakeholder workshop built upon the 2013 workshop by additionally discussing the management priorities required for the future conservation of the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat. Consultation with stakeholders revealed six major management priorities, relating to a series of key tasks and questions (Table 4).

Table 4.Management priorities for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat identified in the 2022 stakeholder workshop.

Rank

Management priority

Key tasks/questions

1

Introduced predator control

  1. Feral cats

    • Extend existing programs

    • Make a compliance requirement

    • Conduct at a landscape scale

  2. Other predators

    • Control food around campsites

    • Make a compliance requirement

2

Local collaboration

  • Proponent collaboration on regional studies

  • Higher standards for new projects

  • Identify what is most effective

  • Tools above databases (e.g. to facilitate comparisons)

  • Include Traditional Owners and Indigenous rangers

  • Have targeted community engagement (including knowledge and incentives)

3

Artificial roosts

  • Determine the methods that work

  • Determine the next steps required to make a viable management method

  • Protect and preserve known roost sites

4

Monitoring

  1. Secondary and cumulative impacts

    • Impacts include vibration, dewatering, light, noise, and blasting

    • Establish and apply agreed industry standards

    • Make post-mining assessment monitoring a compliance requirement

  2. Colony and habitat characteristics

    • Long-term monitoring of population impacts to occur at a regional scale for a range of variables

    • Monitor at the population scale

    • Water/hydrology levels and quality

5

Buffer implementation

  • Must be based on research

6

Regional consistency

  1. Consistent application of management regimes

    • Protocols document

    • Consistent guidance

    • Adaptive management for local conditions

  2. Security for the future

    • Identify source of funding for ongoing management and monitoring

    • Determine whether there are there other/new offset options

    • Manage the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat as a panmictic population

Management priority 1: introduced predator management

Management of introduced predators, particularly feral cats, is a priority for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat, with feral cats confirmed as a threat to the bats by stakeholder consensus and presenter findings (D’Rozario 2022; Moyses et al. 2022; J. Moyses, C. Grabham, K. N. Armstrong, C. Knuckey, B. D’Rozario, unpubl. data) at the 2022 workshop. Although not previously identified as a key threatening process for Pilbara leaf-nosed bat (Threatened Species Scientific Committee 2016; Bat Call WA 2021), bat predation by feral cats is known to occur on a broad range of species and cats are considered one of the most damaging invasive species on bat populations around the world (Ancillotto et al. 2013; Oedin et al. 2021). The impact of cat predation has contributed to numerous extinctions, particularly in Australia (Doherty et al. 2016, 2017), and predation by feral cats is listed as a broad threatening process for threatened species under the Australian EPBC Act. The Australian Government’s Threatened Species Strategy 2021–2031 (DAWE 2021) lists ‘mitigating new and established threats’, including feral cats, as the top action fundamental to the recovery of threatened species in Australia. Therefore, the top management priority for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat aligns with the same focus area for the recovery of threatened species more broadly throughout Australia.

Management and monitoring of feral cats is challenging, as they are cryptic and solitary, with large home ranges and often occur at low density across the landscape (Edwards et al. 2000; Fisher et al. 2015; Comer et al. 2018; Palmer et al. 2021). There is no current landscape-scale control method determined consistently effective for the management of feral cats (Webber 2020). Despite being declared a pest under the BAM Act, feral cats are in the ‘unassigned control-category’, meaning that individuals and agencies are not obligated to manage feral cats on their property (Webber 2020). Stakeholders at the 2022 workshop advocated for feral cat management to become a compliance requirement in the Pilbara (Table 3). Regulation of feral cat management in the Pilbara region could contribute towards a more coordinated management approach, leading to widespread and long-term testing of methods to help improve management techniques (Webber 2020). Management as a compliance requirement could also help reduce the likelihood of unmanaged neighbouring properties acting as a continued source of replacement individuals for those areas with active control. In addition, regulation could reduce low-level and ad hoc management practices, which can counter-productively lead to the immigration of more feral cats than were originally in the area, increasing predatory activity (Lazenby et al. 2014).

Management priority 2: local collaboration

Positive communication between proponents and organisations in the Pilbara will be critical for the widespread sharing and advancing of management methods. Stakeholders emphasised the importance of proponent collaboration on regional studies to address broad questions, compared with past projects that were typically isolated to areas managed by a single proponent, and the results not communicated outside to separate organisations. The first study using microsatellite and mitochondrial (mtDNA) markers (K. N. Armstrong, unpubl. data), plus a recent conservation genetics study using mtDNA and nuclear single nucleotide polymorphism markers identified high levels of gene flow throughout Pilbara leaf-nosed bat colonies and that the population exists in a state of panmixia (Umbrello et al. 2022). Connectivity corridors are important to maintaining high gene flow between colonies and appropriate management will involve communication among proponents and land managers to facilitate continued dispersal events and prevent the establishment of barriers to gene flow (Armstrong 2001, K. N. Armstrong, unpubl. data; Umbrello et al. 2022).

Communication of the most effective methods and management under different circumstances will also increase the capacity for best-practice techniques to be followed across the Pilbara. Inclusion of Traditional Owner and ranger groups as part of ongoing discussions of Pilbara leaf-nosed bat conservation and management is also a priority highlighted by the 2022 workshop attendees, as well as targeted community engagement. The collaborative use of traditional ecological knowledge, particularly in combination with western science, to inform biodiversity conservation and natural resource management continues to be highlighted as an avenue for improving shared knowledge and achieving biodiversity protection and sustainable development of natural resources (Nabhan and Martinez 2012; Freitas et al. 2020; Sousa et al. 2020; Goolmeer et al. 2022; Goolmeer and van Leeuwen 2023). Overall, local collaboration and open communication will likely help improve or expedite achieving the other management and research priorities for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat.

Management priority 3: artificial roosts

Investigation into the suitability of artificial roosts is a research priority (Table 2) as well as a management priority (Table 3) for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat. Of first importance is determining the most effective artificial roost designs for Pilbara leaf-nosed bats. Once there is evidence for a design that is structurally sound and can successfully attract the focus of colonies over long-term monitored periods over multiple years or decades, then an optimised design and strategy can be promoted throughout the Pilbara. Although this is the final option in the mitigation hierarchy and will not compensate for the loss of natural roosts, installation of artificial roosts has successfully attracted and supported other bat species around the world (e.g. Kelm et al. 2008; Mering and Chambers 2014). This could be a useful approach for maintaining population size, colony connectedness and other conservation efforts that include other nearby roosts.

Management priorities 4–6: monitoring, disturbance buffers and regional consistency

Long term, targeted monitoring across the Pilbara region is a management priority for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat. Standardised and consistent monitoring will help develop a better baseline dataset for characteristics relating to habitat use, as well as track responses to threatening processes (Legge et al. 2018), such as the cumulative impacts of mining. Analysis of monitoring records can help inform appropriate disturbance buffer sizes (e.g. Blast It Global 2020) to establish around roost sites and foraging habitat, which is also a priority area for research (Table 2). To achieve broad-scale monitoring for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat, stakeholders from the 2022 workshop emphasised the need to make monitoring a compliance requirement. Workshop attendees also highlighted the need to establish and apply agreed industry standards, which will facilitate the development of meaningful, sharable datasets across the Pilbara to help inform best-practice management and achieve regional consistency (Management Priority 6).

Stakeholders at the 2022 workshop recommended that a guidance document be created to provide consistent guidance to land managers and ensure that appropriate management actions are implemented across the Pilbara. Development of this document is likely to require another collaborative stakeholder workshop with expert recommendations. Consistency is important across the region to ensure that all colonies are awarded appropriate protection; however, adaptive management is also important to achieve successful management in the context of local conditions. Adaptive management, with experimental trials of new methods or technologies, will facilitate further improvements to best practice techniques for the future (Haney and Power 1996; Kimball and Lulow 2019). Stakeholders at the 2022 workshop further recommended the need to identify a source of funding for the ongoing management and monitoring of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats to help understand patterns within and among colonies, and to provide information about possible population size changes. This will also be important to ensure that management regimes will continue to be implemented, as their longevity is key to providing the intended outputs of reliable datasets in the long term.

Conclusions and implications

As is evident from this literature review and the concerns raised at the 2022 Pilbara leaf-nosed bat workshop, there has only been partial progress towards addressing research priorities identified in the 2013 workshop (Cramer et al. 2016). Participants at the 2022 workshop identified the lack of an overarching framework, and the need for clear leadership structure or development of guidance documentation arising from the 2013 workshop as a barrier to developing the next steps for initiation and coordination of research programs. Participants were concerned that these risk factors are still present and may impact outcomes of the recent workshop, further hindering implementation of best management and conservation practices for the species.

Various efforts were made to investigate and answer the questions posed in Cramer et al. (2016); however, these investigations were largely isolated, in their infancy, were based on limited sampling, or with results mainly limited to release in the grey literature (or many studies likely not published at all), which can be difficult to access and contribute towards a shared knowledge. A clearly defined, detailed, and costed research strategy for Pilbara leaf-nosed bats based on outcomes from the workshop and stakeholder elicitation is necessary to guide and direct research activities and funding opportunities. A costed research strategy could act as a prospectus to facilitate the development of research partnerships between public, private and academic institutions, outlining the roles and contribution of each. Such a collaborative approach is currently employed by the Western Australian Biodiversity Science Institute and may provide a model for Pilbara leaf-nosed bats.

A key concern for stakeholders is the identification of source/s of ongoing funding to address research priorities, management activities and monitoring, particularly because the research targets are ambitious and require extended timeframes to address adequately. The key research questions for Pilbara leaf-nosed bats established in the 2013 stakeholder workshop were published in 2016 (Cramer et al. 2016), just after the sharp global decline in the price of iron ore (Bekiros et al. 2015), which is the primary industry of the Pilbara (Barratt and Ellem 2019). As evidenced by our literature review, progress on research priorities was largely restricted to grey literature reports by or for mining companies, thus a lack of spending by proponents outside of meeting regulatory requirements is likely to also have contributed to the impartial completion of the 2013 research targets.

Public–private co-funding models were the preferred approach raised at the workshop, and attendees discussed leveraging funding through other sources such as the Pilbara Environmental Offset Fund. However, only a limited portion of the Fund is allocated towards research spending with the remaining focused on on-ground recovery actions (Government of Western Australia 2023). Allowance for greater research spending from the Fund to better understand species ecology prior to management intervention may help to improve the long-term conservation of the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat as well as other sympatric and ecologically similar species. This is of particular importance given the relatively limited expenditure on the species compared to other species that are not endemic to the region (i.e. northern quoll). The substantial expertise and good will present among workshop participants provide a strong foundation for the development of future collaborative approaches.

For the key management and research goals of the 2022 stakeholder workshop to be met, previous issues in the past decade relating to funding and allocation of responsibility will need to be addressed as a priority. Targets determined by stakeholders at the 2022 workshop provide guidance on research foci for the species and will need to be translated to specific, timely, and actionable goals when implementation is desired (i.e. furthering study on a particular aspect of the management and research goals identified herein), with a coordinated and collaborative effort among all stakeholders required to improve the likelihood of regional recovery for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat more broadly overall. Experience since 2013 will help to direct and focus future research and management efforts, as well as highlight the clear gaps in strategy and policy to improve for the future. A research and management approach developed directly to address the priority targets, rather than indirectly through the current regulatory framework for mineral extraction and development in the Pilbara, will increase the likelihood of successfully completing the 2022 research and management targets. Overall, updated compliance regulations, coordinated funding, positive communication between proponents, and targeted research beyond simple survey measures, are critical for effectively meeting the targets highlighted in this review in the upcoming decade.

Supplementary material

Supplementary material is available online.

Data availability

The grey literature that supports this review are available through the Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions Library Catalogue, Government of Western Australia Environmental Protection Authority proposal portal, Australian Government EPBC Act portal, plus other links provided in the Supplementary material.

Conflicts of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Declaration of funding

Funding for this project was provided by the Fortescue Metals Group Ltd, and the School of Molecular and Life Sciences, Curtin University.

Acknowledgements

We respectfully acknowledge the Whadjuk people of the Noongar Nation as the Traditional Custodians of the lands on which we undertook this review. We also acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the lands in the Pilbara for their ongoing stewardship of the Country on which this bat occurs. We would like to thank Craig Salt from Sustainable Consulting for workshop facilitation at the 2022 Pilbara Leaf-nosed Bat Workshop, and for all workshop attendees for providing their expert opinion and discussion. We thank Fortescue Metals Group Ltd for sponsorship of the workshop, and to Todd Edwards and team members for reviewing the draft manuscript.

References

Ancillotto L, Serangeli MT, Russo D (2013) Curiosity killed the bat: domestic cats as bat predators. Mammalian Biology 78(5), 369-373.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Armstrong KN (2000) Roost microclimates of the bat Rhinonicteris aurantius in a limestone cave in Geike Gorge, Western Australia. Australian Mammalogy 22, 69-70.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Armstrong KN (2001) The distribution and roost habitat of the orange leaf-nosed bat, Rhinonicteris aurantius, in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. Wildlife Research 28, 95-104.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Armstrong KN (2002) Morphometric divergence among populations of Rhinonicteris aurantius (Chiroptera: Hipposideridae) in northern Australia. Australian Journal of Zoology 50, 649-669.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Armstrong KN (2003) The bats that time forgot: the orange leaf-nosed bat Rhinonicteris aurantius (Gray, 1845) (Microchiroptera: Hipposideridae) in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. PhD thesis, The University of Western Australia, Perth.

Armstrong KN (2006a) Resolving the correct nomenclature of the orange leaf-nosed bat Rhinonicteris aurantia (Gray, 1845) (Hipposideridae). Australian Mammalogy 28, 125-130.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Armstrong KN (2006b) Phylogeographic structure in Rhinonicteris aurantia (Chiroptera: Hipposideridae): implications for conservation. Acta Chiropterologica 8, 63-81.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Armstrong KN (2010) Assessing the short-term effect of minerals exploration drilling on colonies of bats of conservation significance: a case study near Marble Bar, Western Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 93, 165-174.
| Google Scholar |

Armstrong KN, Coles RB (2007) Echolocation call frequency differences between geographic isolates of Rhinonicteris aurantia (Chiroptera: Hipposideridae): implications of nasal chamber size. Journal of Mammalogy 88, 94-104.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Atlas Iron Limited (2021) Mt Webber Direct Shipping Ore: EPBC compliance report 2021 – stage 1 and 2. Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions library catalogue, location 206824, Perth, WA.

Barratt T, Ellem B (2019) Temporality and the evolution of GPNs: remaking BHP’s Pilbara iron ore network. Regional Studies 53(11), 1555-1564.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Bat Call WA (2020) Ratty Spring and Paraburdoo Pools Pilbara leaf-nosed bat monitoring program, 2015 to January 2020. Prepared for Rio Tinto. WA, Australia, Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions Library, Government of Western Australia, location 206070.

Bat Call WA (2021) A review of Pilbara leaf-nosed bat ecology, threats and survey requirements. Report prepared for the Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions library catalogue, location 206199, Canberra, ACT.

Baudinette RV, Churchill SK, Christian KA, Nelson JE, Hudson PJ (2000) Energy, water balance and the roost microenvironment in three Australian cave-dwelling bats (Microchiroptera). Journal of Comparative Physiology B 170, 439-446.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Bekiros S, Hernandez JA, Hammoudeh S, Nguyen DK (2015) Multivariate dependence risk and portfolio optimization: an application to mining stock portfolios. Resources Policy 46(2), 1-11.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Biologic Environmental Survey (2019a) Western Range: Pilbara leaf-nosed bat VHF study. Prepared for Rio Tinto Iron Ore. Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions library catalogue, location 206495.

Biologic Environmental Survey (2019b) Warrawoona targeted bat assessment – April 2019. Prepared for Calidus Resources Limited. Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions library catalogue, location 206473.

Biologic Environmental Survey (2020) Western Range: Pilbara leaf-nosed bat VHF study. Prepared for Rio Tinto Iron Ore. Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions library catalogue, location 206496.

Biologic Environmental Survey (2022) Mt Webber artificial bat roost monitoring interim year 3: October 2020 to March 2021. Prepared for Atlas Iron Limited. Available at https://www.atlasiron.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Mt-Webber-DSO-EPBC-2012-6611-Compliance-Report-2021-2022.pdf

Blast It Global (2020) Assessment of blasting at Miralga Creek Project – preservation of ghost bat habitats post mining activities. Prepared for Atlas Iron Limited. Available at https://www.epa.wa.gov.au/sites/default/files/PER_documentation2/Appendix%20H%20-%20Blast%20Impact%20Assessment.pdf

Brussard PF (1991) The role of ecology in biological conservation. Ecological Applications 1(1), 6-12.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Bullen RD, Creese S (2014) A note on the impact on Pilbara leaf-nosed and ghost bat activity from cave sound and vibration levels during drilling operations. The Western Australian Naturalist 29(3), 145-154.
| Google Scholar |

Bullen RD, Reiffer S (2020) A record of movement of a Pilbara leaf-nosed bat between distant diurnal roosts using PIT tags. Australian Mammalogy 42(1), 119-121.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Bullen RD, Reiffer S (2021) Measurement of roost entrance activity of Pilbara leaf-nosed bats (Rhinonicteris aurantia) using passive integrated transponder tags. Australian Mammalogy 43, 311-318.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Churchill SK (1991) Distribution, abundance and roost selection of the orange horseshoe-bat, Rhinonycteris aurantius, a tropical cave-dweller. Wildlife Research 18, 343-353.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Churchill SK, Helman PM, Hall LS (1988) Distribution, populations and status of the Orange Horseshoe Bat, Rhinonicteris aurantius (Chiroptera: Hipposideridae). Australian Mammalogy 11, 27-33.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Comer S, Speldewinde P, Tiller C, Clausen L, Pinder J, Cowen S, Algar D (2018) Evaluating the efficacy of a landscape scale feral cat control program using camera traps and occupancy models. Scientific Reports 8, 5535.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Cramer VA, Armstrong KN, Bullen RD, Ellis R, Gibson LA, Mckenzie NL, O’Connell M, Spate A, van Leeuwen S (2016) Research priorities for the Pilbara leaf-nosed bat (Rhinonicteris aurantia Pilbara form). Australian Mammalogy 38(2), 149-157.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Cramer VA, Armstrong KN, Bullen RD, Cross SL, Gibson L, Hanrahan N, Knuckey CG, Ottewell K, Reiffer S, Ruykys L, Shaw RE, Thavornkanlapachai R, Thompson SA, Wild S, van Leeuwen S (2023) Research priorities for the ghost bat (Macroderma gigas) in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. Australian Mammalogy 45(1), 1-12.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Dales JT (2011) Death by a thousand cuts: incorporating cumulative effects in Australia’s Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act. Pacific Rim Law & Policy Journal 20, 149-177.
| Google Scholar |

DAWE (2021) Threatened species strategy 2021-2031. Australian Government, Canberra. Available at https://www.dcceew.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/threatened-species-strategy-2021-2031.pdf

DCCEEW (2021) Affirming Australia’s net zero emissions by 2050 target. DCCEEW; 2021. Available at https://www.dcceew.gov.au/about/news/affirming-australias-net-zero-emissions-by-2050-target [accessed 20 June 2023

Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) (2022) Rhinonicteris aurantia (Pilbara form). In ‘Species Profile and Threats Database’. Department of the Environment, Canberra. Available at https://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/sprat/public/publicspecies.pl?taxon_id=82790

Doherty TS, Glen AS, Nimmo DG, Ritchie EG, Dickman CR (2016) Invasive predators and global biodiversity loss. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 113(40), 11261-11265.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Doherty TS, Dickman CR, Johnson CN, Legge SM, Ritchie EG, Woinarski JCZ (2017) Impacts and management of feral cats Felis catus in Australia. Mammal Review 47(2), 83-97.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Donnelly LJ, McCann DM (2000) The location of abandoned mine workings using thermal techniques. Engineering Geology 57(1–2), 39-52.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Department of the Environment (2013) Matters of National Environmental Significance. Significant impact guidelines 1.1 Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999. Australian Government, Australia. Available at https://www.agriculture.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/nes-guidelines_1.pdf

D’Rozario B (2022) Temporal variation in microclimate within a non-permanent roost. In ‘Oral presentation, Pilbara leaf-nosed bat workshop 2022’, 27 April 2022. WA, Australia, Curtin University.

Dunlop JA, Rayner K, Doherty TS (2017) Dietary flexibility in small carnivores: a case study on the endangered northern quoll, Dasyurus hallucatus. Journal of Mammalogy 98(3), 858-866.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Edwards GP, de Preu ND, Shakeshaft BJ, Crealy IV (2000) An evaluation of two methods of assessing feral cat and dingo abundance in central Australia. Wildlife Research 27, 143-149.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Fisher P, Algar D, Murphy E, Johnston M, Eason C (2015) How does cat behaviour influence the development and implementation of monitoring techniques and lethal control methods for feral cats? Applied Animal Behaviour Science 173, 88-96.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Foerster A, Peel J, Osofsky HM, Mcdonnell B (2017) Keeping good company in the transition to a low carbon economy? An evaluation of climate risk disclosure practices in Australia. Corporate and Securities Law Journal 16, 1-30.
| Google Scholar |

Freitas CT, Lopes PFM, Campos-Silva JV, Noble MM, Dyball R, Peres CA (2020) Co-management of culturally important species: a tool to promote biodiversity conservation and human well-being. People and Nature 2(1), 61-81.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Gonsalves L, Potter T, Colman N, Law B (2021) Long-term effects of grating derelict mines on bat emergence activity, abundance and behaviour. Australian Journal of Zoology 68(6), 320-331.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Goolmeer T, van Leeuwen S (2023) Indigenous knowledge is saving our iconic species. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 38(7), 591-594.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Goolmeer T, Skroblin A, Grant C, van Leeuwen S, Archer R, Gore-Birch C, Wintle BA (2022) Recognising culturally significant species and indigenous-led management is key to meeting international biodiversity obligations. Conservation Letters 15(6), e12899.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Government of Western Australia (2023) Program: Pilbara environmental offsets fund fact sheet – What can be funded? Available at https://www.wa.gov.au/system/files/2023-08/peof-fact-sheet-what-can-be-funded.pdf [accessed 13 January 2023]

Haney A, Power RL (1996) Adaptive management for sound ecosystem management. Environmental Management 20(6), 879-886.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Hein CD, Schirmacher MR (2016) Impact of wind energy on bats: a summary of our current knowledge. Human-Wildlife Interactions 10(1), 19-27.
| Google Scholar |

Holz P, Hufschmid J, Boardman WSJ, Cassey P, Firestone S, Lumsden LF, Prowse TAA, Reardon T, Stevenson M (2019) Does the fungus causing white-nose syndrome pose a significant risk to Australian bats? Wildlife Research 46(8), 657-668.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Kelm DH, Wiesner KR, von Helversen O (2008) Effects of artificial roosts for frugivorous bats on seed dispersal in a neotropical forest pasture mosaic. Conservation Biology 22(3), 733-741.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Kimball S, Lulow ME (2019) Adaptive management in variable environments. Plant Ecology 220, 171-182.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Kulzer E, Nelson JE, Mckean JL, Möhres FP (1970) Untersuchungen über die Temperaturregulation australischer Fledermäuse (Microchiroptera). Zeitschrift fuer Vergleichende Physiologie 69, 426-451.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Kunz TH, Arnett EB, Erickson WP, Hoar AR, Johnson GD, Larkin RP, Strickland MD, Thresher RW, Tuttle MD (2007) Ecological impacts of wind energy development on bats: questions, research needs, and hypotheses. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 5(6), 315-324.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Lazenby BT, Mooney NJ, Dickman CR (2014) Effects of low-level culling of feral cats in open populations: a case study from the forests of southern Tasmania. Wildlife Research 41, 407-420.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Legge S, Lindenmayer DB, Robinson NM, Scheele BC, Southwell DM, Whintle BC (Eds) (2018) ‘Monitoring threatened species and ecological communities.’ (CSIRO Publishing: Clayton South, Vic.)

Lorch JM, Meteyer CU, Behr MJ, Boyles JG, Cryan PM, Hicks AC, Ballmann AE, Coleman JTH, Redell DN, Reeder DM, Blehert DS (2011) Experimental infection of bats with Geomyces destructans causes white-nose syndrome. Nature 480(7377), 376-378.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Mering ED, Chambers CL (2014) Thinking outside the box: a review of artificial roosts for bats. Wildlife Society Bulletin 38(4), 741-751.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Minnis AM, Lindner DL (2013) Phylogenetic evaluation of Geomyces and allies reveals no close relatives of Pseudogymnoascus destructans, comb. nov., in bat hibernacula of eastern North America. Fungal Biology 117(9), 638-649.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Moyses J, O’Brien J, Grabham C, Moyses J, Armstrong K (2022) Demography of a local Pilbara leaf-nosed bat colony. In ‘Oral presentation, Pilbara Leaf-nosed Bat Workshop 2022’, 27 April 2022, Perth, WA.

Nabhan GP, Martinez D (2012) Traditional ecological knowledge and endangered species recovery: is ethnobiology for the birds? Journal of Ethnobiology 32(1), 1-5.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Oedin M, Brescia F, Millon A, Murphy BP, Palmas P, Woinarski JCZ, Vidal E (2021) Cats Felis catus as a threat to bats worldwide: a review of the evidence. Mammal Review 51(3), 323-337.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Palmer R, Anderson H, Richards B, Craig MD, Gibson L (2021) Does aerial baiting for controlling feral cats in a heterogeneous landscape confer benefits to a threatened native meso-predator? PLoS ONE 16(5), e0251304.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Reiffer S (2022) Pilbara leaf-nosed bat work at Rio Tinto since 2013. In ‘Oral presentation, Pilbara Leaf-nosed Bat Workshop 2022’, 27 April 2022, Perth, WA.

Richardson SM, Lintott PR, Hosken DJ, Economou T, Mathews F (2021) Peaks in bat activity at turbines and the implications for mitigating the impact of wind energy developments on bats. Scientific Reports 11, 3636.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Segner H, Schmitt-Jansen M, Sabater S (2014) Assessing the impact of multiple stressors on aquatic biota: the receptor’s side matters. Environmental Science & Technology 48(14), 7690-7696.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Sousa R, Nogueira JG, Miranda F, Teixeira A (2020) Time travelling through local ecological knowledge regarding an endangered species. Science of The Total Environment 739, 140047.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Start AN, Mckenzie NL, Bullen RD (2019) Notes on bats in the diets of ghost bats (Macroderma gigas: Megadermatidae) in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 34(1), 51-53.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Szabadi KL, Kurali A, Rahman NAA, Froidevaux JSP, Tinsley E, Jones G, Görföl T, Estók P, Zsebők S (2023) The use of solar farms by bats in mosaic landscapes: implications for conservation. Global Ecology and Conservation 44, e02481.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Threatened Species Scientific Committee (2016) Conservation advice: Rhinonicteris aurantia (Pilbara form) Pilbara leaf-nosed bat. Department of the Environment, Canberra. Available at http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/threatened/species/pubs/82790-conservation-advice-10032016.pdf

Tinsley E, Froidevaux JSP, Zsebők S, Szabadi KL, Jones G (2023) Renewable energies and biodiversity: impact of ground-mounted solar photovoltaic sites on bat activity. Journal of Applied Ecology 60(9), 1752-1762.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Tulloch AIT, Barnes MD, Ringma J, Fuller RA, Watson JEM (2016) Understanding the importance of small patches of habitat for conservation. Journal of Applied Ecology 53(2), 418-429.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Umbrello L, Bullen R, Shaw R, Mcarthur S, Byrne M, van Leeuwen S, Ottewell K (2022) Extensive gene flow in a threatened bat (Rhinonicteris aurantia) in an arid landscape. Global Ecology and Conservation 37, e02154.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Vanderduys EP, Reside AE, Grice A, Rechetelo J (2016) Addressing potential cumulative impacts of development on threatened species: the case of the endangered black-throated finch. PLoS ONE 11(3), e0148485.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Verant ML, Boyles JG, Waldrep W, Jr, Wibbelt G, Blehert DS (2012) Temperature-dependent growth of Geomyces destructans, the fungus that causes bat white-nose syndrome. PLoS ONE 7(9), e46280.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Webber BL (2020) Increasing knowledge to mitigate cat impacts on biodiversity. The Western Australian Biodiversity Science Institute, Perth. Available at https://wabsi.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/WABSI_Mitigating-cat-impacts_FINAL.pdf

Whitehead AL, Kujala H, Wintle BA (2017) Dealing with cumulative biodiversity impacts in strategic environmental assessment: a new frontier for conservation planning. Conservation Letters 10(2), 195-204.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Woinarski JC, Burbidge AA, Harrison PL (2014) ‘The action plan for Australian mammals, 2012.’ (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood)