Canada
Biospeleology Bibliography
Altig, R. & Ireland, P. H. 1984. A key to Salamander larvae and larviform adults of the United States and Canada. Herpetologia 40: 212-
218.
Bateman, R. M. 1961. Mammal occurrences in escarpment caves. Ontario Field Biologist 15: 16-18.
Burns L.E., T.R. Frasier, and H.G. Broders. 2014. Genetic connectivity among swarming sites in the wide ranging and recently declining
little brown bat (Myotis lucifugus). Ecology and Evolution doi: 10.1002/ece3.1266
Churcher, C. S. & Fenton, M. B. 1968. Vertebrate remains from the Dickson Limestone quarry, Halton County, Ontario, Canada. N. S. S.
Bulletin 30: 11-16.
Chruszcz, B.J.and R.M.R. Barclay. 2003. Prolonged foraging bouts of a solitary gleaning/hawking bat, Myotis evotis. Canadian Journal
of Zoology 81(5): 823-826.
Czenze, Z.C. and C.K.R. Willis. 2015. Warming up and shipping out: Cues for arousal and emergence in hibernating little brown bats
(Myotis lucifugus). Journal of Comparative Physiology B. 185:575-586.
Davis, M., Chatwin, T. & and D. Nagorsen 1997. Bat usage of the Weymer Creek Cave Systems on Northern Vancouver island. 13th
National Cave Management Symposium, Highlighting Forest Karst Ecosystems, October 7-10, 1997, Bellingham, Washington, U. S. A.
Davis, M.D., A.D.Vanderberg, Chatwin, T.A. & and M.H. Mather. 2000. Bat usage of the Weymer Creek cave systems on Northern
Vancouver Island. pp.305-312 IN: Darling, L. (ed) Proceedings of a conference on the biology and management of species and habitats
at risk, Kamloops, BC 15-19 Feb 1999. B.C. Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks, Victoria, B.C. and University College of the
Cariboo, Kamloops, B.C. 490pp.
Davy CM, Martinez-Nunez, F., C.K.R. Willis and S.V. Good. 2015. Implications of spatial genetic structure among winter aggregations of
bats along the leading edge of a rapidly spreading pathogen. Conservation Genetics 16:1013-1024.
Dubois, J.E. and K.M. Monson. 2003. Recent distribution of the little brown bat (Myotis lucifugus) in Manitoba and northwestern
Ontario. Canadian Caver 60:12-17.
Fenton, M. B. 1969. Summer activity of Myotis lucifugus (Chiroptera,Vespertilionidae) at hibernacula in Ontario and Quebec. Canadian
Journal of Zoology 47:597-602.
Fenton, M. B. 1970. Population studies of Myotis lucifugus (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae) in Ontario. Roy. Ontario Mus. Life Sci.
Contrib. n° 77: 34 pp.
Fenton, M. B. 1972. Distribution and wintering of Myotis leibii and Eptesicus fuscus (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae) in Ontario. Roy.
Ontario Mus. Life Sci., Occas. Pap. n° 21: 8 pp.
Hitchcock, H. B. 1949. Hibernation of bats in southeastern Ontario and adjacent Quebec. Canadian Field Naturalist 63:47-59.
Hitchcock, H. B. 1965. Twenty-three years of bat banding in Ontario and Quebec. Canadian Field Naturalist 79:4-14.
Jonasson K.A. and C.K.R. Willis. 2011. Changes in body condition of hibernating bats support the thrifty female hypothesis and
predict consequences for populations with white-nose syndrome. PLoS One 6: 1-8.
Lausen, C.L. and R.M.R. Barclay. 2002. Roosting behaviour and roost selection of female big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) roosting in
rock crevices in southeastern Alberta. Canadian Journal of Zoology 80(6): 1069-1076.
Luszcz, T.M.J. and R.M.R. Barclay. 2016. Influence of forest composition and age on habitat use by bats in southwestern British
Columbia. Canadian Journal of Zoology 94(2): 145-153
McAlpine, D.F. 1977. Notes on cave utilization by beaver. The NSS Bulletin 39, 3. pp. 90-91.
McAlpine D.F. 1983. Status and conservation of solution caves in New Brunswick. New Brunswick Museum Publications in Natural
Science No. 1, 28 pp.
McAlpine, D. F., K. J. Vanderwolf, G.J. Forbes, and D. Malloch. 2011. Consumption of bats (Myotis sp) by raccoons (Procyon lotor)
during an outbreak of white-nose syndrome in New Brunswick: implications for bat mortality estimates. Canadian Field-Naturalist 125:
157-160.
Nagorsen, D.W., G. Keddie and R. Hebda. 1995. Early Holocene black bears, Ursus americanus, from Vancouver Island. Canadian Field
Naturalist 109:11-18.
Nagorsen, D. W. and R. M. Brigham. 1993. The bats of British Columbia. Royal British Columbia Museum Handbook. University of
British Columbia Press, 164 pp.
Nagorsen, D. W. 1995. Cave bones: clues to the history of the Vancouver Island marmot. Discovery, Friends of the Royal British
Columbia Museum 23(5):1-2.
Nagorsen, D. W., G. Keddie and T. Luszcz. 1996. Vancouver Island marmot bones in subalpine caves: archaeological and biological
implications. Occasional Paper No. 4, Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks; BC Parks, Victoria. 56 pp.
Nagorsen, D. W. and G. Keddie. 2000. Late Pleistocene mountain goats (Oreamnos americanus) from Vancouver Island: biogeographic
implications. Journal of Mammalogy 81(3): 666-675.
Nelson, J. S. and M.J. Paetz. 1974. Evidence for underground movement of fishes in Wood Buffalo National Park, Canada, with notes
on recent collections made in the Park. The Canadian Field Naturalist 88: 157-162.
Norquay, K.J.O. and C.K.R. Willis. 2014. Hibernation phenology of Myotis lucifugus. Journal of Zoology (London). 294:85-92.
Olson, C. R., D. P. Hobson and M. J. Pybus. 2011. Changes in population size of bats at a hibernaculum In Alberta, Canada, in relation
to cave disturbance and access restrictions. Northwestern Naturalist 92:224-230.
Randall J and HG Broders. 2014. Identification and characterization of swarming sites used by bats in Nova Scotia, Canada. Acta
Chiroptera 16(1): 109-116.
Reddy, E. and M.B. Fenton. 2003. Exploiting vulnerable prey: moths and red bats (Lasiurus borealis; Vespertilionidae). Canadian
Journal of Zoology 81(9): 1553-1560.
Reimer J.P., Lausen C.L., Barclay R.M.R., Irwin S. and M.K. Vassel. 2014. Bat activity and use of hibernacula in Wood Buffalo National
Park, Alberta. Northwestern Naturalist 95:277-288.
Thomas, D. W., Fenton, M. B. and R. M. R. Barclay. 1979. Social behavior of the little brown bat, Myotis lucifugus. I. Mating behavior.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 6: 129-136.
Vanderwolf, K.J., D.F. McAlpine, G.J. Forbes and D. Malloch. 2012. Winter bat populations and cave microclimate prior to and at the
onset of white-nose syndrome in New Brunswick. Canadian Field-Naturalist 126 (2): 125-134.
Vanderwolf, K.J., D.F. McAlpine, D. Malloch and. G.J. Forbes. 2013. Ectomycota associated with hibernating cave bats in eastern
Canada prior to the emergence of white-nose syndrome. Northeastern Naturalist 20(1):115-130.
Vanderwolf K.J., D. Malloch, DF McAlpine. 2015. Fungi associated with over-wintering Tricolored bats, Perimyotis subflavus, in a white-
nose syndrome region of Eastern Canada. Journal of Cave and Karst Studies 77(3): 145-151.
Vanderwolf, K.J., D. Malloch, D.F. McAlpine. 2016. Fungi on white-nose infected bats (Myotis spp.) in Eastern Canada show no decline
in diversity associated with Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Ascomycota: Pseudeurotiaceae). International Journal of Speleology
45(1): 43-50.
Wilcox, A., L.T. Warnecke, J.M. Turner, L.P. McGuire, J.W. Jameson, V. Misra, T.C. Bollinger and C.K.R. Willis. 2014. Behaviour of
hibernating little brown bats experimentally inoculated with the pathogen that causes white-nose syndrome. Animal Behaviour 88:157-
164.
Vertebrates including Bats
Last addition
January 2016