
Dr. Christine Reusch
Applied Zoology and Nature Conservation
Loitzer Str. 26
 17489 Greifswald
christine.reusch(at)uni-greifswald(dot)de
Research Interests
Costs, benefits and constraints of responses to recent climate change in bats
Recent studies predict increasing temperatures within the next decades  and a higher frequency of extreme weather events. There are ongoing  studies to estimate the consequences of those environmental changes, but  still little is known about the impact of changing environmental  variables on the fitness of various organisms.
 Within the framework of the Research Training Group “RESPONSE” my  research project focuses on bats and how they cope with changing  environments. Bats are for several reasons outstanding among mammals.  One reason is their exceptional longevity compared to other mammals of  their size. However, the combination of longevity and a low fecundity  might slow down genetic adaptation to environmental changes in bats.  Therefore, it is important to investigate how different environmental  parameters (e.g. temperature, precipitation) and life history traits  (e.g. fecundity, size and age) impact mortality of bats.
 The main part of my work will be the analysis of individual based  long-term data sets of the species Natterer’s bat (Myotis nattereri),  Daubenton’s bat (Myotis daubentonii) and brown long-eared bat (Plecotus  auritus). During my PhD project I will for example address the following  questions: 1. Do bats adapt their behavior (for example hibernation  strategies, group size) regarding to environmental changes? 2. Does  hibernation behavior influence mortality and survival of M. nattereri  and M. daubentonii? 3. How do increasing temperatures influence body  size? E.g., do the three bat species increase their body size due to  higher food abundance during warmer years? And how does body size affect  mortality? 4. Does local adaptation or species affiliation play a  bigger role in the ability of bats to cope with changing environments?
 The results will allow us to draw conclusions concerning M. nattereri,  M. daubentonii and P. auritus, three protected bat species, and to  identify their responses to recent climate change. Depending on the  uniformity of the results it might be possible to gain knowledge about  temperate bats with a similar ecology in general. This will help us to  contribute to a better protection and conservation of bats. 
Publications
- Reusch, C., Gampe, J., Scheuerlein, A., Meier, F., Grosche, L. & Kerth, K. (in press). Differences in seasonal survival suggest species-specific reactions to climate change in two sypatric bat species. Ecology and Evolution.
 - Zeus V.M., Reusch C., Kerth G. (2018). Long-term roosting data reveal an unimodular social network in large fission-fusion society of the colony-living Natterer's bat (Myotis nattereri). Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 72: 99