Background: Western Asia represents a mixing pot of diverse bat species with distributions spanning across other geographic regions. Yet, relative to other regions, there is a significant gap in coordinated bat research in Western Asia, thereby resulting in a relatively limited number of curated occurrence records.
New information: The Western Asia Bat Research Network (WAB-Net) project was created to strengthen research capacity and knowledge of the diversity and distribution of bat species in a little-studied region, as well as to collect data to characterise the diversity and prevalence of coronaviruses in diverse bat species. Over a four-year period (2018-2022), we documented 4,278 individual records for 41 bat species using a cross-sectional survey approach at 50 sites in seven Western Asian countries, specifically Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Jordan, Oman, Pakistan and Turkiye. At each site, we captured, on average, 90 individual bats (range: 9-131) over multiple consecutive nights and used standardised methods to collect demographic and morphological data from captured individuals. We additionally completed a systematic evaluation of environmental characterisation and human-bat interactions at all 50 sites. Here, we report individual occurrence records and site conditions from this multi-country, multi-year sampling effort.
Keywords: Chiroptera; Middle East; West Asia; biodiversity; mammal.
Kendra Phelps, Zahran Al Abdulasalam, Nisreen Al-Hmoud, Shahzad Ali, Mumen Alrwashdeh, Attaullah, Rasit Bilgin, Astghik Ghazaryan, Luke Hamel, Nijat Hasanov, Ioseb Natradze, George Papov, Ketevan Sidamonidze, Andrew Spalton, Lela Urushadze, Kevin J Olival.