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Dive into the research topics where Jiří Gaisler is active.

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Featured researches published by Jiří Gaisler.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Increasing Incidence of Geomyces destructans Fungus in Bats from the Czech Republic and Slovakia

Natália Martínková; Peter Bačkor; Tomáš Bartonička; Pavla Blažková; Jaroslav Červený; Lukáš Falteisek; Jiří Gaisler; Vladimír Hanzal; Daniel Horáček; Zdeněk Hubálek; Helena Jahelková; Miroslav Kolařík; L'uboš Korytár; Alena Kubátová; Blanka Lehotská; Roman Lehotský; Radek Lučan; Ondřej Májek; Jan Matějů; Zdeněk Řehák; Jiří Šafář; Přemysl Tájek; Emil Tkadlec; Marcel Uhrin; Josef Wagner; Dita Weinfurtová; Jan Zima; Jan Zukal; Ivan Horáček

Background White-nose syndrome is a disease of hibernating insectivorous bats associated with the fungus Geomyces destructans. It first appeared in North America in 2006, where over a million bats died since then. In Europe, G. destructans was first identified in France in 2009. Its distribution, infection dynamics, and effects on hibernating bats in Europe are largely unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings We screened hibernacula in the Czech Republic and Slovakia for the presence of the fungus during the winter seasons of 2008/2009 and 2009/2010. In winter 2009/2010, we found infected bats in 76 out of 98 surveyed sites, in which the majority had been previously negative. A photographic record of over 6000 hibernating bats, taken since 1994, revealed bats with fungal growths since 1995; however, the incidence of such bats increased in Myotis myotis from 2% in 2007 to 14% by 2010. Microscopic, cultivation and molecular genetic evaluations confirmed the identity of the recently sampled fungus as G. destructans, and demonstrated its continuous distribution in the studied area. At the end of the hibernation season we recorded pathologic changes in the skin of the affected bats, from which the fungus was isolated. We registered no mass mortality caused by the fungus, and the recorded population decline in the last two years of the most affected species, M. myotis, is within the population trend prediction interval. Conclusions/Significance G. destructans was found to be widespread in the Czech Republic and Slovakia, with an epizootic incidence in bats during the most recent years. Further development of the situation urgently requires a detailed pan-European monitoring scheme.


Acta Theriologica | 2009

Bat casualties by road traffic (Brno-Vienna)

Jiří Gaisler; Zdeněk Řehák; Tomáš Bartonička

We studied the impact of road E461, Brno-Vienna, on bat mortality, with the goal to predict this impact after the road has been reconstructed and turned into highway, R52. In the Czech territory, two proposed road sections of E461 were selected, 3.5 and 4.5 km long, and divided into segments 100 m in length. Bat carcasses were picked up from emergency stopping lanes, and bat activity was recorded by ultrasound detectors along the road and 100 m away on both sides from the central strip. From May to October 2007, 25 checks of bat mortality performed at weekly intervals revealed 119 bat carcasses representing 11 or 12 species.Pipistrellus nathusii, P. pygmaeus andMyotis daubentonii were the most frequent traffic casualties. The greatest mortality was documented from early July to mid-October, with a peak in September. Monitoring bat activity by ultrasound detectors (one night per month in May, June and September) yielded 12 bat species and 3 species couples (Myotis mystacinus/brandtii, M. emarginatus/alcathoe, Plecotus auritus/austriacus), mostly the same taxa as found dead on the road. Significantly greater bat numbers were revealed in the section where the road was situated between two artificial lakes, as compared to a road section without any lakes directly adjacent to the road. In the former section, significant correlation was found between the number of carcasses found and the activity detected, according to road segments.


Acta Theriologica | 2001

Comparison of enumeration and Jolly-Seber estimation of population size in the common voleMicrotus arvalis

Josef Bryja; Emil Tkadlec; Jiřina Nesvadbová; Jiří Gaisler; Jan Zejda

Capture-recapture data on common volesMicrotus arvalis (Pallas, 1779) in central Europe have been almost exclusively analysed by means of the enumeration technique (minimum number alive or calendar of catches). Here we compare enumeration and Jolly-Seber (JS) estimation of population size in the common vole using live-trapping data from an alfalfa field-population in southern Moravia, Czech Republic. Over the entire study the enumeration estimate of the population size was smaller by an average of 28% than the JS estimate. The negative bias increased with density, decreased with both capture probability and the survival rate, and was more pronounced in males at high density. We conclude that the method of direct enumeration is not reliable for estimating population size in the common vole.


Journal of Zoology | 1998

Habitat preference and flight activity of bats in a city

Jiří Gaisler; Jan Zukal; Z. Rehak; M. Homolka


Archive | 2000

Bats of the Palearctic Region: a taxonomic and biogeographic review

Ivan Horáček; Vladimír Hanák; Jiří Gaisler


Parasitology Research | 2007

Seasonal dynamics in the numbers of parasitic bugs (Heteroptera, Cimicidae): a possible cause of roost switching in bats (Chiroptera, Vespertilionidae)

Tomáš Bartonička; Jiří Gaisler


Journal of Zoology | 2007

Can pipistrelles, Pipistrellus pipistrellus (Schreber, 1774) and Pipistrellus pygmaeus (Leach, 1825), foraging in a group, change parameters of their signals ?

Tomáš Bartonička; Zdeněk Řehák; Jiří Gaisler


Folia Zoologica | 2004

Diet of two Eptesicus bat species in Moravia (Czech Republic)

Martin Gajdošík; Jiří Gaisler


Folia Zoologica | 1994

Dynamics of the number of bats hibernating in the Moravian Karst in 1983 to 1992

Jan Zima; Miroslav Kovařík; Jiří Gaisler; Zdeněk Řehák; Jan Zukal


Archive | 2003

Výsledky kroužkování netopýrů v České republice a na Slovensku,1948-2000

Jiří Gaisler; Vladimír Hanák; Vladimír Hanzal; Vilém Jarský

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Zdeněk Řehák

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Jan Zukal

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Jan Zima

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Ivan Horáček

Charles University in Prague

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Jiřina Nesvadbová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Vladimír Hanák

Charles University in Prague

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Dita Weinfurtová

Charles University in Prague

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Emil Tkadlec

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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