O’SHEA, CRYAN & BOGAN: UNITED STATES BAT SPECIES OF CONCERN 
249 
roptera): wing adaptations, flight performance, foraging strategy and echolocation. Philosophical Trans¬ 
actions of the Royal Society, Series B Biological Sciences 316:335^127. 
Norberg, U.M.L., A.P. Brooke, and W.J. Trewhella. 2000. Soaring and non-soaring bats of the family 
Pteropodidae (flying foxes: Pteropus spp.): wing morphology and flight performance. Journal of Exper¬ 
imental Biology 203:651-664. 
North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission. 2014. Protected wildlife species of North Carolina. 8 pp. 
<http://www.ncwildlife. org/Portals/0/Conserving/documents/protectedspecies.pdf>. Cited 5 September 
2017. 
Ober, H.K., and J.P. Hayes. 2008. Prey selection by bats in forests of western Oregon. Journal of Mammal¬ 
ogy 89:1191-1200. 
O’Farrell, M.J. 1970. Notes on the distribution of Macrotus waterhousii in southern Nevada. Great Basin 
Naturalist 30:53. 
O’Farrell, M.J., and W.G. Bradley. 1970. Activity patterns of bats over a desert spring. Journal of Mam¬ 
malogy 51:18-26. 
O’Farrell, M.J., and E.H. Studier. 1973. Reproduction, growth, and development in Myotis thysanodes and 
M. lucifugus (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae). Ecology 54:18-30. 
O’Farrell, M.J., and E.H. Studier. 1975. Population structure and emergence activity patterns in Myotis 
thysanodes and M. lucifugus (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) in northeastern New Mexico. American Mid¬ 
land Naturalist 93:368-376. 
O’Farrell, M.J., and E.H. Studier. 1980. Myotis thysanodes. Mammalian Species (137): 1-5. 
Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife. 2015. Ohio’s listed species: wildlife that 
are considered to be endangered, threatened, species of concern, special interest, extirpated, or extinct in 
Ohio. Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife Publication 5356 (R1015). 10 pp. 
<https://wildlife, ohiodnr.gov/portals/wildlife/pdfs/publications/information/pub356.pdf>. Cited 5 Sep¬ 
tember 2017. 
Ohlendorf, H.M. 1972. Observations on a colony of Eumops perotis (Molossidae). Southwestern Naturalist 
17:297-300. 
O’Keefe, J.M., and M. LaVoie. 2010. Maternity colony of eastern small-footed myotis ( Myotis leibii) in a 
historic building. Southeastern Naturalist 10:381-383. 
Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. 2005. Oklahoma comprehensive wildlife conservation 
strategy. 421 pp. <https://www.wildlifedepartment.com/CWCS.htm> Cited 5 September 2017. 
Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. 2016. Oklahoma comprehensive wildlife conservation 
strategy: a strategic conservation plan for Oklahoma’s rare and declining wildlife. 358 pp. 
<https://www.wildlifedepartment.com/wildlifemgmt/cwcs.pdf > Cited 5 September 2017. 
Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. 2017. Eastern Oklahoma bat tests positive for white- 
nose syndrome. Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation press release from April 17, 2017, 
<https://www.wildlifedepartment.com/outdoor-news/eastern-oklahoma-bat-tests-positive-white-nose- 
syndrome> Cited 5 September 2017. 
Oliver, G.V. 2000. The bats of Utah: a literature review. Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, Publication 
Number 00-14, Salt Lake City, Utah. 140 pp. <http://dwrcdc.nr.utah.gov/ucdc/viewreports/bats.pdf> 
Cited 5 September 2017. 
Olson, A.C., Jr. 1947. First record of Choeronycteris mexicana in California. Journal of Mammalogy 28:183- 
184. 
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. 2005. The Oregon conservation strategy, <http://www.ore- 
gonconservationstrategy.org/>. Cited 5 September 2017. 
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. 2008. Sensitive species. 11 pp. 
<http://www.dfw.state.or.us/wildlife/diversity/species/sensitive_species.asp > Cited 5 September 2017. 
Ormsbee, PC. 1996. Characteristics, use, and distribution of day roosts selected by female Myotis volans 
(long-legged myotis) in forested habitat of the central Oregon Cascades. Pages 124-130 in R.M.R. Bar¬ 
clay and R.M. Brigham, eds., Bats and Forests Symposium, October 19-21, 1995, Victoria, British 
Columbia. Research Branch, British Columbia Ministry of Forestry, Working Paper 23/1996. Victoria, 
British Columbia. 
