We radio-tracked fifteen reproductive females (5 pregnant, 5 lactating, 5 in post-lactation) of the Daubenton's bat in summer 2005 in order to reveal the effect of reproductive state on their foraging and roosting activity. Spatial activity of females decreased from pregnancy to lactation and increased again in the post-lactation period. Overall time spent foraging did not differ among the three study periods. However, while pregnant and lactating females spent similar proportion of the night length foraging, females in the post-lactation period were foraging for shorter part of night. The frequency of nightly visits to roosts was highest during lactation but there was a trend towards shortening of particular visits during that period. All but one roost were in tree hollows excavated by woodpeckers in spatially restricted area of ca 0.7 km 2 . Tree cavities used during pregnancy were located higher on a tree trunk and had larger entrance area than the cavities used in the two later periods. Bats switched roosts every 2-3 days (range 1-8) and moved to a new roost up to 800 m apart. Pregnant females tended to switch roosts more frequently than females in the two later periods. We did not observe a significant effect of minimum nightly temperature on the activity of radio-tracked Daubenton's bats. Therefore, we suggest that observed seasonal changes in the pattern of behaviour of Daubenton's bat females were driven by their changing energetic demands rather than by some extrinsic factors (e.g. weather conditions).
Evolution in the field of optical networking in National Research and Education Networks led to utilization of Alien Wavelengths (AWs) and disaggregated Open Line Systems. Dynamic provisioning of AWs, in general spectrum services, is achieved via Reconfigurable Optical Add Drop Multiplexers (ROADMs) operating with flexible spectrum allocation. Northbound interface of these is usually implemented via the NETCONF protocol and through an appropriate Yet Another Next Generation (YANG) model. This paper presents a self-contained flexible spectral grid YANG model for low-level control and monitoring of a ROADM. The presented YANG model offers access to all functional components of a modern flexgrid ROADM and enables SDN applications to access and manipulate the media layer with no required external validation. The model is verified by an SDN application which implements optical path protection of AWs. A physical demonstration with model railroad intuitively shows the accomplished functionality.
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