“…1A and 1C). Various studies in the eastern and south-eastern regions of North America (Trousdale and Beckett, 2004; Ferrara and Leberg, 2005; Bennett et al ., 2008; Borges-Jesús et al ., 2021), Europe (England, France, Bulgaria, Portugal, Slovakia, Spain, Scotland, and Ireland — Speakman et al ., 1991; Jones et al ., 1996; McGuire, 1998; Flavin et al ., 2001; Keeley, 2007; Tilova et al ., 2008; Mendes et al ., 2011; Papadatou et al ., 2011; Amorim et al ., 2013; Kaňuch et al ., 2016; Barré et al ., 2021), Asia (Takumi et al ., 2007; Chung et al ., 2009; Feng et al ., 2022), South America (Díaz and Linares García, 2012; Benvindo-Souza et al ., 2021), Africa (Ahmim, 2017; Czenze et al ., 2022), and Pacific Islands (Dwyer, 1960; Daniel and Williams, 1984) have documented bridge use, with more than half of North American bat species and 68% of European species documented roosting in bridges (Amorim et al ., 2013; Sparks et al ., 2019; Fig. 1B and 1C).…”