“…For example, long-term monitoring of bat boxes in Melbourne, Australia has shown that, despite the provision of boxes constructed from materials with a range of insulative properties (ranging from 12 mm plywood to 90 mm pine), box use was dominated by one widespread, urban-adapted species, Gould's wattled bat Chalinolobus gouldii (Gray, 1841) [71]. Further research is required to investigate whether there is a link between the thermal profiles in nest boxes (compared to tree hollows) deployed in disturbed landscapes and their disproportionate level of use by widespread, highly adaptable species of birds [29,93,94] and mammals [21,71,95,96]. Field-based studies examining rates of occupation of chainsaw hollows and log hollows by target species versus undesirable exotic species would be of great interest, particularly in urban and peri-urban landscapes where nest box programs are often undertaken by land managers and conservation-focused community groups [4,97].…”