Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Critically endangered bats found close to track

The long-tailed bats, and their short-tailed cousins,
are the country's only native land mammals.
A colony of rare native bats has been discovered beside one of the most popular walking tracks in the country.

Department of Conservation rangers found the long-tailed bats near the Kepler Track Great Walk in Fiordland after automatic recording devices led them to just the second known colony of the creatures in the region.

DoC ranger Warren Simpson said 60 of the critically endangered bats had been observed, and the colony was believed to number around 100.

Long- and short-tailed bats are the country's only native land mammals, and both are critically endangered.

In mid-December, Bay of Plenty Polytechnic students recorded hundreds of bat passes on automated recording equipment in the Iris Burn Valley. The "bat boxes" picked up the animal's high-frequency echo-location calls.


The students tipped off rangers and the Fiordland Conservation Trust, which had been looking for the bats near Lake Te Anau.

After relocating to the valley, rangers immediately caught four bats, two of them breeding females.

"We attached a tiny radio transmitter to each female so we could track them down to their maternity roost trees," said Mr Simpson.

"This is when we discovered they were roosting so close to the Kepler Track."

The bats were seen leaving the roost trees in darkness. They then made huge round trips of 20km to feed on insects at their favourite waterways. Their home range can extend to as much as 100sq km.

Five maternity roost trees have now been discovered in the Iris Burn Valley, less than 500m from the Kepler Track.

DoC biodiversity ranger Jo Whitehead said that techniques had not been developed to transfer bats to predator-free environments. Native bats, once plentiful in South Island towns and forests, were decimated by rats during plague years and the clearance of their habitat for development.

The creatures, which breed in large, lofty trees such as silver birch, produce only one offspring a year.

Ms Whitehead said she hoped the find would encourage protection work such as pest control to save the colony.

Tiny Natives

  • Long-tailed bats were once common in Christchurch, Dunedin and Invercargill but are now rare because of rats and forest clearance.
  • Chestnut brown in colour, weigh 8g to 11g, smaller than short-tailed bats.
  • Can fly at 60km/h and have a very large home range of 100sq km.
  • Feed on small moths, mosquitoes and beetles.
  • A Maori proverb urges travellers to hurry if they see a long-tailed bat, or pekapeka, because it foreshadows the arrival of a hikioi, a bird associated with death.

Source: Isaac Davison @ NZ Herald

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Critically endangered bats found close to track

The long-tailed bats, and their short-tailed cousins,
are the country's only native land mammals.
A colony of rare native bats has been discovered beside one of the most popular walking tracks in the country.

Department of Conservation rangers found the long-tailed bats near the Kepler Track Great Walk in Fiordland after automatic recording devices led them to just the second known colony of the creatures in the region.

DoC ranger Warren Simpson said 60 of the critically endangered bats had been observed, and the colony was believed to number around 100.

Long- and short-tailed bats are the country's only native land mammals, and both are critically endangered.

In mid-December, Bay of Plenty Polytechnic students recorded hundreds of bat passes on automated recording equipment in the Iris Burn Valley. The "bat boxes" picked up the animal's high-frequency echo-location calls.


The students tipped off rangers and the Fiordland Conservation Trust, which had been looking for the bats near Lake Te Anau.

After relocating to the valley, rangers immediately caught four bats, two of them breeding females.

"We attached a tiny radio transmitter to each female so we could track them down to their maternity roost trees," said Mr Simpson.

"This is when we discovered they were roosting so close to the Kepler Track."

The bats were seen leaving the roost trees in darkness. They then made huge round trips of 20km to feed on insects at their favourite waterways. Their home range can extend to as much as 100sq km.

Five maternity roost trees have now been discovered in the Iris Burn Valley, less than 500m from the Kepler Track.

DoC biodiversity ranger Jo Whitehead said that techniques had not been developed to transfer bats to predator-free environments. Native bats, once plentiful in South Island towns and forests, were decimated by rats during plague years and the clearance of their habitat for development.

The creatures, which breed in large, lofty trees such as silver birch, produce only one offspring a year.

Ms Whitehead said she hoped the find would encourage protection work such as pest control to save the colony.

Tiny Natives

  • Long-tailed bats were once common in Christchurch, Dunedin and Invercargill but are now rare because of rats and forest clearance.
  • Chestnut brown in colour, weigh 8g to 11g, smaller than short-tailed bats.
  • Can fly at 60km/h and have a very large home range of 100sq km.
  • Feed on small moths, mosquitoes and beetles.
  • A Maori proverb urges travellers to hurry if they see a long-tailed bat, or pekapeka, because it foreshadows the arrival of a hikioi, a bird associated with death.

Source: Isaac Davison @ NZ Herald