Nelson Mail

New bat roosts discovered at Pelorus

- Samantha Gee samantha.gee@stuff.co.nz

Every day for the last two months, Gillian Dennis has set out before dawn in search of long-tailed bats.

The mysterious mammals are small, dark, nocturnal and trying to catch them involves a lot of patience.

As the manager of Forest & Bird’s Te Hoiere/Pelorus Bat Recovery Project, Dennis is behind the push to get a better understand­ing of the bat population in the area.

In the last two months, bats have been located in 12 different trees at the Brown River Reserve and Carluke Reserve near Rai Valley.

‘‘Neither of those sites were on the radar as being roosting habitats so that is pretty cool.’’

Previous acoustic surveys in the area had shown that bats were present, but couldn’t provide any idea of their population size and whether they were just feeding or also roosting.

Dennis and a team of volunteers have been tracking bats at dawn and dusk near the Pelorus River since early December. Long-tailed bats forage for food at night, then head back to their roosts at dawn.

During the monitoring period, Dennis said the aim was to catch bats and attach tiny radio transmitte­rs to those who could cope with the weight, so they could follow them to their roost. Ideally, they would place a trap in front of the roost, catching the bats inside it to find out how many were living there. But the roosts were all at least 20 metres off the ground in dense canopy so it had been difficult to get an exact count of how many bats were in the area.

Long-tailed bats are one of only two native land mammals in New Zealand.

They have the same threatened status as the ka¯ kapo. Dennis said it was not known that bats were hunting and breeding in the area so it was a special discovery.

While it has long been known that bats frequent the Pelorus area, their population is unknown. ‘‘Bats were widespread and abundant before European settlement but with the introducti­on of predators and the loss of forest habitat they have just been dropping away.’’

Ecologist Brian Lloyd had previously surveyed long-tailed bat population in the top of the South Island and found there were sizeable population­s in the Pelorus River catchment and on D’Urville Island.

Dennis said the new roosts were about 10 kilometres from where Lloyd had first identified a population at Pelorus. An extensive trapping programme had been implemente­d in the area in a bid to protect the bats.

Dennis said without knowing the population size or the survival rate of the bats it was hard to gauge if the

‘‘Neither of those sites were on the radar as being roosting habitats.’’ Gillian Dennis

extensive volunteer efforts were having an impact on the species. It was the first time such comprehens­ive monitoring for long-tailed bats had occurred in the area and Dennis said it would support conservati­on efforts.

Referred to as a ‘‘bat expert’’, Dennis has been working with bats for the last 13 years. Monitoring is finished for the season and will resume next summer.

The Te Hoiere/Pelorus Bat Recovery Project is run by Forest & Bird and received funding from the Department of Conservati­on community fund and the Rata Foundation. It is hoped funding can be secured for acoustic lures to be used. Donations can be made through the Forest & Bird Givealittl­e page.

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 ??  ?? Left, Te Hoiere/Pelorus Bat Recovery Project manager Gillian Dennis attaching a transmitte­r to a bat caught in a harp trap over the stream at Brown River Reserve. Above, a long-tailed bat in its roosting spot (file photo).
Left, Te Hoiere/Pelorus Bat Recovery Project manager Gillian Dennis attaching a transmitte­r to a bat caught in a harp trap over the stream at Brown River Reserve. Above, a long-tailed bat in its roosting spot (file photo).
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