Wednesday, April 6, 2016
Hawaiian bats: new data reveals a more complicated history
The Islands have long been assumed to have just a single
land mammal, the `ope`ape`a or Hawaiian
hoary bat.
(Image: The bones of a newly reported but extinct Hawaiian
bat, which has been named Synemporion keana, discovered in Maui’s Mahiehie Cave.
Credit: © American Museum Novitates)
Our marine mammals, the seals and porpoises and whales,
pretty clearly got here by swimming. But for a land animal, arriving across a
couple of thousands of miles of ocean is more problematic. So, no rats, mice, dogs,
cats, wolves, cows, or any other land mammals in pre-contact Hawai`i.
But bats, particularly migratory bats capable of
long-distance flight, could presumably have made the cross-ocean transit.
And new evidence says they did, several different times.
A study by the late Bishop Museum mammologist Alan Ziegler, Bishop
Museum entomologist Frank Howarth and Nancy Simmons of the American Museum of
Natural History, reveals that the Hawaiian hoary bat is actually two
populations, descended from two separate immigration events more than 9,000
years apart.
Their paper, published in the journal American Museum Novitates, is here, and there’s a press release
from the American Museum of Natural History is here.
The first Hawaiian hoary bat arrived in the Islands about 10,000
years ago—long before humans were present. The second immigration was just 800
years ago. Both of those immigrations involved the same species, although there
are differences among zoologists whether they have since evolved into new
species.
The parent species was Lasiurus
cinereus, and authors take the view that the Hawaiian bat is a subspecies, Lasiurus cinereus semotus. But they agree that further study could
change that designation.
But they also noted something that has been understood for
decades: that fossil evidence shows that there was another bat, now extinct,
flying Hawaiian skies.
It is smaller than the `ope`ape`a
and different in several ways. It has been given the scientific name Synemporion keana.
Like the hoary bat, it appears to have been an insect eater,
and to have been spread throughout the Hawaiian Islands. It is not clear where the parent Synemporion came from, but it evolved into a distinct species in the Hawaiian Islands.
The paper’s co-author, Frank Howarth, first found the bones
of this bat in a Maui cave in 1981.
"The initial specimens included skeletons embedded in
crystals on the lava tube wall and thus were likely very old. Ziegler eagerly
guided me through the bat collection at the Bishop Museum to identify the bat
and show me features to look for in order to find additional material for
study," Howarth said.
Since then, fossil bones from the bat have been found on a
total of five Hawaiian islands. Ziegler, a noted and respected Hawaiian
biologist, died in 2003 before completing his study of the new bat. His work
was completed by Simmons.
The fossil record suggests this bat was Hawai`i’s first bat.
The oldest fossil bones date back 320,000 years, but the authors say the
limited fossil record doesn’t allow an accurate arrival date. It could be a few
millions of years earlier.
Synemporion
keana appears to have gone extinct about 1,100 years ago—roughly the time
when both humans and rats first appeared in the Hawaiian Islands.
The authors suggest that Polynesian rats, Rattus exulans, which arrived with the
first Polynesian settlers, may have either directly or indirectly led to the
bats’ extinction.
“If Synemporion roost sites were accessible to rats, it is
possible that Rattus exulans may have
had a direct impact on the bat populations by preying upon roosting bats and/or
their young. Alternatively,
the effects of rats on the local environment may have indirectly contributed to
bat population reductions and extinction,” the paper says.
It’s possible that the bats survived into the historic
period, when Europeans brought in roof rats, cats, mongooses and other
predators, which would have completed the extinction if the Polynesian rats
hadn’t, they write.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2016
Posted by Jan T at 9:38 AM
Labels: Agriculture, Geology, Invasive Species, Voyaging, Zoology
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