Northern bat

The northern bat (Eptesicus nilssonii) is the most abundant species of bat in northern Eurasia. It is found from England to Hokkaidō and down to northern India.[2] It is closely related to the serotine bat (Eptesicus serotinus).[3]

Northern bat
A northern bat, crawling on a wooden surface
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Chiroptera
Family: Vespertilionidae
Genus: Eptesicus
Species:
E. nilssonii
Binomial name
Eptesicus nilssonii
(Keyserling et Blasius, 1839)

Description

The northern bat is a medium-sized animal with short and rounded ears. Specimens range from 8 to 16 g in weight depending on the season, 54 to 64 mm[4] in body length and 240 to 280 mm in wing span, which is a moderate size for a bat. The nose, ears, tail and wings are black or blackish brown. Most of the body is coated with dark brown or black with some gold touched at the tip of the hairs in the head and back region. The coat on the ventral side is yellowish brown. Like other dental structures of Eptesicus genus, there is no presence of peculiarities, but the dental structure of the northern bat is large compared to the size of the skull.[2]

Distribution and habitat

Northern bat hibernating deep in a disused cobalt mine in Norway

It is widespread throughout Eurasia, and is the most common bat in the northern part of the continent. It is found from northern Scandinavia (beyond the Arctic Circle) to northern Italy, and eastern England to northern Japan.[5] The bat mostly favours forest uplands about 200–2000 m above sea level.[6]

Behaviour

It was thought that the northern bat is a sedentary species, but research shows colonies have moved as far as 450 km. It does not migrate seasonally but over a period of years.[5]

Breeding season is in late autumn, and the females stores the male sperm over the winter. Hibernation begins in early winter (November and December), and lasts until March or April;[2] only then do the females become pregnant, pregnancy lasting for 50–60 days. In summer, males dwell alone, but females form a colony of 10-80 adults. A colony is formed in early summer and disbanded in August, when young bats are able to fly. Winter colonies are often found in houses, and natural or artificial underground habitats.[2]

Hunting

Northern bats are nocturnal and fast flying, adapted to hunting airborne insects using echolocation.[5] For example, northern bats commonly hunt ghost moths while the moths are hovering above ground to attract a mate. The species hunts in open spaces at a speed of 5–6 m/s. The sound pulse consists of 10-13 ms in normal foraging habitats, sometimes up to 18 ms of steeply frequency-modulated (FM) component (about 40–30 kHz). The bats send out the pulse approximately once every 200 ms, and the steep FM are used to locate obstacles or targets, allowing them to fly indoors.[2] In high latitude areas, female northern bats fly during daytime because of the short nights, but their foraging peaks after dusk and sometime before dawn. Females select small feeding territories where their food source is abundant, and sometimes can be used by the same individual over a period of years.[2]

Genetics

Serotine bats (Eptesicus serotinus) are cryptic species of northern bats. They are distinguishable by appearance but research shows that there is little genetic difference between the two species (only difference of intraspecific variation).[3]

See also

References

  1. Coroiu, I. (2016). "Eptesicus nilssonii". The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN. 2016: e.T7910A22116204. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-2.RLTS.T7910A22116204.en.
  2. Rydell, J. (1993). Eptesicus nilssonii. Mammalian species, (430), 1-7.
  3. Mayer, F., & von Helversen, O. (2001). "Cryptic diversity in European bats". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences. 268 (1478): 1825-1832.
  4. (PDF) http://www.minambiente.it/sites/default/files/archivio/allegati/eurobats/07_eptesicus_nilssonii_eng.pdf. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. "The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  6. Hanak, V. & Gaisler, J. (1971). "The status of Eptesicus ogveni bobrinskii, 1918 and remarks on some other species of this genus (Mammalia: Chiroptera)". Vestnik Ceskoslovenske Spolecnosti Zoologicke. 35: 11-24.
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