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Bat bites bird ... in migration attacks.


Fighter-pilot dogfights no longer blaze across the night skies of Europe, but other fliers may still duel to the death up there. Researchers in Spain propose that bats hunt down migrating birds in midair.

The biggest bat in Europe, the greater noctule noc·tule  
n.
A large, reddish-brown insectivorous bat of the genus Nyctalus, found in Eurasia, Indonesia, and the Philippines and typically dwelling in the hollows of trees.
, or Nyctalus lasiopterus, eats many birds during the spring and fall migrations, says Javier Juste of Donana Biological Station in Seville. He and his colleagues reached that conclusion after analyzing 14,000 bat droppings during the course of a year.

"It's the only bat known to get the profit of migrating birds," Juste says. Birds by the millions stream over Europe between winter havens in Africa and northerly breeding grounds. For a predator, the mass of birds is "a big, big chocolate "Big Chocolate" is a pejorative business term assigned to multi-national chocolate food producers, much akin to the terms assigned to "Big Oil" and "Big Tobacco".

According to Asamoah[1] and Estis[2]
 bar coming by," Juste says.

Most of the world's bats dine on insects or fruit. Yet a handful can take on bigger and livelier prey, swooping down to pluck fish out of the water, silence a frog in midcroak, or grab a lizard off a wall. Around a dozen bat species, mostly in the tropics tropics, also called tropical zone or torrid zone, all the land and water of the earth situated between the Tropic of Cancer at lat. 23 1-2°N and the Tropic of Capricorn at lat. 23 1-2°S. , snatch roosting birds from their perches, says Juste. He suspects that the greater noctule doesn't wait for its meal to come home to roost Home to Roost is a British television sitcom produced by Yorkshire Television. Written by Eric Chappell, it starred John Thaw as Henry Willows and Reece Dinsdale as his 18-year-old son Matthew. . Several lines of evidence suggest that this bat attacks birds on the wing, say Juste, his Donana colleague Carlos Ibanez, and their coauthors in the Aug. 14 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .

Three noctule populations take advantage of birds' seasonal migrations, the researchers report. As many as 45 percent of the analyzed droppings carried feathers during the March-to-May and August-to-November runs. On two occasions, researchers found bats with, or near, identifiable bits from a European robin The European Robin (Erithacus rubecula) or, in Anglophone Europe, simply Robin is a small passerine bird that was formerly classed as a member of the thrush family, but is now considered to belong to the Old World flycatchers (Muscicapidae).  or a warbler warbler, name applied in the New World to members of the wood warbler family (Parulidae) and in the Old World to a large family (Sylviidae) of small, drab, active songsters, including the hedge sparrow, the kinglet, and the tailorbird of SE Asia, . In June and July, the bats went back to eating insects, and barely 1 percent of bat droppings had feathers.

Several traits suggest that the greater noctule specializes in long-range hunting, the researchers find. The bat spreads long, relatively narrow wings built more for speed than for close-range maneuverability in forests. Also, the echolocation echolocation

Physiological process for locating distant or invisible objects (such as prey) by emitting sound waves that are reflected back to the emitter by the objects. Echolocation is used by an animal to orient itself, avoid obstacles, find food, and interact socially.
 calls that the team recorded are typical of those used by open-air species.

Though low for a bat, the calls are still too high in pitch for birds to hear, Juste adds. As he pictures it, the bats "take advantage of millions of birds flying at night, tired, blind, probably flying mechanically, trying to get to Africa."

Juste speculates that a bat swoops onto an unsuspecting bird and must disable it before plummeting to the ground. "The bat has very strong neck muscles and formidable teeth," he says, so he suspects that a few bites do the job.

The bats may even eat the birds in midair, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Juste. The team found no heaps of bird leftovers under the bats' roosts.

After considering how bats eat large, airborne beetles, Juste suspects that the greater noctules strip off a bird's wings. "They take a couple of big bites of the breast and then throw the bird away," he suggests.

Bat researcher Richard Laval in Monteverde, Costa Rica Costa Rica (kŏs`tə rē`kə), officially Republic of Costa Rica, republic (2005 est. pop. 4,016,000), 19,575 sq mi (50,700 sq km), Central America. , calls the suggestion of airborne hunts "fascinating." The paper presents "amazing data," though the question of how the bat catches the bird remains open, he says.

Kent Rylander of Texas Tech University in Lubbock adds, "I'm a little surprised that the scientific community has been so long in discovering this obvious niche for nocturnal bats." He calls the team's arguments "convincing."

Juste recognizes the difficulties of making the case by indirect evidence. For skeptical researchers, he says, "we have plenty of bat droppings, and they are more than welcome to look at them."
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Article Details
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Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUSP
Date:Aug 11, 2001
Words:598
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