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New Zealand was once home to a giant, burrowing bat

Author
Jamie Morton, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 Jan 2018, 8:55am
An artist's impression of the extinct native burrowing bat Mystacina robusta. The newly-discovered Vulcanops jennyworthyae bat was an ancient relative. (Illustration / Gavin Mouldey)
An artist's impression of the extinct native burrowing bat Mystacina robusta. The newly-discovered Vulcanops jennyworthyae bat was an ancient relative. (Illustration / Gavin Mouldey)

New Zealand was once home to a giant, burrowing bat

Author
Jamie Morton, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 Jan 2018, 8:55am

New Zealand was once home to a giant, burrowing bat that was three times the size of the average bat today.

The extinct creature, which weighed about 40g, represents the largest burrowing bat known to science, and New Zealand's first new bat genus for more than 150 years.

Teeth and bones of the bat were recovered from sediments dated between 16 and 19 million years old, found near the old Central Otago gold and coal mining town of St Bathans.

Burrowing bats, now found only in New Zealand, are peculiar because they not only fly, but also scurry about on all fours over the forest floor, under leaf litter and along tree branches.

It has been named Vulcanops jennyworthyae, after Jenny Worthy, who was part of the team that found the fossils, and after Vulcan, the mythological Roman god of fire and volcanoes, in reference to New Zealand's tectonic nature, but also to St Bathans' historic Vulcan Hotel.

Its discovery, by Australian, Kiwi, United States and British scientists, has been revealed in a new study, just published in the international journal Scientific Reports.

"Burrowing bats are more closely related to bats living in South America than to others in the southwest Pacific," explained the study's first author, Professor Sue Hand of the University of New South Wales.

"They are related to vampire bats, ghost-faced bats, fishing and frog-eating bats, and nectar-feeding bats, and belong to a bat superfamily that once spanned the southern landmasses of Australia, New Zealand, South America and possibly Antarctica."

Around 50 million years ago, these landmasses were connected as the last vestiges of the southern supercontinent Gondwana.

Sediments in the Manuherikia River were washed through sieves to collect the fossil bones and teeth. Photo / Vanesa De Pietri

Sediments in the Manuherikia River were washed through sieves to collect the fossil bones and teeth. (Photo / Vanesa De Pietri)

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