Rare native bat 'missing' in Ireland since 2003, study shows
The Brandt’s bat or Myotis brandtii has remained unidentified in Ireland since 2003 when a sample was first discovered by a wildlife ranger stuck to a freshly painted fence in Glendalough, County Wicklow.
According to the latest findings by the Centre for Irish Bat Research published in the scientific journal Acta Chiropterologica, the Brandt’s bat is listed as ‘data deficient’ and as such should not be considered as resident in Ireland.
“Our results suggest that Myotis brandtii or Brandt’s bat are rare and possibly endangered in Ireland,” says Dr Emma Boston from the UCD School of Biology and Environmental Science, University College Dublin, one of the scientists involved in the study.
“We conducted surveys in Killarney National Park and Glendalough where suspected Myotis brandtii had been caught before, but we did not catch one single Myotis brandtii.”
“Little is known about their ecology, but they are generally thought to be associated with broadleaf woodland.”
“It is possible that the Brandt’s bat has been resident in Ireland since the early Holocene [about 9,000 years ago] and the destruction of Irish forests may have caused a major decrease in its distribution and abundance.”
Due to historical deforestation, only about 1% of Ireland is covered in native woodland today. It is thought that almost 80% of Ireland was once covered by native forest.
Given the morphological similarity of Myotis brandtii and Myotis mystacinus (the whiskered bat), previous Brandt’s bat examples discovered in Ireland may have been misidentifications. More research is required to determine the status and distribution of this bat species in Ireland.
According to the Red List of Terrestrial Mammals for Ireland, there are 27 species of native Irish mammals: nine are species of bats, the grey wolf (Canis lupus) is regionally extinct, and the black rat (Rattus rattus) is vulnerable.
With funding from the National Parks and Wildlife Service, the Irish Research Council for Science, Engineering and Technology and the Heritage Council, the Centre for Irish Bat Research is conducting a large research project on the three rare Myotis bats species in Ireland; Natterer’s bat (Myotis nattereri), the whiskered bat (Myotis mystacinus) and Brandt’s bat (Myotis brandtii).
The Centre for Irish Bat Research is a cross-border collaboration between University College Dublin and Queens University Belfast, under the Directorship of Dr Emma Teeling